Abel John
1860 Fort Madison Directory
wharf master, res n s Front bet Elm & Cedar
Alley L. C. Capt.
Chapter 11
E. H. Thomas
Saturday Evening Post
Just above Fort Madison, opposite Dutchman’s Island and on the
Iowa shore is the fine country home of Captain L. C. Alley, the
one time pilot of the Keithsburg and other boats. Connected
with his house is 320 acres
Capt. L. C. Alley
CARROLL Alex. F.
1890-1891 City Directory Fort Madison
CARROLL Alex. F.
riverman, r. 1404 3d
Atlee Family
1860 Fort Madison Directory
ATLEE Isaac, lumber dealer, res n e cor Front & Market
ATLEE John C., lumber merchant, res s s 4th 2 w Market
ATLEE SAMUEL, mnfr & dealer in sash, doors & blinds,
&c., office & yard on R.R. track nr depot, res cor
Hamilton & Maple
ATLEE William A., wks S. Atlee, res n e cor Elm & 2d
BOARDMAN Charles,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
steamboatman, res n s 3d 2 c Pine
Campbell
Steamboats
Bucket
No. 1, Isaac R. Campbell
Bucket No. 2, Henry J. Campbell
Bucket No. 3, Captain Jim Campbell
Campbell B. H.
Master of the “City of Keithsburg”
Capt. Campbell J. W.
1879 Lee county Historical bios
Campbell, J. W., now a resident of Ft.
Madison, Lee Co., Iowa, was born on the North Fabius, Lewis Co.,
Mo., June 17, 1825, and became a resident of Lee Co., Iowa, in
October 1830, and is to-day the second oldest inhabitant living
in the county; while residing at Keokuk, in his boyhood days, he
devoted a large share of his time to catching catfish and drift
logs; this occupation inclined him in after years to a nautical
life, and, in 1844, he shipped on board the steamer Mermaid in
St. Louis, to learn to pilot on the Upper Mississippi River; he
followed this occupation until 1851, when he was promoted to the
position of Master of the steamer Badger State, plying between
St. Louis and Galena; in succeeding years, he commanded the
following boats: Hindon, in 1852; Envoy, 1853 to 1856; he built
and commanded the Henry Clay in 1857 and 1858; City Belle and
Kate Cassell in 1859 and 1860; Flora, in 1861; Fannie Harris, in
1862; Jenny Whipple, in 1863 and 1864; Keithsburg, in 1865 and
1869; built and commanded the steamer Rock Island in 1870 to
1871, and, in October of this year, after spending twenty-seven
years on the waters of the Upper Mississippi, he voluntarily
stepped down and off the hurricane deck, and requested President
Rhodes, of the Northern Line Packet Company, to fill his place
with Capt. Albert Woempner, who had at one time been an
apprentice pilot with him on the steamer Envoy. There are
probably living in Iowa at this time 50,000 persons who have
been guests of Capt. J. W. Campbell during his career as a
steamboatman; for many of these people he entertains a kindly
regard, and feels assured the friendship is reciprocated. In
1871, he secured the original autographs of all the prominent
boatmen on the Upper Mississippi from 1819 to 1871, and arranged
them as an autographical chart, and presented it to the
Historical Society of Iowa, at Iowa City, endeavoring thereby to
perpetuate the names of many good and generous pioneer boatmen
who would have soon been forgotten. The writer of this sketch is
more indebted to him and his father, Isaac R. Campbell, for
information in regard to the pioneer history of Lee Co. than any
other authorities; they seem to have forgotten nothing relating
to the county, or the men who have lived in it. Capt. J. W.
Campbell married Miss Eliza J. Eversole, in St. Louis, in 1849,
with whom he is now passing along the journey of life with all
the happiness that man can ask; he has three sons - J. W.
Campbell, Jr., B. H. Campbell, and I. R. Campbell, whom he is
endeavoring to train up to be good and useful men. In the years
1872 and 1874, Capt. Campbell built several grain houses on the
B. & S. W. R. R. in Van Buren, Davis and Appanoose Cos., and
has bought and shipped, in the past year, to Chicago and St.
Louis, about 300,000 bushels of grain.
1860 Fort Madison Directory
Campbell Captain of The “Keithsburg”
Waterways Journal
Name: Jenny Whipple Type: Sternwheel, wooden hull packet. Size:
135 X 30, 138 tons. Power: 15-1/2's--3-1/2 ft., 3 boilers
Launched, 1857, Brownsville, Pa. Destroyed: 1866, off the lists.
