Constitution (1829 steamboat)

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Constitution (1829 steamboat)
History
NameConstitution
OwnerSloo & Byrne, William Bryan (or Byrne)
OperatorCaptain Edward Auld
Port of registryNew Orleans
RouteNew Orleans, Galveston, Texas, mouth of the Brazos River, Matagorda, Texas
Completed1829
Out of serviceJune 1840
FateStranded at Matagorda, Texas
General characteristics
Tonnage262
Length150 ft (46 m)
DraftAbout 7.5 ft (2.3 m)
PropulsionSteam-powered sidewheeler

Constitution is a former steamboat which operated in the Republic of Texas.

Constitution is a former steamboat, registered in New Orleans, but it primarily serviced the ports within the Republic of Texas. The steamer was 262 tons and 150-feet long.[1] Constitution was designed as a riverboat, and built at a yard in Cincinnati in 1829. It had a draft of seven feet and seven inches.[2]

Augustus Chapman Allen and John Kirby Allen—the original developers of Houston—commissioned Constitution for a demonstration voyage to prove the navigability of Buffalo Bayou as far as their new town site. They had already dispatched the Laura for the same purpose, but detractors of the Houston town site objected that a truer test would be a much larger ship.[1] The Allen brothers accepted the challenge. They hired Captain Edward Auld to pilot the steamer from Galveston to Houston for $1,000. He successfully navigated Constitution through Buffalo Bayou and docked in Houston on 1 June 1837. However, unable to turn the steamer around at Houston, the captain ran the engines in reverse for six-and-a-half miles, turning it about at a wide segment of the bayou now named for the steamship and the event: Constitution Bend.[2][3]

Auld did not take Constitution up Buffalo Bayou again. Instead, he offered monthly packet service between Galveston and New Orleans. He ran it aground in January 1838 near Sabine Pass, Texas, though the steamer limped into Galveston for repairs.[2] Francis Cynric Sheridan remarked in his journal that a steamer named Constitution was used for lightering freight and passengers from his brig, passing through shallow waters to gain access to Galveston Island.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Marilyn McAdams Sibley (1968). Port of Houston: A History. Austin: University of Texas Press. pp. 37–39.
  2. ^ a b c Andrew P. Hall (2012). Galveston-Houston Packet: The Steamboats on Buffalo Bayou. Charleston, SC: The History Press. pp. 34–36. ISBN 978-1609495916.
  3. ^ David G. McComb (1981). Houston: A History. Revised. Austin: University of Texas Press. p. 205.
  4. ^ Richard V. Francaviglia (1998). From Sail to Steam: Four Centuries of Texas Maritime History, 1500–1900. Austin: University of Texas Press. pp. 139–140.