Captain James W. Troup


Monday, May 26, 2014

James William Troup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Captain James W. Troup" redirects here. For other uses, see Captain James W. Troup (disambiguation).
Capt. James W. Troup as a young man
James William Troup (February 5, 1855-November 30, 1931) was an American steamship captain, Canadian Pacific Railway administrator and shipping pioneer.

Family[edit]

Captain James William Troup was born in Portland, Oregon in February, 1855.[1][2] He was the son of Capt. Willam H. Troup, a prominent early steamboatman in the Pacific Northwest. His maternal grandfather was sailing ship Capt. John Turnball. James had a younger brother, Claud Troup (1865-1896) who was also an accomplished steamboat captain. James Troup also had a son, Roy Troup, who became a steamboat captain.[1]

Early career[edit]

Together with his father, Captain Troup built many of the early steamboats of the Columbia River and he went to work on the steamer Vancouver in 1872 at the age of 17.[3]
By the age of 20 he was captain of the small propeller steamer Wasp, having served in every position from deckhand on up. Troup went to work on the Columbia river above the Cascades, for the Oregon Steam Navigation Company holding first a position as a purser and later as master. When the first Harvest Queen, a big new steamer was built in 1878, Troup was appointed her master, even though he was only 23 years of age.[1]
In the early 1880s, as railways started to be completed along the Columbia River, the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company, which had bought out the O.S.N., started taking its boats off of the river to find employment for them elsewhere. This required running the rapids either at Celilo Falls, the Cascades, or both. In 1881, Troup ran Harvest Queen over Celilo Falls, where she was nearly wrecked, and then through the Cascades.[3] In 1881, he also took Idaho through the Cascades.[1]

First work in British Columbia[edit]

John Irving's William Irving at Yale (1882).
Yale was the head of river navigation on the Lower Fraser.
In 1883 Troup began working in British Columbia for J. A. Mara, owner of the Peerless and Spallumcheen, two steamboats running on Kamloops andShuswap lakes and the Thompson River. He also won the trust of Captain John Irving as a skilled steamboat captain, and was placed in charge of Irving's main steamer William Irving, named after Captain Irving's father. Irving also gave Troup command of the huge and difficult to manage sidewheeler Yosemiteon the route from Victoria to New Westminster.[4]

Return to Oregon[edit]

He worked with John Irving and the Canadian Pacific Navigation Company until 1886, when he returned to Oregon to assume charge of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company which was then owned by the Union Pacific. He worked in Oregon until 1892, and during this time he supervised construction of many steamboats, including the famous T.J. Potter.[1] In 1891, Victorian was launched at Portland, Oregon. This ship was an extremely large vessel for one built entirely of wood. She was also underpowered, and became one of Troup's few design failures.[1][4]

Run of the Hassalo through the Cascades[edit]

Hassalo running Cascades of the Columbia, May 26, 1888
On May 26, 1888, Troup took the sternwheeler Hassalo through the Cascades of the Columbia, covering the six miles of whitewater in just seven minutes. Other captains had come through the Cascades, and even bested Troup's time in doing so, as had notably Captain John McNulty (steamboat captain) in the R.R. Thompson over a half decade earlier and with a speed of steamboat passage through the rapids never again attained. Unlike the record run of the Thompson, though, the famous run of the Hassalo was witnessed by 3,000 people and made the subject of a well-known photograph.[1]

Steamboat operations in inland British Columbia[edit]

Lytton (in distance), Columbia (center), and Kootenai at Robson, BC, sometime between 1890 and 1894
While Troup was in Oregon, his old Canadian colleagues John Irving and J.A. Mara had joined with Frank S. Barnard and two others to form the Columbia and Kootenay Steam Navigation Company. Mara persuaded Troup to return to Canada and supervise his company's operations on the large inland lakes of British Columbia. Troup arrived back in Canada in March 1892 to take up his new post at Nelson, BC. He designed many of the inland steamboats used on the lakes, and each boat was specifically built for a particular task, such as towing or passenger work.[3] As Professor Turner, a leading historian of British Columbia, states:
Captain James W. Troup was not one for taking half measures in steamship design although he was far from being an impractical man. Indeed his career was highlighted by a succession of ships that demonstrated his instinctive ability to understand the qualities needed in steamships to best capitalize on the traffic conditions. His vessel designs tended towards the fast and elegant although there were of course some utilitarian exceptions. They also developed reputations for good reliable performance and long service lives.[5]
One of Troup's most successful designs was the steamer Rossland, which Professor Turner described as the most beautiful vessel ever to run on the Arrow Lakes. Like many prestigious steamers in the Pacific Northwest, such as the Wide West and the Bailey GatzertRossland's saloon deck extended clear forward to her bow, and her pilot house was placed high above the water on top of the Texas.[4] When Mara's company was bought out by the Canadian Pacific Railway, Troup continued in charge.[1]

