Crosline

The Crosline’s last stop: Coos Bay, Oregon, June 1975. Author’s collection.

CROSLINE

BUILT/REBUILT: 1925/1947 (conversion to double-ender), Marine Construction Company, Seattle, WA.

OFFICIAL NUMBER: 224839 CALL SIGN: WH7219 

L/B/D: 151 x 55 x 11 GROSS/NET TONS: 466/316 PASSENGERS/AUTOS: 300/30 cars

PROPULSION: Diesel SPEED: 10 knots 

NAME TRANSLATION: Taken from Captain Crosby’s name, the “C” in the A-B-C scheme.

FINAL DISPOSITION: Broken up about 1977.

HISTORY

The Crosline was launched on 22 June 1925 for the Crosby Direct Line Ferries from the Marine Construction Company on the Duwamish River in Seattle. She was built to make the run between Manchester on the Kitsap Peninsula and Alki Point in West Seattle. Carrying 65 cars, the little single-ended ferry could make the run in 25 minutes with her Seattle-built Sumner diesel providing the power.

In 1926, scarcely a year after going into service and as somewhat of a surprise to the people of the Crosby Direct Line Ferries, the company merged with Puget Sound Navigation. Owner Captain Harry W. Crosby remained in charge, however, and the merger didn’t affect the Crosline, which remained on the Manchester-Alki route until 1935, when the Alki dock was destroyed by a storm.

She stayed on the Manchester route, now running to Colman Dock, until 1940, with the exception of two summer seasons in the San Juan Islands in 1939 and 1940 when she assisted the Rosario.

With enough ferries to spare, PSN sold the Crosline in 1942 to Canadian interests.  They sailed the ferry on the North Vancouver run during WWII, converting her into a passenger-only vessel for the shipyard workers.  After the war, the Crosline was no longer needed.

The Crosline‘s interior, just after she was built. Courtesy of Tom Sanislo collection.

The Washington State Department of Highways, having made a contract with Washington Navigation to keep ferries running from the Kitsap Peninsula to Tacoma after the Narrows bridge collapsed, needed another vessel.  They purchased the Crosline in 1947 and sent her into the Lake Union Drydock company for an extensive rebuild.

Refitted with Cooper-Bessemer diesels, the Crosline also emerged from the rebuild as a double-ended ferry. A second wheelhouse was built, and in this configuration she could off load and load cars more efficiently.  She went to work on the Narrows route but was moved in February 1949 to the Fauntleroy-Vashon route to take over for the old ferry Lincoln.

After the State took over ferry operations in 1951, the Crosline became a part of the new WSF fleet. The State moved the ferry to Hood Canal in June of 1952, working only weekends, which she did until 1961 when the bridge was built.  Becoming part of the reserve fleet, she worked only the summers of 1962, ’63 and ’64 on the Mukilteo-Clinton route as the “extra” boat. For 1965, ’66 and 1967 the little Crosline worked Sundays only on the Vashon-Fauntleroy run.  Her last trip was the 9:55 p.m. departure on Labor Day of 1967.

The ferry system sold her on December 19th of the same year.  She was first used as a warehouse on Lake Union.  Sold again in 1975, she was moved to Coos Bay, Oregon to be used as a restaurant.  The venture fell through, and instead her superstructure was removed to become a shore-based warehouse.  Her hull was eventually disassembled, the remaining timbers and planks of the Crosline became part of a fishing boat and a dock.

An email sent to the author in 2007 indicated that the dock and warehouse that had been built out of the Crosline had since been torn down. It is unknown if the fishing boat made from her timbers or is still afloat.