SS Kelowna

SS Kelowna was a tow boat that was operational between the years 18921912 on Okanagan Lake in British Columbia. It was later dismantled in Penticton.

SS Kelowna
SS Kelowna in 1906
History
Canada
Namesake: Kelowna, British Columbia
Owner: Canadian Pacific Railway
Port of registry: New Westminster, BC, number 111,790
Builder: Keswick & Son
Launched: 1892
In service: 1892–1912
Fate: dismantled in Penticton, BC
General characteristics
Class and type: Steam tug
Tonnage: 65.38 gross, 4.46 net
Length: 78 feet (24 m)
Beam: 18 feet (5.5 m)
Depth: 5.5 feet (1.7 m)

Kelowna Saw Mill Company

In 1892, a new boat named Kelowna was built by Keswick & Son for the Kelowna Saw Mill Company. When the Kelowna Saw Mill Company had been formed, it had taken over the saw mill business in Kelowna that was formerly carried on by Lequime Bros. Previous to the construction of the S.S. Kelowna, the Kelowna Saw Mill Company had used the S.S. Okanagan as a tow boat on Okanagan Lake until the boat was dismantled in 1902. The machinery taken from Penticton was placed on S.S. Kelowna.

Role

Kelowna was a coal-fired steam tug that operated along Okanagan Lake. She was used to haul log booms to David Lloyd-Jones’ recently built mill as well as deliver lumber along various points in the lake. In her later years, some of Kelowna’s parts were used in mines.

Later years

The Kelowna Saw Mill Company used Kelowna until 1911. She was then sold to a man in Vernon named S.C. Smith, who at the time was operating a saw mill near Naramata. Afterwards, Kelowna was taken to Penticton and dismantled there. The boiler from Kelowna was used for a while on the Okanagan Mine near Penticton, BC.

Further reading

  • Weeks, Joseph B. (1931). "The Steamer Penticton". Fifth annual report of the Okanagan Historical and Natural History Society. p. 7.
  • Hatfield, Harley R. (1992). "Commercial Boats of the Okanagan". Okanagan history. Fifty-sixth report of the Okanagan Historical Society. p. 29. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
  • Clement, J. Percy (1960). "Early Days in Kelowna". The twenty-fourth report of the Okanagan Historical Society. p. 148.
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