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SS Iowa (1920)


FieldValue
section1{{Infobox ship/image
imageSS West Cadron in port.jpg
image_captionSS West Cadron, 1920s
section2{{Infobox ship/career
flag[[Image:Flag of the United States.svg60px]]
nameSS Iowa (1928-1936) SS West Cadron (1920-1928)
operator*U.S. government (1920-1928)
builderWestern Pipe & Steel Co.
yard_number12
completed1920
fateRan aground January 12, 1936
section3{{Infobox ship/characteristics
tonnage5,724 (gross)
length410 ft
beam54 ft
power359 nhp
propulsiontriple-expansion engine
speed10.5 knots
  • Quaker Line (1928-1936)

'SS Iowa* was a steamship built by the Western Pipe and Steel Company of San Francisco, California in 1920 for the U.S. government and was known as the **SS West Cadron'''. It served in the Quaker Line subsidiary of the States Steamship Company. from 1928—when it was renamed the *Iowa''—until January 12, 1936, when it ran aground on Peacock Spit, Washington, part of the Columbia Bar at the mouth of the Columbia River.

SS Iowa was travelling from Longview, Washington where it had taken on a load of lumber. The ship was carrying more than 6,900 long tons of cargo. Around midnight, as SS Iowa was crossing the Columbia River bar, a gale estimated at 75 mph hit the ship. Captain Edgar Yates was experienced crossing the bar and had not brought a bar pilot aboard. At the Cape Disappointment Lighthouse around 2 a.m., a Coast Guard observer witnessed the ship start to turn south and then turn to the north toward Peacock Spit where water depths are only around 20 ft. The Astoria Coast Guard station received the Iowa distress call around 4:30 a.m.

The Coast Guard cutter Onondaga was dispatched after the SOS was received. Attempts were made to communicate with the ship by observers at the lighthouse using radio, light signals, and flags. The observers saw a flash of light from the ship and a few flags raised in response, but were unable to decipher any messages from the ship in the stormy conditions. By the time that the Onondaga arrived, only masts were visible above the waves. All 34 people aboard the ship died, and only six bodies were recovered from the wreckage that dotted local shorelines for days.

References

References

  1. "SS Iowa (+1936)".
  2. (June 2015). "Washington Disasters". Rowman & Littlefield.
  3. (January 13, 1936). "Ship wrecked with 34 aboard lost: Freighter is hit by gale off Astoria". Fairbanks Daily News-Miner.
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