About Southern Indiana

A photo blog of the sights and unexpected wonders of Indiana

Life On The Ohio

River Boats

River Boats

Switzer­land County His­tor­i­cal Soci­ety, in Vevay on the Ohio River has a won­der­ful col­lec­tion of River Boat arti­facts and models.

This is a must see any­time you are in the area. Won­der­ing the museum you will see pre-Civil War Mus­kets, Gramo­phones, period clothes and let­ters from loved ones. Upstairs you will find so much more.

Here is some his­tory of the model boats that I found.


Harold Pat­ter­son Model builder
The cen­ter­piece of the “Life on the Ohio” museum are the model boats built by Harold Pat­ter­son. Pat­ter­son, a native of Flo­rence Indi­ana, was a per­former on Bryant’s Show­boat. Mr. Patterson’s trav­els exposed him to many of the finest show­boats and steam­boats. He faith­fully pre­served the mem­ory of these boats with his beau­ti­ful mod­els. In 1991 Bar­bara Fluege­man wrote a very infor­ma­tive arti­cle about Harold Pat­ter­son for the Vevay news­pa­per. Much of the infor­ma­tion for her col­umn was obtained from inter­views with Luana Gaebel, grand­daugh­ter of Harold Pat­ter­son.
The museum has twelve of the Pat­ter­son mod­els. Seven of the mod­els came to the museum in 1991 for the “Always a River” pro­gram. In 2003 the Switzer­land County Library donated Harold Patterson’s model of the HATTIE BROWN to the museum. Pat­ter­son had loaned four of his mod­els to the Howard Steam­boat museum in Jef­fer­son­ville, Indi­ana. Luana Gaebel felt that since her grand­fa­ther had built the mod­els in Switzer­land County the new “Life on the Ohio” museum should be the per­ma­nent home for the entire col­lec­tion. Luana made arrange­ments with the Howard museum to return the four mod­els “home” to Switzer­land County.
Although the mod­els are unbe­liev­ably detailed they are true Amer­i­can folk art, as they are con­structed from com­mon house­hold mate­ri­als. On each model you will see chairs, benches, stacked fire­wood, cargo and even pot belly stoves.
Mod­els asso­ci­ated with the show­boat busi­ness are the ARGAND, PRICE’S NEW WATER QUEEN, BRYANT’S NEW SHOWBOAT, and FLORENCE.
The ARGAND model is of the ARGAND, a stern­wheel tow­boat (sin­gle large pad­dle on the stern or rear of the boat) built at Lev­anna, Ohio in 1896. She ran the Wheeling-Parkersburg trade until 1898 at which time she was sold to run on Big Sandy River. She was sold, April 1901, to Capt. Edwin A. Price, who used her to tow his show­boat NEW WATER QUEEN. The ARGAND burned on the Musk­ingum River in 1927.
PRICE’S NEW WATER QUEEN was built as the ROBINSON PALACE. The boat was one hun­dred and fifty feet long and thirty feet wide. It had a dou­ble deck audi­to­rium with twelve plush lined boxes and two bal­conies. The seat­ing capac­ity was seven hun­dred and fifty-nine patrons. It was pur­chased at auc­tion by Cap­tain French and renamed FRENCH’S NEW SENSATION. Upon his retire­ment French sold the boat to Cap­tain Price who renamed the boat PRICES NEW WATER QUEEN. This is the show­boat where the famous Bryant fam­ily got their start.
The FLORENCE was a small gas pow­ered stern­wheel boat used by the Bryant show­boat fam­ily to push their house­boat.
BRYANT’S NEW SHOWBOAT, built in 1917, was one hun­dred and thirty-five by thirty feet, with a capac­ity of almost nine hun­dred. A unique fea­ture of this model is the inte­rior is a faith­ful repro­duc­tion of Bryant’s show­boat. It is lighted and fea­tures seat­ing and a stage com­plete with scenery.
Pat­ter­son also built mod­els of the work­ing boats he would pass in his trav­els. These are the ALICE BROWN, CHARLES B. PEARCE, LEVI J. WORKUM, and HATTIE BROWN
The ALICE BROWN was a stern­wheel tow­boat built in 1871 in Pitts­burgh, Pa. for Brown’s Line coal min­ers and boat oper­a­tors. She reg­u­larly plied between Pitts­burgh and New Orleans until 1915.
The CHARLES B. PEARCE was a Stern­wheel Packet Boat (car­ried both freight and pas­sen­gers). She was built in Augusta, Ky. in 1900 and ran Cincin­nati –Portsmouth briefly. Sold to Capt. John Carnes in June 1903 and ran Paducah-Golconda. She towed show­boats for some years. She sank at Pt. Pleas­ant in 1918.
The LEVI J. WORKUM was a stern­wheel packet boat built in Lev­anna, Ohio in 1890. She plied between the Workum dis­tillery in Peters­burg, Ky. and Cincin­nati trans­port­ing their wares. She was famil­iarly known as “the whiskey boat.” She was taken to Madi­son, Ind., in 1907 where the hull was enlarged. She was renamed KENTUCKY and ran a great while in the Cincinnati-Madison trade, fre­quently Cincinnati-Louisville. This model is com­plete with whiskey bar­rels.
The JOSEPH B. WILLIAMS was a stern­wheel tow­boat built in Pitts­burgh in 1876. She was owned by the Grand Lake Coal Co. In 1898 she towed a record tow of coal between Cairo and New Orleans. She pushed 52 coal boats, four barges, and four flats for a total of 1,453,000 bushels of coal. She caught fire at Cairo in 1914 and was lost.
The crown jew­els of the model col­lec­tion are the NATCHEZ, ROBERT E. LEE and the AMERICA. These three boats were side­wheel (large pad­dle wheel on each side of the boat) packet boats.
The NATCHEZ and ROBERT E. LEE are mod­eled after the famous NATCHEZ and ROBERT E. LEE that raced from New Orleans to St. Louis in 1870. The NATCHEZ was built in Cincin­nati in 1869 for Cap­tain T. P. Leathers for the New Orleans-Vicksburg trade. The ROBERT E. LEE was built in New Albany Indi­ana in 1866 for Cap­tain John W. Can­non for the New Orleans-Vicksburg trade.
The AMERICA model is of the AMERICA built in Jef­fer­son­ville, Ind. by the Howard boat­yard in 1917. The hull and machin­ery came from the INDIANA, which had burned off her upper works at Cincin­nati on May 1, 1916. She ran the Louisville-Cincinnati trade for the Louisville & Cincin­nati Packet Co. While laid up for the win­ter above Jef­fer­son­ville, Ind., she burned Sept. 8, 1930.
The HATTIE BROWN model is of a well-known boat in the Switzer­land County area. She was built in Belle Ver­non, Pa. in 1884. Capt. Dick Brown ran her in the daily Warsaw-Madison trade for many years. She was later owned by Louisville & Cincin­nati Packet Co. She was lost in the big ice at Cincin­nati, win­ter 1917–1918.
Danny Back
Greet­ings from Ohio River mile 519.4

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Posted in Uncategorized 9 months, 4 weeks ago at 5:45 pm.

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