Chief Commissioner (HBC vessel): Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(first draft here)
 
(trim metadata incompatible with this site)
Line 31: Line 31:
</ref>
</ref>
}}
}}
{{Merchantship-stub}}


[[Category:Hudson's Bay Company ships]]
[[Category:Hudson's Bay Company ships]]

Revision as of 10:46, 24 July 2022

After being stripped of her steam engine the Chief Commissioner (right) was converted to a floating warehouse.

Chief Commissioner was a Hudson's Bay Company propeller driven steamship intended for operation on the Saskatchewan River.[1] She was launched in May, 1872, in Fort Garry. However, her draft was too deep, and for her three years of operation, she provided service on Lake Winnipeg.[2] She was retired in 1875, with her components cannibalized and used in other vessels.

References

  1. Ted Barris (2015-09-26). Fire Canoe: Prairie Steamboat Days Revisited. Dundurn Press 2015. ISBN 9781459732100. Retrieved on 2020-08-22. 
  2. Martha McCarthy (1987). Steamboats on the rivers and lakes of Manitoba: 1859-96. Operated on Lake Winnipeg. Had been designed for Lake Manitoba but could not proceed up the Little Saskatchewan (Dauphin) River. Used as a freighter on Lake Winnipeg to Grand Rapids. Flat bottom unsuitable for Lake Winnipeg and declared unsafe..