释义 |
- Career
- References
{{Infobox ship imageShip image= | Ship caption= }}{{Infobox Ship Career | Hide header= | Ship name=Anna M. Pence | Ship owner= La Conner Trading & Trans. Co. | Ship operator= | Ship registry= | Ship route= | Ship ordered= | Ship builder= | Ship original cost= | Ship yard number= | Ship way number= | Ship laid down= | Ship launched= | Ship completed=1890 | Ship christened= | Ship acquired= | Ship maiden voyage= | Ship in service= | Ship out of service= June 1895 | Ship identification= | Ship fate= Destroyed by fire | Ship status= | Ship notes=Hull salvaged, used to build T.W. Lake in 1896. }}{{Infobox ship characteristics | Hide header= | Header caption= | Ship type=inland steamboat | Ship tonnage=95.15 net tons | Ship displacement= | 89|ft|m|2|abbr=on}} | 18.7|ft|m|2|abbr=on}} | Ship height= | Ship draught= | Ship draft= | 6.2|ft|m|2|abbr=on}} | Ship decks= | Ship deck clearance= | Ship ramps= | Ship ice class= | Ship sail plan= | Ship power=twin steam engines, horizontally mounted | Ship propulsion=sternwheel | Ship speed= | Ship capacity= | Ship crew= | Ship notes= }} | Annie M. Pence was a steamboat that ran on Puget Sound in the early 1890s. CareerAnnie M. Pence was built at Lummi Island in 1890. The boat was a sternwheeler intended to carry freight. For most of the career of Annie M. Pence, the vessel was under the command of Capt. Peter Falk, who was also one of their owners. Annie M. Pence was purchased by the La Conner Trading and Transportation Company as one of the company's first steamboats. Anna M. Pence was destroyed by a fire in June 1895. The hull was still usable, and was incorporated into the construction of the propeller steamer T.W. Lake in 1896. References - Newell, Gordon R., Ships of the Inland Sea, Superior, Seattle WA (2nd Ed. 1960)
- Newell, Gordon R., ed., H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest, Superior Publishing Co., Seattle, WA (1966)
- {{cite book|author=E. W. Wright|title=Lewis & Dryden's Marine History of the Pacific Northwest: An Illustrated Review of the Growth and Development of the Maritime Industry, from the Advent of the Earliest Navigators to the Present Time, with Sketches and Portraits of a Number of Well Known Marine Men|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=seRDAAAAYAAJ|year=1895|publisher=Lewis & Dryden Printing Company|location=Portland, Oregon}}
{{Mosquito Fleet}}{{Puget Sound propellers}}{{ship-stub}} 3 : 1890 ships|Steamboats of Washington (state)|Sternwheelers of Washington (state) |