Sternwheelers for the Klondike[edit]

When the Klondike Gold Rush generated a huge demand for shipping in 1898, the C.P.R. put Troup in charge of supervising steamboat construction. Troup went to Port Blakeley, Washington to supervise construction of four sternwheelers. These vessels were intended for service on the Yukon and Stikine rivers and were named ConstantineWalshDalton, and Schwatka. Of these boats, only Schwatka made it to Alaska, and this was only in 1904. Constantine sank on the way while under tow, and Walsh and Dalton remained in Puget Sound and the Columbia River. Troup also supervised sternwheeler construction atFalse Creek, BC and Vancouver, BC. Only three of the Vancouver boats actually operated on the Stikine River, which was being boomed as the "All-Canadian" route to the Klondike gold fields.[1][4] Troup then returned to the Kootenay district, where in 1901, he was made superintendent of both steamboat and rail lines.[6]

Superintendent of Canadian Pacific Steamships[edit]

In 1901, when the C.P.R. bought John Irving's company, the Canadian Pacific Navigation Company, Troup was transferred to Victoria, B.C. to assume charge of the operation that his former employer John Irving had established:[1]
For James Troup, the new British Columbia Coast Steamship Service was to be an all-consuming challenge for the remainder of his working life. He put his talents as a naval architect and his persuasive abilities to work immediately and convinced Canadian Pacific's management to build some of the finest coastal liners ever seen on the Pacific Coast.[7]
Troup's long career was closely linked with the C.P.R. from then onwards. In 1903, he was appointed Superintendent of the British Columbia Coast service of Canadian Pacific Railway.[8]
The company was engaged in many struggles over the years, such as a bitter rate war in 1909 with the Puget Sound Navigation Company, headed by his friend Joshua Green. Both Troup and Green agreed never to discuss the rate war so that they would not become personally involved in the dispute between their companies.[9]
Troup is credited with conceiving and building CPR's Princess fleet. In 1913, 10 of the 12 Princess ships in the coastal fleet had been built to the orders of Capt. Troup.[10]
The worst blow for Captain Troup during his career with the C.P.R. was the tragic sinking of the Princess Sophia. That ship had run ashore on Vanderbilt Reef in Lynn Canal on October 23, 1918 Though rescue vessels were at hand, it was too rough to take anyone off the Sophia, and she remained on the reef. During the night of October 25, the storm increased, and the Sophia was blown off the reef and sank, taking down with her all 343 people. The loss of the Sophia with so many people was the worst disaster in the history of the Canadian west coast and Inside Passage shipping. It deeply affected Captain Troup, causing him a breakdown in health which took him a long time to recover from.[2]

Last years[edit]

Captain Troup retired in August 1928. He was 73 years old, eight years past the C.P.R.'s mandatory retirement age. By this time the C.P.R. had a fleet of profitable modern steamers serving the west coast of Canada, Alaska, and running down Puget Sound, all due in great part to the work of Captain Troup.[2] In 1929, when he was 74 years old Captain Troup made his last whitewater run when the captain of theLewiston showed Troup the high honor of asking him to pilot her through the lower Cascades.[2] Captain Troup died on November 30, 1931. No other man contributed more to the maritime commerce of the Pacific Northwest.[9]

Loyalty to Captain Irving[edit]

Perhaps Captain Troup's only equal in achievement and esteem was his good friend and old employer, John Irving, who lived on until 1936. Like Troup, Captain Irving had led a life of adventure and challenge, but he was an improvident man who gave away or gambled through his fortune. His only son had been killed in World War I, and the broken-hearted Irving, well over military age, had offered to take his up place in Canada's armed forces. In later years Captain Irving was so destitute that he seemed to have no home. C.P.R. had granted Irving the right of free travel on its ships in 1901 when he sold his firm to them. With no real residence onshore, Captain Irving used his right of travel constantly, so much so that he was practically living on C.P.R.'s ships.
There might have been some question as to whether the right of travel extended so far as Captain Irving was taking it, but for so long as Captain Troup was superintendent of the C.P.R, steamships, he made sure that that Captain Irving was always welcome on every ship in the fleet. After Troup retired, his successor tried to curtail Captain Irving's travels by decreeing that passage might be free, but Irving would have to pay for meals and a berth. This edict was always ignored by the line's captains, and Captain Irving always had a cabin and was welcome at every captain's table, as Captain Troup had wished it.[2][11]


Friday, March 12, 2010

TJ Potter! The Greatest Race of All.

