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1923 - Bath (ME) built boat burns in Lake Washington
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On April 4,
1923, wooden sailing vessel turned whaling supply barge Fresno burns at a
wharf on Meydenbauer Bay. After usable machinery is removed and sold as
scrap, Fresno is scuttled in 190 feet of water, just north of today’s
Evergreen Point Bridge. A subsequent lawsuit reaches the Washington State
Supreme Court.
Sailing Vessel Turned Support Barge
W. Rogers of Bath, Maine, built the 1,244-ton sailing vessel Fresno in 1874.
After operating for years serving Atlantic ports, she sailed around Cape
Horn for use in Pacific waters and was eventually reconfigured as a barge.
North Pacific Sea Products (NPSP) bought her in 1914. North Pacific Sea
Products, a Canadian firm whose American affiliate was known as American
Pacific Whaling Co., used the Fresno to carry supplies from Seattle to a
whaling station at Akutan, Alaska, and to haul whale oil and fertilizer on
the return trip to Seattle.
In 1919, North Pacific Sea Products (American Pacific
Whaling Co.) began storing its whaling ships at Meydenbauer Bay (Bellevue)
during the off-season.
In the fall of 1922, the firm brought the Fresno into the lake and laid her
up on the northern side of its wharf there. Aided by steam winches, the
Fresno’s bow was dragged as close to shore as possible, where it sank into
the soft, gooey mud. The Fresno was embedded there as if in quicksand. She
was equipped with a steam donkey, steam winches, and other machinery for a
new wharfside support role.
The Fire
In the early morning of April 4, 1923, a fire broke out spontaneously in the
vessel's hold, which the Marine Digest described as having been (whale) "oil
soaked." Initially, the passenger ferry Leschi and a small tug struggled to
pull the Fresno away from the wharf but thick mud held her fast. Then the
whaling firm's steamers Aberdeen, Moran, and Westport joined the tug and
finally the four succeeded in wresting the Fresno from the goo and away from
the burning wharf.
The wreck just sat, so after the 30 days had passed North Pacific Sea
Products removed and sold the scrap machinery and paid another operator
$2463.16 to refloat the Fresno, tow her out into 190 feet of water and
finally fill her with gravel until she sank to the bottom. This was
considered the most efficient and economical disposal method.
North Pacific
Sea Products sued Nieder & Marcus for the scuttling costs minus the proceeds
from the scrap machinery’s sale. Finding that Nieder & Marcus had breached
the contract, the trial court held for North Pacific Sea Products. Nieder &
Marcus appealed to the Washington State Supreme Court, which affirmed the
trial court's original ruling.
Eighty Years Later
The Fresno sat unnoticed on the cold, black lakefloor until October 2003. At
that time, scientists working for Golder and Associates surveyed the
lakefloor for Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) in
preparation for the project of building a second SR-520 bridge. They spotted
the burned vessel on their sonar equipment. (picture is on the right)
Using hardhat divers, Golder videotaped the wreck so WSDOT can determine its
historical or environmental relevance and whether WSDOT should leave the
vessel or move it to make way for the SR-520 Bridge Replacement Project.
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