• Win a Free Custom Engraved Brass Coin!!!
    As a way to introduce our brass coins to the community, we will raffle off a free coin during the month of August. Follow link ABOVE for instructions for entering.

The River boat Libertador

  • Thread starter Thread starter Kevink
  • Start date Start date
  • Watchers Watchers 2
Joined
May 27, 2021
Messages
261
Points
278

Location
Trinidad & Tobago
I have been researching the history of the River Boat Liberator for some time now and am finally at a point where i can shear my findings.

IMG_9704.jpeg

IMG_9705.jpeg

IMG_9706.jpeg

IMG_9707.jpeg

IMG_9708.jpeg

IMG_9709.jpeg

IMG_9710.jpeg

IMG_9711.jpeg

IMG_9712.jpeg

IMG_9713.jpeg

IMG_9714.jpeg

IMG_9715.jpeg

IMG_9716.jpeg

IMG_9717.jpeg
 
Just a update.
The draft research paper is now 61 pages long with lots of corrections and additions. I also started going through the english magazine The Engineer, from 1865 to 1900 and prepared a paper on all references to Yarrow and Co. Also took copies of all references to locomotive boilers, horizontal engines and drawing of river boats. That paper is now over 150 pages containing direct references to my project. But its time to take a break and get back to k to modeling the Thorn. I AM RESEARCHED OUT.
 
There was at least one American company that specialized in building these river steamboats for export. It was located in Pittsburgh, PA. Once built, these boats were dissembled into shippable sections to be reassembled at the destination. I used to have a reprint of a catalog but gave it away several years ago. I don’t ember the company’s name.

Roger

The name of the company in Pittsburgh is James Rees.
 
Last edited:
Here you go. Thanks

James Rees was born in 1821. He worked in the Western Pennsylvania shops and foundries which built steamboat machinery, and he later worked for noted steamboat engine builder, Andrew Hartupee. In 1854, he established his own operation in Pittsburgh along the Allegheny River building steamboat engines, machinery and boilers. Later, he also built complete steamboats.

In the late 19th century, Rees constructed metal-hulled western river type steamboats for export around the world. These boats were fabricated, then disassembled and shipped abroad with a crew who then reassembled the vessel and taught its purchasers how to operate the boat. Rees’ boats plied the Volga, Nile, Magdalena, Yukon, Columbia, Mississippi, Missouri, and Ohio rivers, to name only a handful.

Modern river transportation came to many hinterlands of the world via Rees steamboats, and their heartiness and quality became legendary. The company’s Idlewild, built in 1914, continues operating today as the Belle of Louisville.
 
Back
Top