Adirondack Photos and Postcards

Raquette Lake Steamers

Click on each photo for a larger image

 

 

1879  Killoquah No. 1

1891  Killoquah No. 2 

1927  Killoquah No. 3 

1929  Killoquah No. 4 

 

Stoddard

 

c1890s Stoddard

 

1890s photo Edward Bierstadt

1879 Stoddard - Killoquah No. 1

1879 Stoddard - Killoquah No. 1

1890s E. Bierstadt photo Killoquah No. 2  

Lower Carry

then known as Bassett's Carry

1902 William Henry Jackson Antlers dock

HM Beach photo 'Killoquah' at steamer dock - Village?

1902 Jackson - Killoquah No. 2

Antlers dock2

c1905 Beach - Lower Carry train

Killoquah No. 2

Under the Hemlocks dock

Marion River at Halfway Trees

1920s Leaving the village

1918 Iroquois or Utowana at Lower Carry

Marion River at Halfway Trees

1920s Killoquah No. 2 leaving village

 

 

Adirondack  1902 - 1927

destroyed in 1927 fire

Double-decker steamer 'Adirondack' could hold 300

c1902 approaching Antlers2

c1902 leaving Antlers2

Up the Marion River

start of Blue Mountain trip

Meeting train passengers RL station 1911 The Ride up the Marion River 4 miles up Marion River

Meeting train at RL Railway

1911 Approaching the Carry

Four miles up Marion River

 

In 1876, when William West Durant joined his father in promoting the Adirondacks as a vacation spot for the wealthy, he found that Dr. Thomas Durant had already made progress.  Dr. Durant started a buckboard or stagecoach company from the terminus of the Adirondack Railway in North Creek, two and four-horse teams travelling along the 30 miles of dusty bumpy rutted roadway to Blue Mountain Lake.

 

At the Blue Mountain Lake House or the Transportation Terminal, passengers found a fleet of rowboats waiting to take them to other cottages on the lake or on to Bassett's Carry for the trip to Raquette Lake.

 

Horse-drawn carts carried the luggage while the travellers walked along the three-quarter mile boardwalk to the Lower End of the carry.  Again, another fleet of rowboats was waiting to continue the journey to either Bennett's Cottage on Long Point or Kenwell's Landing.  There they would be met by boats owned by their host, or continue on with their guides.

 

By 1879 William West Durant had launched the "Blue Mountain Lake and Raquette Lake Steamboats" to replace the rowboats.  Purists objected to the noise and steam - too much like the over-populated cities they were attempting to escape.

 

Steamer being loaded with passengers and luggage

 

He started with the Irocosia and Toowahloondah on Blue Mountain and the Killoquah and Utowana on Raquette Lake - each canopied and carrying about 20 passengers, often loaded with a summer's worth of baggage and the guides' boats strapped on top.  Some 20 years later the steamers would connect with the Marion River Carry Railroad and the Raquette Lake Railway.

 

In 1902 he launched the much larger Adirondack and Tuscarora, double-decked steamers holding close to 300 passengers each.  But as Hochschild relates in his book mentioned below, the Tuscarora was the most impressive of them all - 75 feet with twin screws.

 

The great Raquette Lake fire of February 1927 destroyed the Adirondack, the Sagamore and the Killoquah No. 2, along with the Raquette Lake House, the general store and most of the village.

 

~~~~~~~

 

1 Hochschild, Harold K., Adirondack Steamboats on Raquette and Blue Mountain Lakes

Blue Mountain Lake, NY:  Adirondack Museum, 1962.

2 Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Detroit Publishing Company Collection
Jackson, William Henry. 1902-1920. Touring Turn-of-the-Century America. 
In Detroit Publishing Company Collection from the Library of Congress, 1880-1920.
[Online] Available HTTP: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/detroit/dethome.html.  [August 15, 1999]

 


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Updated

2007-07-24 01:02:48