So may the fate of the Bailey Gatzert have been nearly so cruel. Launched in Seattle in the year of 1890, it was claimed by its owner to be the fastest ship on the water, and would challenge any boat that dismissed its claim or got in its way. Thus it was, on that eventful day in history that the current title holder, the mighty “Greyhound,” accepted the Gatzerts challenge ... only to be stripped of its prestigious title and to limp shamefully away. This did not sit well with Capt. Jim Troup, of the T.J. Potter, who was the brother of the captain of the sadly defeated, “Greyhound.” A “grudge match” was, indeed, soon in the works and much anticipation was felt by all. The shores were lined with spectators as the two sternwheelers were neck-and neck at the halfway point. All was “a buzz” with the excitement at hand, when a horrifying explosion shook the Bailey Gatzert’s deck. Passengers, fearing that a boiler had exploded were soon to learn that the pressure had blown a nozzle out of the smokestack and into Puget Sound. None- the-less, crippled by malfunction, the Bailey Gatzert limped gallantly into port ... far behind it’s rival, the T.J. Potter.

C.P.R. GETS SOUND SERVICE

Article

from the Victoria Daily Colonist, 15 Jan 1904, pg.1

Search billions of records on Ancestry.com


previous page BC Lists Clallam Index next page
C.P.R. GETS SOUND SERVICE
from the Victoria Daily Colonist, 15 Jan 1904, pg.1


Steamer Princess Beatrice Will Be Placed on Victoria Seattle Route

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Will Commence in a Few Days Direct and Speedy Service to Seattle

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Agreement Made By Local Merchants to Give Their Business to C.P.R.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The steamer 'Princess Beatrice', of the C.P.R. will be placed on the Sound route between Victoria and Seattle in a few days, arrangements to that effect being now under way. The 'Princess Beatrice' will give a direct service, omitting the call at Port Townsend. This will make at least an hour and a half difference in the time for the voyage, a great saving. The call at Port Townsend involves an hours delay, in that a stop of half an hour is made, and half an hour is spent in making and leaving the wharf. With the steamer making the voyage direct she will save half an hour in steaming direct without rounding in to Port Townsend.

The steamer 'Princess Beatrice' is a fine new vessel, staunchly built and splendidly equipped, having been built of unusual strength for the run to northern British Columbia ports, and the inauguration of a steamship service between Victoria and Seattle with that vessel by the Canadian Pacific Railway Company is another showing of the policy adopted by the C.P.R. to further the interests of Victoria. The corporation has decided to add still further to the interests being acquired in Victoria, and, with the building of the new tourist hotel, the company, by improving the steamship connections with Victoria will endeavor to keep the hotel well filled. With the establishment of a service by the steamer 'Princess Beatrice' on the Victoria-Seattle route, and the 'Princess Victoria' giving a four hour service between Victoria and Vancouver, the connections between both the British Columbia and United States mainland, will be much improved.

The 'Princess Beatrice' will be placed on the Sound route as soon as the necessary arrangements can be made. The matter was finally arranged at a meeting of the council of the board of trade and C.P.R. officials held yesterday. A committee was appointed on Tuesday by the board of trade to take up this matter with Capt. J.W. Troup, superintendent of the C.P.R. Steamship Co., coast service, and he attended a meeting of the committee. Following up the overtures made in August, 1902 when the C.P.R. was unwilling to engage in a service between Victoria and Seattle, strong pressure was brought to bear upon Capt. Troup by the committee and the council of the board of trade offered to get a unanimous guarantee from the merchants of Victoria that they will give their freight and the passenger business controlled by them to the C.P.R. This arrangement was similar to the proposals made by the board of trade to J.F. Lawless, when the then manager of the Pacific Coast Steamship Company recently visited this city.

