- SS Tahoe
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name = TAHOE (Shipwreck)
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location =Lake Tahoe
nearest_city =Glenbrook, Nevada
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added =February 11 ,2004
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refnum = 04000026
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governing_body = The SS "Tahoe" was asteamship that operated onLake Tahoe at the end of the 19th century and first half of the 20th. Scuttled in 1940, the wreck presently lies in 400 feet of water offGlenbrook, Nevada . The wreck was first visited in 2002 by a record-setting high-altitude dive, and as a result became the first maritime site inNevada to be listed in theNational Register of Historic Places .By the end of the 19th century, Lake Tahoe had become known as a vacation resort, with a handful of hotels and communities scattered around its shores, serviced by a number of steamers crossing the lake. Lumber magnate
Duane Leroy Bliss ordered the vessel from San Francisco'sUnion Iron Works in 1894. It was shipped by rail in pieces to Carson City, then by wagon to Glenbrook, reassembled, and launched with much acclaim onJune 24 ,1896 .At 169 feet, "Tahoe" was the largest of the lake steamers; she was propelled by two wood-fired engines developing a total of 1200 hp, each driving a three-bladed propeller. Her 200 passengers enjoyed a well-appointed interior, with leather upholstery, carpeting, and marble fixtures in the lavatories. Modern technologies included electric lights and bells, hot and cold running water, and steam heating.
From 1901, "Tahoe" operated from a railroad pier in
Tahoe City during the summers, leaving in the morning, making a daily circuit of the shoreline communities, and returning in late afternoon. In addition to the passengers, she carried freight and mail.The completion of an automobile road all around the lake in 1926, followed by the loss of the mail contract in 1934, made "Tahoe" uneconomical to operate, and she lay unused for several years. In 1940, Bliss' son William L. Bliss repurchased the vessel from the operating company; his intent was scuttle her in shallow water off Glenbrook as a memorial to a bygone era, visible to
glass bottomed boat s. "Tahoe" was scuttled onAugust 29 , 1940, but the underwater slope was unexpectedly steep at the chosen location, and the ship slid down out of sight, ending up with the bow at 385 feet and the stern at 460 feet.In 2002, Reno-based group
New Millennium Dive Expeditions set a record for both Lake Tahoe and for high-altitudescuba diving in general when they reached the wreck of "Tahoe". The information they gathered on the wreck was a crucial part of the documentation enabling "Tahoe" to be listed as a National Historic Place.References
* Sean Whaley, "Ship earns historic designation", "
Las Vegas Review-Journal ", February 24, 2004
* [http://www.diverssupport.com/sstahoe.htm Page on the dive, with photos]
* [http://www.boattahoe.com/history.htm Page on SS "Tahoe"]
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