Comox (steamboat)

For other uses, see Comox (disambiguation).
Comox circa 1892.
History
Name: Comox
Route: coastal British Columbia
Builder: Henry Darling
In service: 1891
Out of service: 1920
Identification: Canada registry #100202
Fate: Transferred to Panama
General characteristics
Type: coastal steamship
Tonnage: 101 gross tons
Length: 101 ft (31 m)
Beam: 18 ft (5 m)
Depth: 5 ft (2 m) depth of hold
Installed power: double-expansion steam engine, coal-fired boiler.
Sail plan: auxiliary sloop
Speed: 11 miles per hour
Capacity: 200 passengers

Comox was a steamship built in 1891 in British Columbia which served until 1920. Comox was the first steel ship built on the West Coast north of San Francisco.

Design and construction

Comox was built in 1891. The components of the vessel were manufactured in Paisley, Scotland, and then shipped to Vancouver, British Columbia, where they were assembled by Henry Darling. When complete, Comox was 101 feet long, with a beam of 18 feet and 5-foot depth of hold. Overall size of the vessel was 101 gross tons. The hull was steel, and Comox was the first steel ship built on the west coast north of San Francisco.[1][2] As built, Comox could accommodate almost 200 passengers.[3][4]

The power plant was a double-expansion steam engine, manufactured by Bow McLachlan & Co., Glasgow, Scotland. The engines had a high-pressure cylinder 12 inches in diameter, low-pressure of 24-inch diameter, and a stroke of 18 inches, and drove the ship at 11 miles per hour. Coal consumption was 4.5 tons in 24 hours.[3][4]

Comox had an auxiliary sailing rig as a sloop.[4]

Operation

Comox was completed in October 1891.[1] After completion, Comox was placed on routes running north from Vancouver.[4] Christ Dragoylovich (born 1857), a native of Austria, was the vessel's chief engineer.[5] Comox ran to logging camps on week days, and was used for excursions on weekends.[1] By 1909, Comox had made 2,000 trips out of Vancouver harbor.[2]

Disposition

Comox was sold for scrap in 1919, but was not dismantled. Instead, the vessel was sold to Panama interests and transferred south, under the name Alejandro.

Notes

References

Further reading

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