El Capitan (ferry) explained
El Capitan was a side-wheel steam-powered passenger ferry operated on
San Francisco Bay. The ferry was built for the
Central Pacific Railroad in 1868 in anticipation of completion of the
First transcontinental railroad. The ferry offered connecting service to San Francisco for train passengers arriving in Oakland, California.
El Capitan collided with the Central Pacific ferry
Alameda in dense fog on 20 February 1879. The hull flooded from a hole forward of the port side paddle box, and the ferry sank onto a mud bar. She was towed to a shipyard for repair the following day.
El Capitan spent its last decade crossing the
Carquinez Strait between
Crockett and Vallejo before being retired in 1925.
[1] Notes and References
- Ford, Robert S. Red Trains in the East Bay (1977) Interurbans Publications pp.27,63-64&133