John H. Sterrett Explained

John H. Sterrett
Birth Date:c. 1815
Birth Place:Pennsylvania, U.S.
Death Date:June 18, 1879, age 64
Death Place:Galveston, Texas, U.S.
Occupation:Steamboat captain
Employer:Self-employed, Houston and Galveston Navigation Company, Houston Navigation Company
Superintendent
Spouse:Susan Wilson
Children:Henrietta, Josephine, Julia, Ida, William, Warner, E. Howard, and Adelle

John H. Sterrett (c. 1815–June 18, 1879) was a ship captain and investor.

Career

John H. Sterrett was born around 1815 in Pennsylvania. He was already operating steamboats as early as 1838 in Ohio and Pennsylvania. He redeployed his small steamer, Rufus Putnam, to New Orleans later in 1838, and then to the Republic of Texas in January 1839. He offered packet service on Buffalo Bayou and Galveston Bay, which included the towns of Houston and Galveston, Texas.[1]

Sterrett also invested and managed transportation companies. In 1851, he invested in the Houston and Galveston Navigation Company, a company headed by William Marsh Rice. Sterrett also managed the company's fleet.[2] [3]

Buffalo Bayou and Galveston Bay were venues for many impromptu steamboat races. Sterrett participated in some of these, and one of these ended in catastrophe. On March 22, 1853, he was racing Captain Webb of Farmer, a vessel which Sterrett himself had recently mastered. The boiler of Farmer exploded, killing about half of the ship's seventy-two persons on board. Local newspapers gave Sterrett mixed revues: they acknowledged his heroism in turning Neptune around to rescue some of Farmers passengers and crew, but charged him with recklessness for participating in the deadly race. The incident may have had a sobering effect on Sterrett, who was later known for the safety of his shipping operations.[4] [5]

In 1854, Rice and other investors of the Houston and Galveston Navigation Company formed a new company. Sterrett would again serve as a managing partner in the Houston Navigation Company, which started with a strategy of competing for United States Mail contracts. Galveston was a transportation hub, controlling traffic for 150,000 pieces of mail from the eastern United States to Texas and California.[6]

Sterrett was the superintendent of the Houston Navigation Company's fleet, and he assumed a similar role for the Texas Marine Department during the Civil War.[7] His responsibility included the Brazos, Sabine, and Trinity rivers, as well as the Galveston Bay system, where the Texas Marine Department operated as many as thirteen steamships.[8] Months after the war, he acquired two Union tinclads, Silver Cloud and St. Clair, and converted them for civilian service between Houston and Galveston.[9] Houston Navigation Company did not survive the war, so he ran his own packet service in 1865 and 1866. In October 1866, William Marsh Rice, the City of Houston, and many investors from the previous firm organized the Houston Direct Navigation Company. They tapped Sterrett as the new company's fleet superintendent and appointed him as one of the officers. In addition, he coordinated lightering, or the transfer of freight from one ship to another without the benefit of a wharf. This enabled the company to obviate the high wharfage fees at the port of Galveston. He also purchased two tugboats for pulling barges laden with cotton as an efficient means of conveying freight.[10]

Sterrett retired from Houston Direct Navigation Company in 1875.[11] He piloted steamers between Galveston and Houston 4,000 times throughout his career.[12]

Personal life

In 1843, Sterrett married Susan Wilson.[13] They had at least eight children.[14]

Death

Sterrett died on June 18, 1879, in Galveston, Texas.[11]

Ship list

Ships owned or mastered by Sterrett (in chronological order by year built):

NameYear builtBuilt atAcquiredPowerPropulsionTonnageLengthBeamDraftOut of serviceNotes
Rufus Putnam[15] 1835Marrietta, Ohio1838SteamSidewheeler98127Ohio River (1838). New Orleans (1838). Buffalo Bayou (1839).
Dayton1835Pittsburgh, PASteamSidewheeler1111845Exploded. Sterrett mastered from 1844.[16]
Farmer1849Brownsville, PASteamSidewheeler1581853Master until 1850. Exploded during race.[17]
Neptune1852Brownsville, PASteamSternwheeler2141858Off the lists
Silver Cloud1862Brownsville, PA 1865SteamSternwheeler23615533.55.31866Three boilers. Lost to snag. Union Navy Tinclad 28.
St. Clair1862Belle Vernon, PA1865SteamSternwheeler20315632.64.9After 1869Two boilers. Off the lists, 1869. Union Navy Tinclad 19.
J.H. Whitelaw1865Beardstown, IllinoisSteamSidewheeler4391871Buffalo Bayou
Superior1866Buffalo, NYSteamPropeller141877Tugboat. Abandoned.
Ontario1866Buffalo, NYSteamPropeller81929Tugboat. Abandoned.
T.M. Bagby1868Louisville, KentuckySteamSidewheeler508175501876Buffalo Bayou. Dismantled.
Diana1870Cincinnati, Ohio1870SteamSidewheeler45017132Converted to barge
Charles Fowler1871SteamHouston Direct Navigation Company
Lizzie1871Jeffersonville, INSteamSidewheelerPerhaps 1880

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hall, Andrew W.. The Galveston–Houston Packet: Steamboats on Buffalo Bayou. History Press. Charleston, SC. 2012. 39–41. 978-1-60949-591-6.
  2. Book: Sibley, Marilyn McAdams. 6970. Houston: A History. 1968. Austin. University of Texas Press.
  3. Hall (2012), p. 49.
  4. Hall (2012), pp. 5152.
  5. Sibley (1968), p. 71.
  6. Hall (2012), pp. 5657.
  7. Hall (2012), p. 67.
  8. Hall (2012), 8081.
  9. Hall (2012), pp. 8384.
  10. Hall (2012), pp. 8689.
  11. Hall (2012), p. 102.
  12. Sibley (1968), pp. 7071.
  13. Hall (2012), p. 61.
  14. Hall (2012), p. 101.
  15. Hall (2012), pp. 116122.
  16. Hall (2012), p. 47
  17. Hall (2012), p. 51.