Mayor McCaudless, on behalf of the city of Victoria, also wired to Sir Thos. Shaughnesay, president of the Canadian Pacific railway, in this regard, and yesterday a meeting of the council of the board of trade was held which was headed by E.J. Coyle, general passenger agent of the C.P.R.; R. Greer, general freight agent of the C.P.R., and Captain J.W. Troup, superintendent of the C.P.R. Steamship Company. Before the officials of the C.P.R. would consent to undertake this service they asked that an assurance be given that it was the wish of the merchants and shippers of Victoria that they did so. A draft of an agreement, similar to the offered to the Pacific Coast Steamship Co., was produced by the council of the Board of Trade, and meeting with the approval of the C.P.R., it was decided to circulate the agreement, which was as follows:

Victoria, B.C., Jan. 14, 1904

In consideration of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company operating and maintaining a proper and satisfactory steamer service between Victoria and Seattle, we the undersigned importers and shipping merchants do hereby agree and guarantee to support to out utmost the Canadian Pacific Railway in such service, and to this end agree to give to the said company all the business we can control or influence both passenger and freight in and out of Victoria by this route, and promise to instruct, on the inauguration of such steamer service, all our shippers in Seattle and other points where we are making purchases, to route our business by said company.

This undertaking to include all trans-continental freight through Seattle.

It being understood that the present tariff rates of Puget Sound Navigation Company are satisfactory and that in the event of a rate war or any cut in rates being made by any opposition company or companies, we will not avail ourselves of same, but will give our undivided support to the Canadian Pacific Railway on the basis of the present tariff rates of the Puget Sound Navigation Company.

The firms included among those who have signed the agreement are as follows:

Government Street:
The Brackman-Ker, Prior & Co., D. Goodacre, Dixi Ross, B.C. Market, Fletcher Bros., W. & J. Wilson, T.N. Hibben & Co., Henry Young, David Spencer, Victoria Book & Stationery Co., Weiler Bros., R. Porter & Son, The West End Grocery, W.M. Waitt, The Westside, Sea & Gowen, J. Sehl, Hickes & Lovick, Sidney Shore.
Wharf Street:
The Hudson's Bay Co., J.H. Todd & Sons, E.B. Marvin, Wilson Bros., E. McQuade & Sons, Turner-Beeton & Co., F.D. Brodie, B. Wilson Co., Loewenberg & Co., W.S. Fraser & Co., Rithet & Co., B.R. Seabrook, Hamilton Powder Co.
Fort Street:
Robt. Ward & Co., Fell & Co., M.R. Smith, Speed Bros., W.J. Mellor & Co.
Yates Street:
Henderson Bros., S.J. Pitts & Co., R. Baker & Son, F.R. Stewart & Co., Hickman Tye, Geo. E. Munro, Lens & Leiser, Pither & Leiser, J. Piercy & Co., B.C. Electric Railway, Sylvester Feed Co.
Johnson Street:
McDowell & Rosie, A. McGregor & Co., Saunders Grocery Co.
Store Street:
Radiger & Janion, Albion Iron Works, Andrew Gray, Victoria Machinery Co.
Broad Street:
B.C. Pottery, J. Mesion, A. & W. Wilson.
Bastion Street:
W.A. Ward, Martin & Robertson
Capt. J.W. Troup, superintendent of the C.P.R. Steamship Company; E.J. Coyle, general passenger agent of the C.P.R., and B.W. Greer, general freight agent, left for Seattle, last night by the steamer 'Dolphin' to make arrangements for wharfage and other arrangements for wharfage and other matters in Seattle.

previous page BC Lists Clallam Index next page top

Troup Junction

http://www.nnsc.kics.bc.ca/newsletter/N20030115_5.pdf

TImelline

Timeline for James W. Troup
factobot added the fact Perhaps Captain Troup's only equal in achievement and esteem was his good friend and old employer, John Irving, who lived on until 1936. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact Captain Troup retired in August 1928. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact Troup's long career was closely linked with the C.P.R. from then onwards. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact In 1901, when the C.P.R. bought John Irving's company, the Canadian Pacific Navigation Company, Troup was transferred to Victoria, B.C. to assume charge of the operation that his former employer John Irving had established. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact When the Klondike Gold Rush generated a huge demand for shipping in 1898, the C.P.R. put Troup in charge of supervising steamboat construction. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact While Troup was in Oregon, his old Canadian colleagues John Irving and J.A. Mara had joined with Frank S. Barnard and two others to form the Columbia and Kootenay Steam Navigation Company. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact On May 26, 1888, Troup took the sternwheeler Hassalo through the Cascades of the Columbia, covering the six miles of whitewater in just seven minutes. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact worked with John Irving and the Canadian Pacific Navigation Company until 1886, when he returned to Oregon to assume charge of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company which was then owned by the Union Pacific. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact In 1883 Troup began working in British Columbia for J. A. Mara, owner of the Peerless and Spallumcheen, two steamboats running on Kamloops and Shuswap lakes and the Thompson River. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact Together with his father, Captain Troup built many of the early steamboats of the Columbia River and he went to work on the steamer Vancouver in 1872 at the age of 17. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact born in Portland, Oregon in February, 1855. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact Captain James William Troup was a highly successful steamboat captain in Oregon and British Columbia who rose to the top of several large shipping concerns, including the steamship service of the Canadian Pacific Railway. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot created the term James W. Troup. 2009-03-13 22:41

