Iron Mountain (riverboat)

The Iron Mountain was a stern-wheeler that plied the Mississippi River for ten years until sinking in 1882. Built in 1872 on the Ohio River at Pittsburgh, the boat was 181 feet (55 m) long and had a 35 feet (11 m) beam.[1] The ship ran aground and sank in 1882. However, a common legend claims that it mysteriously disappeared.

History
United States
Name: SS Iron Mountain
Owner: Mound City Ice Company[1]
Launched: 1872[1]
Fate: Sank, March 1882[1]
Notes: 1 life lost
General characteristics [2]
Type: Stern-wheel paddle steamer
Length: 181 ft (55.2 m)
Beam: 35 ft (10.7 m)
Propulsion: Steam engine

Sinking

The Iron Mountain sailed from Vicksburg on March 25, 1882, and hit an obstruction at Stumpy Point, near Island 102, which holed her hull and sank her. The crew scrambled onto one of the barges and escaped. Ellen Anderson, a chambermaid/ship stewardess, [3] was caught below decks and killed. Her body was recovered the next day with some wreckage, but there was no sign of the ship. Further wreckage was found on June 30, several miles from where the boat was lost.[4] The sinking of the ship was reported locally, with articles appearing in the March 27 edition of the Vicksburg Daily Commercial,[5] and the March 28 issue of the Daily Memphis Avalanche.[6][7] The ship was not found until later, having apparently been refloated by flood waters and carried through a break in a levee, and grounded in a cotton field[8] at Omega Landing, near Tallulah, Louisiana.[2]

Legend

A common legend claims that it was travelling from New Orleans to Pittsburgh, loaded with cotton and sugar, when it disappeared. It sailed from Vicksburg, Mississippi, and headed north, towing a string of barges and with 55 crew and passengers aboard. Another steamer, the Iroquois Chief, found the Iron Mountain's barges floating downriver, apparently having been cut loose, but the ship itself had vanished.

This legend is often repeated as fact, as in Frank Edward's 1956 book, Strangest of All, Paul Begg's Into Thin Air (1979), the Reader's Digest's Mysteries of the Unexplained (1982), Louis L'Amour's The Haunted Mesa (1987), Charles Berlitz's World of Strange Phenomena (1988) and Herbie Brennan's Seriously Weird True Stories (1997). Most versions of the story give the date of the "disappearance" as 1872, which was the year of the ship's launching.[6]

The legend was indirectly shown in the 2011 science fiction Western film Cowboys and Aliens. In this film there is a scene where a posse discover an upturned Mississippi riverboat in the middle of the desert in New Mexico. Although the boat's name is not shown or mentioned, it is presumed that it is the Iron Mountain that was dropped there by the extraterrestrials.

gollark: Soon... soon I shall have my mandatory 3 xenowyrms.
gollark: <@292188390684753920> No name shorter than 32 chars is too long!
gollark: This sounds worryingly like something TJ09'd do.
gollark: Oh, imaginary TJ09...
gollark: In basically a row...

References

  1. Donahue, James (2012). "Legend Of The Iron Mountain". perdurabo10.tripod.com. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  2. Pitts, Bill (2011). "Whatever Happened To The Steamboat Iron Mountain". The New Southern View Ezine. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  3. The Weekly Louisianian., April 01, 1882, Image 2
  4. Colby, C. B. (1959). Strangely Enough. Sydney: Oak Tree Press. ISBN 0-8069-3918-4.
  5. "Down In Three Minutes. The Steamer Iron Mountain". GenealogyBank Newspaper Archives. 2012. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  6. Little, Greg (February 2011). "Vanished! The Mystery of the Iron Mountain". Alternate Perceptions Magazine. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  7. Other contemporary accounts of the ships loss
  8. Bragg, Marion (1977). "Omega Landing, Louisiana". Historic Names and Places on the Lower Mississippi River. Retrieved 31 August 2012.

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