Area: Built for Chippewa River trade. 1858-59, Ark. R. Miss. R.
1861, Fort Madison-Rock Island trade Owners: 1861, Capt. J. W.
Campbell and Capt.Hillhouse Captains: 1857, Chippewa R., Charles
C. Gray 1859-59, Ark. R. to Memphis, Ad Storm, 1864, for U.S.
trip with 7th Infantry Volunteers, Burlington-St. Louis, Jones
Worden.
* all of these men are from Lee
County, Iowa
Carrey Louis,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
boatman, res n e cor 2d & Broadway
Carroll James,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
clk on the Savannah, bds n s Front 2 c Spruce
Chambers Oscar,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
Captain ferry boat, res n s Front bet Elm & Broadway
Chambers Thomas
1880 Census Fort Madison
Occupation: engineer
Age: 38
Wife: May 35
Children: Fred 11, John 9, William 7,
THE OLD BOATS
Geo. Merrick
Lorna Doon
Small sternwheel tow boat built at St. Paul 1895: 12.3 feet
beam, 3.5 hold 64 ft long. Owned for two seasons by Capt Asa
Woodward and Thomas Chambers residents of Fort Madison, Iowa who
did a general towing business at Fort Madison and Burlington.
Woodward running as master and Chambers as engineer.
1890 Fort Madison Directory
CHAMBERS John, r. 305 2d
CHAMBERS Oscar F. engineer, r. Chestnut bet. Front & 2d
CHAMBERS Thomas C. Mrs. r. 305 2d
CHAMBERS Thomas C. river engineer, r. 305 2d
CHAMBERS William, river engineer, r. 305 2d
Church Davis
1880 Census Fort Madison
Occupation: clerk on S boat
Born: Ky.
Lee Davis
Margret 59
Cowles Calvin
1880 Fort Madison Census
Age 36
Occupation: rafter
Dobson Marion,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
boatman, res e s Oak 2 s 3d
Dobson Zephin
1880 Fort Madison Census
Occupation: Pilot
Finch Hiram,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
mate of the Keithsburg, res s s 3d 3 c Broadway
Enderle William
Captain of the J. C. Atlee
1890 1891 Fort Madison Directory
DIAMOND Jo Packet Co.
J.H. Einspanjer agt. office 613 2d
Freiter Henry,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
wks str Keithsburg, res n w cor 4th & Maple
Hampton Alexander B.,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
river man, bds e s Oak 2 s 2d
Hessing Jacob 26
1880 Fort Madison census
Born: N. Y.
Occupation: boatman
Henderson James,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
boatman S. Atlee, res n w cor 2d & Broadway
Henderson Charles
Hooey Walter
1880 Federal Census Fort Madison, Iowa
Occupation: engineer
Wife Catherine
Children: William: engineer
Katie, Eddie
Hunter Walter
Capt. of the “Ottumwa Belle”
1899 Capt of “Isaac Stanlee”
CAPTAINS FOR 1899
Who Will Handle the Rafts on the River This Season. Rafting the
Only Branch of Steamboating that Preserves Part of its Pristine
Vigor--About Le Claire Rivermen
Davenport Democrat
“The justice of the peace, the wealthy farmers and substantial
shopkeepers are dwarfed into insignificance when a river man
with a romantic career steps down the gang plank. When Capt. Ike
Wasson laid in ambush for Capt. Walter Hunter and struck him
shortly after midnight one night last fall, the event marked an
epoch in the history of the village. It was the subject of
gossip from Stillwater to Hannibal and occurrences of minor
importance are referred to as being before or after the
encounter.”
Pg 204
Walter Blair
A Raft Pilots Log
Captain W.L. Hunter of Wynona was in charge as master and pilot
and made a nice, clean trip from Hudson to S.& J.C. Atlee at
Fort Madison in fourteen days with a single crew. Captain
Hunter had been on the 'Ottumwa Belle' doing Atlee's running
until the logs gave out, but in `1915 was piloting on the
'Morning Star' in the Davenport and Saint Paul trade. Mr.
Atlee wanted Captain Hunter to run this last raft and Captain
Hunter was pleased to do it; so we arranged that I would stand
his watch on the 'Morning Star' while he made the trip that
wound up the great industry that had lasted seventy-five years
and really made all the good towns on the Upper Mississippi.