Steamships Of The Columbia Article

Steamships Of The Columbia


Birth of the "paddlewheel" at edgewood.
On a December day in 1865, the serenity of the Columbia Valley was broken when a steam-driven paddle wheeler, the SS Forty-Nine came up from the south, making its way upriver. It was launched at Marcus, Washington and was built for service on the river from Marcus to La Porte, at the foot of Death Rapids. La Porte was a community that served the placer mines along the branches of the Goldstream River, a few kilometers to the north. During the first voyage, the SS Forty-Nine wasn’t able to make its way through the ice in the Narrows between the two Arrow Lakes. Passengers had to reach the goldfields on foot.


During the next season, Captain Leonard White was successful in undertaking the rapids of the Columbia and reaching La Porte. His policy was to charge his passengers full fare on the upstream journey, and to allow poor miners free passage back out to civilization. Unfortunately, the gold deposits of the Big Bend ere soon used up, and late in 1866, on his third voyage of the year, Captain White had only three paying passengers. Although business to La Porte declined, other gold strikes, such as the one on Forty-nine Creek near Nelson, allowed the service to continue until the SS Forty-Nine hit bottom below Downie Creek in 1869. It was patched up and continued service when there was a demand.The Columbia River remained quiet for the next fourteen years until prospects began developing for upriver traffic. The idea of the Canadian Pacific Railway through the Selkirks came about and the SS Kootenai was launched at Little Dalles in 1885. The Kootenai was used to haul construction materials and general supplies to Farwell. Work was temporary, and after completion of construction in the fall, the SS Kootenai was inactive like the SS Forty-Nine had been. This period of inactivity was relatively brief. The discovery of the Silver King ore deposit near Nelson started a flurry of mining exploration and conditions were right for launching a steamship enterprise on the Columbia River.


Edgewood, BC, from the steamer.
With the C.P.R. mainline completed, things were now drastically changed. It became possible to run a scheduled service from Revelstoke to Little Dalles. Fred Hume and Robert Sanderson who also took on an additional partner and started the Columbia Transportation Company accepted this challenge. In 1888, they launched a small twin-hulled vessel named the SS Despatch. The Despatch left Revelstoke on its first run on August 8, 1888, and reached Sproat's Landing (the access point to the Silver King claim) two days later. It soon became obvious that its design had many limitations of speed and hauling capacity and some upgrading would be necessary.
The three partners of the Columbia Transportation Company had realized that now they could only meet the demand by the mix of additional capital, and three additional partners were added to the company. The expanded venture was renamed the Columbia and Kootenay Steam Navigation Company. The company was incorporated on January 21, 1890 with capital resources of $100,000. Immediately, they commissioned the construction of a much larger and more luxurious vessel, the SS Lytton, for $38,000. Another $ 10,000 was spent on purchasing the idle SS Kootenai and immediately putting this ship back into service. The SS Lytton left Revelstoke on July 3, 1890 on its maiden run. Amid the notable people on board, was William van Horne, who was traveling to Sproat's Landing to check on the progress of the Columbia and Kootenay Railway, which was inching its way towards Nelson.


Taken from the bow of the Bonnington 1915.
They arrived at the Landing on July 4th, finding a bustling community, which included a government building, railway buildings, a sawmill, two stores, at least one hotel, three restaurants, and several houses. On August 15th, Corbin's railway from Spokane to Northport starting operating and connections were worked out with the C.K.S.N. steamers. Once the Columbia and Kootenay Railway was completed at the end of May 1891, a steamer service was started on Kootenay Lake, from Nelson to Bonner's Ferry. In August, the largest and most beautifully outfitted vessel, the SS Columbia was put into service on the Arrow Lakes. Business was thriving, especially after Captain J.W. Troup was hired as the general manager. Another addition to the fleet was the unsightly, but very practical, SS Illecillewaet, which replaced the worn out SS Despatch on October 30, 1892. The SS Illecillewaet was designed by Troup as a workhorse and was made with such a shallow draft, that the low water in the Narrows would never pose a problem. New mining developments, as well as railway construction near Upper Arrow Lake kept the fleet profitably occupied. New docking facilities were built at Robson to take advantage of more suitable terrain than what was offered at Sproat's Landing.


