Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company explained

Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company
Type:Subsidiary of the Union Pacific Railroad
Foundation: (Origins trace back to)
Defunct: (O.R. & N)
(O.W.R. & N)
Location:United States
Key People:Henry Villard
Area Served:United States
Industry:Railroad and Shipping
Successor:Oregon-Washington Railroad and Navigation Company
Union Pacific Railroad
Parent:Union Pacific Railroad Company

The Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company (OR&N) was a rail and steamboat transport company that operated a rail network of 1143miles running east from Portland, Oregon, United States, to northeastern Oregon, northeastern Washington, and northern Idaho. It operated from 1896 as a consolidation of several smaller railroads.

OR&N was initially operated as an independent carrier, but Union Pacific (UP) purchased a majority stake in the line in 1898. It became a subsidiary of UP titled the Oregon–Washington Railroad and Navigation Company in 1910.[1] In 1936, Union Pacific formally absorbed the system, which became UP's gateway to the Pacific Northwest.

Predecessors

The OR&N was made up of several railroads:

Development of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company

The Oregon Railway and Navigation Company's purchase of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company in 1880 gave it a partial route on the south (Oregon) side of the Columbia River. The company then pursued expansion of its Columbia River route, surveying from where the Oregon Steam Navigation tracks ended at Celilo and continuing east to Wallula. By 1882 the route along the Columbia River was complete.

Starting in 1880, one of the competitors of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company was the Shaver Transportation Company.

Blue Mountain route

The company purchased right-of-way in 1882 from Alfred B. Meacham and John Harvey Meacham, along their Meacham Road through the Blue Mountains.[3] The Meacham road, built in 1862, had a lower pass than competing roads, and was a corduroy road, allowing it to hold up in poor weather conditions. The railroad was laid in 1884.

Shipping

Before 1879, the Oregon Steamship Company provided passenger service onboard coastal steamships from San Francisco, California, to Portland, Oregon, while the Oregon Steam Navigation Company operated multiple steamboats along the Columbia River. That year, the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company purchased the entirety of both companies, which helped to create a monopoly over transportation in Oregon. The large steamships City of Chester, George W. Elder and Oregon were included in the purchase.[4]

Columbia

See main article: SS Columbia (1880).

In 1880, the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company accepted delivery of the steamship Columbia from John Roach & Sons in Chester, Pennsylvania. Columbia was innovative for her time as she featured a dynamo that powered electric light bulbs, instead of oil-based lanterns. Columbia mainly served on the San Francisco, California, to Portland, Oregon, run in her career. Columbia remained with the company after the Union Pacific takeover in 1898. The shipping faction of the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company that operated Columbia was renamed the San Francisco and Portland Steamship Company in 1904. Columbia was lost on July 20, 1907, following a collision with the schooner San Pedro.[5]

George W. Elder

See main article: SS George W. Elder. The George W. Elder was another steamship operated by the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company. Originally an east coast steamer built by John Roach & Sons in Chester, Pennsylvania, the George W. Elder was purchased by the Oregon Steamship Company and sailed around Cape Horn to Oregon in 1876. The Oregon Steamship Company later sold the George W. Elder to the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company.[6] On May 31, 1899, the George W. Elder left Seattle, Washington, carrying 126 passengers and crew on a 9000miles scientific expedition to Russia, visiting Alaska and British Columbia along the way. Later that year, the George W. Elder was used as a troopship in the Philippines by the U.S. Army. The George W. Elder Continued to operate with the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company until 1904, when it was transferred to the San Francisco and Portland Steamship Company. In 1905, the George W. Elder struck a rock in the Columbia River and sank into 16feet of water. The ship was subsequently raised and acquired by the North Pacific Steamship Company. In 1907, the George W. Elder helped rescue the survivors of the Columbia. The ultimate fate of the George W. Elder following its retirement in 1935 remains uncertain.[7]

Other ships

The 1899 Annual Report of Directors for the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Company lists 26 or 27 other ships besides the Columbia and George W. Elder between June 30, 1898, and June 30, 1899. The fleet listing from June 30, 1898, to June 30, 1899, goes as follows[8]

Steamships

River Steamers

Tug boats

Barges

Predecessors of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Book: Oregon. Public Service Commission, Oregon Railroad Commission . Annual report, Volumes 5-6 . Harvard University.
  2. Web site: Idaho Railroads: Map, History, Abandoned Lines . 2022-08-07 . American-Rails.com.
  3. Book: Deumling, Dietrich. The roles of the railroad in the development of the Grande Ronde Valley (masters thesis). Northern Arizona University. Flagstaff, Arizona. May 1972. 4383986.
  4. Web site: The Railway World, Volume 5 . United States Railroad and Mining Register Company . Reprinted . 1879 . 13 September 2013 . 734.
  5. Belyk, Robert C. Great Shipwrecks of the Pacific Coast. New York: Wiley, 2001. Print.
  6. Web site: George W. Elder (steamer) - Magellan - The Ships Navigator . Magellan - The Ships Navigator . 23 July 2013.
  7. Web site: The George W. Elder Defied the Skeptics . Bay Ledger News Zone . 31 March 2008 . 23 July 2013 . Grover, David H..
  8. Book: Annual Report of the Board of Directors of the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company, to the Stockholders, Volume 3 . Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company . 1899 . 24.