Klecan Michael,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
fireman "Keithsburg" res e s Maple 1 s Water
Maher John
Life on the Main Deck
William Cairncross
Chapter 10
“My partner and I walked up the levee and shipped on the
Lamartine bound for Dubuque and St. Paul. Hosea Montgomery was
mate, and he was a nice a man as I ever ran with and we had a
fine crew. The river was high and we had a nice trip. There
were six deck-hands on each watch; and we had an old man on our
watch named John Maher. He had been a soldier at fort Madison
in his young days, and he ran the ferry boat between fort
Madison and Nauvoo and was well acquainted with Joe Smith and
all the Mormon men, who were there before they went west. He
escorted Joe Smith from the ferry to Nauvoo one night a few days
before he was killed. He called him ”Mormon John”. John would
get a lot of the passengers around him and give them a whole
history of the Mormons.
One of the stories “Mormon John”
used to tell of Joe Smith, the Mormon Prophet was Joe was great
in the faith that could move a mountain; with faith he could
walk on the water as Christ did. There was a mill pond near
Nauvoo and to prove that he said he was to walk on the water, so
he went to the mill pond one night with some of his confidential
friends, and with stake and boards made a platform so when the
dam was full, the water would cover it about five or six
inches. On Sunday morning he got a boy and a yoke of oxen to
take a tree top and drag it up and down the creek, so the water
was so muddy that the boards could not be seen. When the
congregation met that forenoon, Joe gave them a lecture on
faith, and to prove it, Joe was to walk on the water, so taking
off his shoes and rolling up his trousers, Joe went over the
mill pond and back. The news spread all over of Prophet Smith
walking on the water.
Next Sunday everything was ready and
all the neighborhood was there to see the miracle. After Joe
had given them a lecture on faith he stared to prove it. He got
half way across, when his faith gave out and down he went, up to
his waist. A lot of heretics in the congregation sent up a yell
and hooted and laughed at him. “Old Nick” or some of his imps
had been there and moved Joe’s faith and that let him down.”
McColgan John,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
pilot, res s s 2d bet Broadway & Elm
McMillan G.W.,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
engineer S.Atlee
Marsh Calvin,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
fireman ferry boat, res n s 2d 2 e Broadway
NORTHWESTERN Line of Packets,
Charles S. Smith, agent, office Front 2 w Cedar
NORTHERN Line of Packets,
G.L. Coleman, agt., office Union Warehouse, foot of Locust
O'Kell Frank
1880 Census Fort Madison
Born: March 25, 1864 Fort Madison
Father: Peter O’Kell, England
THE OLD BOATS
Geo Merrick
Louise (second)
“Frank A. Whitney was engineer in 1896, She still was in service
in 1915, Frank O’Kell, engineer, captain McAllister and Charles
Delisle commanded the Louise at different times.”
Pruden M.
1860 Fort Madison Directory
pilot, res cor 2d & Elm
Chapter 40
E. H. Thomas
Saturday Evening Post
“This was my last work on the Gate City. She was operated for a
portion of the next season the business let go, she got in debt,
and was sold by the U. S. Marshall. Two bankers, who held a
claim against her, bid her in for $2,000 the bankers sent her
to the Rock Island boat yards, where she was remodeled and
repaired, and converted into a stern wheel steamboat. Milo
Pruden was made captain and pilot, and the Gate-City went into
the Davenport and St. Louis trade.”
Pyle Clinton,
1890-1891 Fort Madison Directory
steamboat engineer, r. 1325 3d
Roe Tyler,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
pilot ferry boat, bds n s 2d 1 e Elm
Ruby O.M.,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
pilot res s s 3d 2 w Broadway
Oscar Ruby
Occupation: Pilot
*See Ruby Scrapbook celticcousins.com
Smith Charles A.,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
agent Northern Line Packet Co., office Front 2 w Cedar, bds s s
6th bet Elm & Cedar
Smith Robert
1860 Fort Madison Directory
clk on Minnesota, res e s Locust bet 6th & 7t
Winter Charles
1880 Census Fort Madison
Born: Iowa
Age; 25
Occupation: pilot
Wife: Ella 24
Child: Harry
Woodward Asa B. Capt.
WOODWARD Asa
Capt. steamer Sam Atlee, r. cor. 4th & Cedar fort Madison
Portrait and Biographical Album of
Lee County, Iowa”, 1887, Pages 242-243:
CAPT. ASA B. WOODWARD, pilot of the steamboat “Sam Atlee,”
has his headquarters at Ft. Madison, and is considered one of
its worthy and excellent citizens. He was born in Lancaster,
Fairfield Co., Ohio, Sept. 3, 1836, and is the son of John Mason
and Elizabeth (Wilson) Woodward, both natives of the Buckeye
State. His father was a carpenter by trade and a skilled
mechanic, who died in New Corydon, Jay Co., Ind. The mother
still survives, and resides at Lancaster, at the advanced age of
seventy-six years. The parental household consisted of six
children, two sons and four daughters.