CPR Bonnington Edgewood B.C.
All things, however, were not going well. On August 2, 1894 the luxurious SS Columbia caught on fire south of Trail and quickly became a total loss, only three years after its maiden run. Plans were made for a replacement, and an even greater vessel, the SS Nakusp was launched on July 1, 1895. Later that year, the SS Kootenai grounded on Upper Arrow Lake and was written off. On June 11, 1896, SS Kootenai’s replacement the SS Trail started service. Towards the end of 1896, the C.P.R. started negotiations for the purchase of the successful company. Before the year was out, a deal was made, and for $280,000 the C.K.S.N. was purchased by the railway giant, effective on February 1,1897. In addition to the fleet of vessels that were acquired from the purchase of C.K.S.N, the C.P.R. also obtained another vessel, which had been under construction when ownership of the company changed hands. This was the SS Kootenay, launched in April 1897.


The Bonnington coming into Edgewood wharf.
C.P.R. began a program of expansion, not only on the Arrow Lakes, but also on Slocan, Kootenay, and Okanagan Lakes. The problem of interrupted service through the Narrows due to low water or ice was solved when the Nakusp and Slocan Railway opened at the end of 1897. Steamers on Slocan Lake closed the gap in the rails between Slocan City and Roseberry. On November 18, 1897, a very different vessel was launched to offer express service on the Arrow Lakes. A more rounded hull design and very powerful engines increased its speed. This was the SS Rossland and it was capable of doing a return trip between Arrowhead and Robson in one day. The year closed sadly for the Lake and River Service. On December 23 the SS Nakusp burnt to the water line while at dock at Arrowhead. The SS Nakusp had been in service for almost two and a half years.By this time, Augustus Heinze had completed his Columbia and Western rail line to Robson West. In a dramatic move, the C.P.R. bought out this railway as well as the smelting operation in Trail for $860,000.


A barging service between Robson and Robson West was put into place so that Crowsnest coal could be hauled to Trail by rail. The SS Illecillewaet and SS Lytton were kept busy at this service until a bridge was put in 1902. In 1898, the C.P.R. pushed ahead with railway expansion westward as well as more improvements to the steamer service. Two steamers ordered for service on the all-Canadian route to the Klondike via the Stikine River, were diverted to the Kootenays. One of them was the SS Minto. The Minto joined the C.K.S.N fleet on November 19th 1898. The peak of C.P.R. expansion on the Arrow Lakes came in 1911 when the SS Bonnington was launched at Nakusp on April 24.

Almost twice as large as its predecessors, the SS Bonnington was built exclusively to promote the tourist trade on the Arrow Lakes. Unfortunately, the First World War made a huge impact and the Tourist Industry was no longer booming as it once had been.


In 1916, the Kootenays became connected to the coast. The Kettle Valley Railway started running trains from Nelson to Vancouver. Traffic to the main line at Revelstoke decreased dramatically. As the older paddle wheelers ended their service periods, they were no longer being replaced. The SS Rossland ended its service when it sank at Nakusp in 1917; the SS Kootenay was withdrawn from service in 1919; and the amazing SS Bonnington succumbed to the effects of the Great Depression and was retired in 1931. Only the SS Minto’s lonely whistle could be heard echoing along the narrow valley. Eventually, its time too ran out. The Minto had outlived all of the other steam ships on the Arrow Lakes and on April 23rd 1954 the Minto left Nakusp for Robson West for the last time. The Minto’s last journey was an emotional parting from friends along the Lakes whom it had served for such a long time. John Nelson was determined not see the Minto go, and he spent his meager life savings to fend off the inevitable end. Finally - a year after his death in 1967- the Minto was committed to the deep in a Viking funeral.


SS Bonnington, Mr Banting with the mail bags.

Minto Model Edgewood Homecoming August 9,1992 Backs of Susan and Ron Akhurst, Bill Penner, Lions Club sponsored John Bryden engineered it, Spike Nesbitt and Richard Spence, and Bill MacDonald.
The SS Minto, like the other ships, represented a way of life and a set of values, which had been at odds with our super-efficient, profit-motivated society. The ships were built to a standard of luxury, which would be hard to justify in even the competitive world of today. The meals served on board were far superior to today's standard fare and they were affordable to all. Great pride was taken in providing a homely atmosphere and the schedules were flexible enough to allow for adventures. If only we could step on board again.