The subject, of this biography was
the eldest son of his parents’ family. He grew to manhood under
the parental roof and received a good education in the common
schools. At the age of nineteen years, in 1855, he set his face
westward to the Father of Waters, boarded a steamer, and went up
the river to St. Paul, where he engaged to return with a raft of
lumber. This novel occupation being quite a change from the
labors of his former life, proved quite an attraction to him,
and he followed the river for the next six years, or until
1861, and the breaking out of the
late Civil War. He then decided to become a volunteer soldier,
and enlisted as a member of Company A, 1st Iowa
Regiment, in which he served three months, that being the term
of enlistment. He then continued in the service as
wagon-master, and subsequently had charge of the Provost
Marshal’s stables at Memphis, under Gen. E. B. Washburn. He
remained in the service until the close of the war and then
resumed his former life on the Mississippi. Since that time he
has either served as Pilot or Captain, and is well fitted for
his peculiar duty.
Capt. Woodward was married in
1862 to Miss Jemima C. Gibson, and they have become the parents
of two children, Rend and Ruth. Capt. Woodward located at Ft.
Madison in 1869, and has made this city his residence since that
time. Religiously he is connected with the Presbyterian Church,
and socially with the A. O. U. W. Politically he is strongly
Republican, and uniformly casts his vote in support of the
principles of that party. He is a good citizen, and the
families are highly respected in their community.
Walter Blair
A Raft Pilots Log
210
“in the large center-wheel ferry boat 'Keokuk' and with Captain
Asa Woodward in charge as master and pilot she made several
trips. When dismantled, her fine engines were put in the new
'Sam Atlee' an excellent towboat.”
The 1913 Graphic
Compiled and Edited by Virginia Ross
Registrar for Daniel McMillan Chapter, N.S.D.A.R.1913
by Virginia Ross
Capt. Asa Woodward Dies:
Capt. Asa Woodward died on April 30,
1913, being 76 years old at that time. He was born at Lancaster,
Ohio, in 1836 and received a good education in the schools of
that place. At the age of 19 he struck out for himself, going to
St. Paul, Minn. Here he chanced upon a raft going down the
Mississippi River and engaged to go with it. This trip marked
the beginning of his experience as a riverman and he quickly
developed into one of those noted pilots who made the
Mississippi River famous 50 years ago and in whom Mark Twain
found material for some of his famous stories. When the Civil
War broke out, young Woodward enlisted as a volunteer in Co. A
First Iowa regiment in which he served for a term of three
months. He then entered the service of the U.S. as a wagon
master, and served in that capacity throughout the war.
In 1869 Capt. Woodward and his wife,
whom he married in 1862, settled in Ft. Madison and this was his
residence until the time of his death. On making his home there,
Mr. Woodward again took up his occupation as steamboat pilot and
was for many years the pilot of the "Sam Altee," one of the best
known lumber rafters of the old times. When the Klondike region
in Alaska was opened up, Capt. Woodward went to the new gold
fields and on his return was shipwrecked along the Pacific
coast, and stayed several years at the Snake River. He later
became a prospector and miner in the Wichita Mountains in
Oklahoma. About 8 years ago he returned to Ft. Madison and
although then close to 70 years of age, his love of the river
led him to again seek occupation in guiding the crafts plying
the stream. He continued to hold a wheel in the pilothouse until
within a year of his death. Although his life was one of romance
and adventure, Mr. Woodward was always a kind and true hearted
husband and father and was highly esteemed by a large circle of
friends. .
Wright Samuel
Samuel Wright, retired; was born in England in 1812; he learned
the trade of machinist and emigrated to America in 1832, and
lived in Ohio until he came here, in 1840, and located in Lee
Co.; has made a farm close by Keokuk, where the west part of the
city now stands; he was engaged in steamboating for fifteen
years, acting as engineer. He married Miss Leonora Dowd, of
Missouri, in July 1874; she is a native of Vermont. When Mr.
Wright began life, he had nothing; has earned what he acquired
by his own industry.
1880 Federal Census Fort Madison
Samuel Wright 65
Occupation: engineer
Born: Eng.
Wife: Lenora 54
Wright Thomas
1880 Federal Census Fort Madison
Rosanah 70
May 46
Thomas 41
Born: Il
Occupation; engineer
John 29
Born: Il
Occupation: engineer
Walter Blair
A Raft Pilots Log
Re: “The Le Claire Bell”
“At breakfast I was made acquainted with James Hugunin, master
and pilot, George Tromley, Sr., pilot, R.B.McCall, mate, Thos,
Wright, chief engineer, Add. Mikesell, assistant engineer, Wm.