Captain J.W. Troup: Columbia & Kooteny Steam Navigation Co. Manager

1892 March B.C.: Columbia and Kootenay Steam Navigation Company hire Captain J.W. Troup as manager.

TJ Potter

Captain J. W. Troup, of the Oregon Railway & Navigation Company, demonstrated his ability as a
practical steamboatman in 1888 by building the 7: ./. Poller, the fastest sidewheel steamer in the Northwest. The
Poller was modeled after the famous Hudson River steamer Daniel
Drew, but Troup made some changes of material benefit in the design.
She is two hundred and thirty feet long, thirty-five feet beam, and
ten feet four inches hold, with engines thirty-two by ninety-six
inches. The house and upper works were taken from the old Wide
West, and no faster or finer steamer of her size has ever floated.


T. J. Potter (steamer)
Port Captain J. W. Troup, of the Oregon Railway & Navigation Company, demonstrated his ability as a practical steamboatman in 1888 by building the T. J. Potter, the fastest sidewheel steamer in the Northwest. The Potter was modeled after the famous Hudson River steamer Daniel Drew, but Troup made some changes of material benefit in the design. She is two hundred and thirty feet long, thirty-five feet beam, and ten feet four inches hold, with engines thirty-two by ninety-six inches. The house and upper works were taken from the old Wide West, and no faster or finer steamer of her size has ever floated. She was placed on the seaside route soon after completion, in charge of Archie L. Pease, captain; Edward Sullivan, pilot; Thomas Smith, chief engineer; Phil Carnes, assistant; and Daniel O'Neil, purser. She made remarkable time on that run and was taken off in September and sent to Puget Sound, Captain Pease, Engineer Smith and Steward Charles Petrie, going with her. She was engaged on the Seattle and Olympia ro

1928 Article

Source: History of the Columbia River Valley From The Dalles to the Sea, Vol. III, Published 1928, Pages 88-91
Author: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company


Mr. Kennedy was born in Boone county, Iowa, November 8, 1867, a son of
Justin C. and Ellen (Morgan) Kennedy, both of whom are deceased. His father
was in the railroad service for many years and was in the Union army during
the Civil war, in which he rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel. Charles D.
Kennedy attended the public schools to the age of thirteen years, when he
commenced work for the Western Union Telegraph Company as a messenger boy.
Later he went to Chicago, where he was employed as office boy by that company,
and later worked for a sewing machine company and also as messenger boy for
the Board of Trade of Chicago. In September, 1887, he came to the Pacific
coast, locating in Seattle, Washington, where he became connected with the
railroad and steamship transportation service as night clerk, in which
capacity, being the only man on night duty, he attended to all the ticket and
clerical work in relation to the trains and boats coming into Seattle. In
July, 1888, Mr. Kennedy entered the service of the Oregon Railroad &
Navigation Company as freight clerk, later serving as purser on several of
that company's early boats, including the Hayward, Olympia, Alaska and others,
under Captain J. W. Troup, one of the ablest and best known steamboat men of
the day. Afterward Mr. Kennedy entered the employ of the Great Northern
Railroad during the construction of its line through the Cascade mountains. He
served in the supply department during 1889-90 and later was in California and
British Columbia on railroad construction work. On the completion of that work
he entered the employ of the Columbia & Kootenai Steam Navigation Company as
purser on its boats, being again under Captain Troup until 1899, when he went
to Lake Bennett as purser on the S. S. Bailey, and in the following year was
purser on the Robert Dollar, the old and widely known steam schooner which did
such excellent service between Seattle and Nome, Alaska. In 1901 Mr. Kennedy
went to work for the Canadian Pacific Railroad, having charge of the steamship
desk in the passenger department at Vancouver, British Columbia, in which
capacity he served until 1903, when he entered the steamer service of that
company, again under Captain Troup, in coastwise transportation to Alaska. In
1905 he joined C. W. Cook, of the American-Hawaiian Steamship Company, as
purser on the steamship Ramona, plying between Seattle and Vancouver, and in
the following year he was made agent for Cook & Company at Tacoma, Washington.
In 1907 he was transferred to Portland as manager of Cook & Company's office,
which in the following year was taken over by the American-Hawaiian Steamship
Company, for which corporation he has served as agent and northwestern manager
here continuously since, with the exception of the World war period, when he
was with the United States Shipping Board, being employed in the operating
department for a time. Afterward he was for one year resident manager at
Portland for Norton & Lilly, and then became president of the Oregon & Ocean
Corporation, which was engaged in doing stevedore work on the Columbia river,
and with which concern he remained identified until 1923. He then returned to
the American-Hawaiian Steamship Company as Portland agent, and was later
appointed northwestern manager, having charge of its northwestern business.
This company operates a fleet of twenty-three steam and motor ships, all cargo
carriers, in the intercoastal trade. They are also managing agents for the
oriental service for the Oceanic & Oriental Steamship Company. In every
position which he has filled Mr. Kennedy has proven capable and painstaking in
the performance of duty and has commanded the esteem of his superior officers
and the respect of those under him.

http://files.usgwarchives.org/wa/king/bios/kennedy112gbs.txt

Some facts about Captain James Troup

Timeline for James W. Troup
factobot added the fact Perhaps Captain Troup's only equal in achievement and esteem was his good friend and old employer, John Irving, who lived on until 1936. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact Captain Troup retired in August 1928. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact Troup's long career was closely linked with the C.P.R. from then onwards. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact In 1901, when the C.P.R. bought John Irving's company, the Canadian Pacific Navigation Company, Troup was transferred to Victoria, B.C. to assume charge of the operation that his former employer John Irving had established. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact When the Klondike Gold Rush generated a huge demand for shipping in 1898, the C.P.R. put Troup in charge of supervising steamboat construction. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact While Troup was in Oregon, his old Canadian colleagues John Irving and J.A. Mara had joined with Frank S. Barnard and two others to form the Columbia and Kootenay Steam Navigation Company. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact On May 26, 1888, Troup took the sternwheeler Hassalo through the Cascades of the Columbia, covering the six miles of whitewater in just seven minutes. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact worked with John Irving and the Canadian Pacific Navigation Company until 1886, when he returned to Oregon to assume charge of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company which was then owned by the Union Pacific. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact In 1883 Troup began working in British Columbia for J. A. Mara, owner of the Peerless and Spallumcheen, two steamboats running on Kamloops and Shuswap lakes and the Thompson River. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact Together with his father, Captain Troup built many of the early steamboats of the Columbia River and he went to work on the steamer Vancouver in 1872 at the age of 17. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact born in Portland, Oregon in February, 1855. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot added the fact Captain James William Troup was a highly successful steamboat captain in Oregon and British Columbia who rose to the top of several large shipping concerns, including the steamship service of the Canadian Pacific Railway. 2009-03-13 22:41
factobot created the term James W. Troup. 2009-03-13 22:41

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Saturday, August 05, 2006

The TIDALDEANE Estate

The Tidaldeane was another of my Great Grandfather's major accomplishments during his lifetime. This estate was more than just a place to inhabit. It was a status symbol for his success and the fruits of his labor. From the Tidaldeane's windows, Captain Troup with pocket watch in hand, could watch his ships sail in route to another 'on time' finish.
Captain and Mrs. Troup entertained often at the estate. Guests would always include the the social and political elite of British Columbia. At one time there was talk of Captain Troup becoming the province's version of Governor. Since he was born in the United States this made it impossible. My Father remembers how it took a closely supervised staff at the Tidadeane to see to its day to day operations.
Sometime following the death of both Captain and Mrs. Troup, The Tidaldeane Estate was sold to business minded parties who eventually built the Patricia Apartments that stand there today.

http://www.victoriawest.ca/default.aspx?PageID=1014

Number 614 Seaforth is built in the bungalow style. The north-facing verandah is reminiscent of India, where this orientation offered the most protection from the sun. The Princess Patricia apartments stand at the junction of Seaforth and Maitland. They occupy the site of the former home of Captain James Troup, who managed the BC Coast Steamship Service from 1901. From here he could watch his ships enter and exit the harbor. It was he who initiated the practice of naming the fleet for princesses.

Tuesday, July 25, 2006



Famous Picture seen in TIME LIFE'S book "The Rivermen"

Here is a photo, compliments of the University of Oregon, of Captain J.W. Troup shooting the Cascade Rapids in his most famous journey. Thousands lined up on the banks of the river to witness Troup as he successfully navigated the vessel. This photo and historical account was featured in the TIME life books seried, "The Rivermen" Posted by Picasa