Davenport, my partner, Ben Shipley, cook, and Harry Carleton,
cabin boy.”
Young John
1880 Federal Census Fort Madison
Occupation: Cook on boat
1880 Federal Census Fort Madison
(these men all boarded
together)
Allen Frank
raftsman single
Ball James
raftsman married
Brown John
raftsman married
Christy James
pilot single
Coyor James
raftsman single
Doyle Thomas
raftsman single
Kingsley Frank
raftsman married
Riley Charles
cook single
McGuin Thomas
raftsman single
Shipley George
raftsman single
Smith James
raftsman married
Stanton William
raftsman married
Van Werner Martin
raftsman married
Boats Fort Madison
Walter Blair
A Raft Pilots Log
The 'Ottumwa Belle
“Belle' is owned by S. & J.C., Atlee of Fort Madison. The
master of the'Belle' is Walter Hunter, one of the few remaining
raft pilots”
Crew of the “Sam Altee”
Sam
Atlee............................................. Capt. James
Hugunin
owned by S&J.C. Atlee of Fort Madison, Iowa.
Later:
Asa Woodward
Captain of the “Sam Altee”
McMillan G.W.,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
engineer S.Atlee
Henderson James,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
boatman S. Atlee, res n w cor 2d & Broadway
Crew of the J. C. Altee
William Enderle
Master of the J. C. Altee
“City of Keithsburg”
Waterways Journal
Name: CITY of KEITHSBURG Type: Sternwheel, wooden hull packet.
Launched: 1854, Port Byron, Ill. Designed and built by Kahlke
Bros and John Theissen Destroyed: 1872, Above St. Louis, Snagged
and lost. Area: 1864-?72?, Ft. Madison-Rock Island trade.
Owners: 1864, B.H. Campbell of Galena and B.W. Davis of Rock
Island. 1864, end, purchased by Northern Line. Captains: 1864,
B.W. Davis, master
Crew on the “Keithsburg”
J. W, Woodward
Capt of the “City of Keithsburg”
Finch Hiram,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
mate of the Keithsburg, res s s 3d 3 c Broadway
Freiter Henry,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
wks str Keithsburg, res n w cor 4th & Maple
Klecan Michael,
1860 Fort Madison Directory
fireman "Keithsburg" res e s Maple 1 s Water
Pilots of the “Keithsburg”
Alley L. C.
Pilot of Keithsburg
Ruby O. M.
Pilot of Keithsburg
Fort Madison
Raft Pilot's Log by Capt. Walter A.
Blair
1929-Arthur H. Clark Company
Transcribed by Joan Bard Robinson
Chief Engineers of the Rafters
Thos. C.
Chambers............................Fort Madison, Iowa
Thos. Wright................................... Fort Madison,
Iowa
John Wright.................................... Fort Madison,
Iowa
Chas. Henderson............................... Fort Madison,
Iowa
Frank O'Kell.................................... Fort
Madison, Iowa
Fort Madison, Iowa
S. and J.C. Atlee mill ran steadily until the last. The old mill
is still there and the business is carried on handling southern
and western stock.
Walter Blair
“A Raft Pilots Log”
The 'LeClaire Belle' was owned by
Captain Sam Van Sant of LeClaire, Iowa, and S. & J.C. Atlee
of Fort Madison, Iowa. Captain Van Sant was her manager and he
put me on her to do what clerking there was, and with Will
Davenport, who became my partner, I stood regular six-hour
watches running the nigger-engine while towing rafts down
stream, and as watchman going up river.
Towed by 'Ottumwa Belle'
These three reminders of the old days were towed through by the
'Ottumwa Belle,' the only survivor of the great fleet of ninety
raft-boats that were in the business on the crest of the wave in
1880. The season of 1914 will see the end of the rafting
business, when the 'Ottumwa Belle' will take three rafts
through, the last three rafts ever destined to go down the
river, and the knell of the once great traffic will be rung. The
'Ottumwa Belle' is owned by S. & J.C., Atlee of Fort
Madison. The master of the 'Belle' is Walter Hunter, one of the
few remaining raft pilots.
Walter Blair
A Raft Pilots Log
During one season of good water and plenty logs, S. & J.C.
Atlee had more work than their steamer 'Le Claire Belle' could
do alone, so Mr. Sam Atlee made a few changes.
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