Olympic (II)
The Olympic beached on Ketron Island, October 2019. Photo courtesy of Matt Masuoka.
BUILT: 1938, Baltimore, MD.
PREVIOUS/LATER NAMES: a. Governor Harry W. Nice b. Olympic
OFFICIAL NUMBER: 237285 CALL SIGN: WB6081
L/D/W: 208 x 62 x 9 GROSS/NET TONS: 773/308 PASSENGERS/AUTOS: 605/55
PROPULSION: 1 Fairbanks Morse Diesel engine, 1400 HP SPEED: 11 knots
NAME TRANSLATION: For the Mountain range; mountains took the name from the tallest peak, Mount Olympus; the name was given by Capt. John Meares who said at the time, “For truly it must be the home of the Gods.”
FINAL DISPOSITION: As of 2020, moored/aground at Ketron Island, WA. Status beyond that unknown.
HISTORY
Put out of work when a bridge was built across Chesapeake Bay, the Gov. Harry W. Nice and Gov. Herbert R. O’Conor were snapped up by Washington State Ferries in 1953. At the time, building a new ferry was a few years away at the earliest and the system needed more carrying capacity and quickly.
Painted in green and white, the two ferries were renamed Olympic and Rhododendron. In 1954, the Olympic started on the South Point-Lofall run, but a month later she was displaced on the run by her sister, Rhododendron. The Olympic was moved up to the Clinton, Whidbey Island – Mukilteo run, taking over the number one ferry spot from the Chetzemoka.
After the Hood Canal Bridge opened in 1961, the Olympic worked side-by-side with the Rhododendron on the Clinton run full time until 1969 when the Kulshan joined the Rhododendron. The Olympic was then used as a third/summer overflow boat.
In 1974 WSF was ordered to take over operations of the Port Townsend-Keystone route from Olympic Ferries Inc., which had recently gone out of business. WSF moved the Oly over to the route, making the first run for the state on the Port Townsend-Keystone run in June 1974.
In February 1979 the Hood Canal Bridge sank in a violent storm. With it, the quick link to the Olympic Peninsula was cut off. Traffic tripled on the Keystone run. The Olympic couldn’t keep up, so she was moved back to Clinton. By the time the bridge was rebuilt, and with the new Issaquah class ferries taking their place on the Sound, the Olympic was scheduled to be retired in 1983.
The retirement never happened. While the Rhododendron was mothballed, the Olympic continued on at Keystone until ordered off the run by the Coast Guard. Her single engine shut down one day leaving her adrift for over an hour before the engine could be restarted. The Coast Guard did not want a vessel with a single engine on the route, and the Klickitat, recently out of being completely refurbished, was moved to the route.
For the next ten years the Olympic continued on in service on various routes in the system, mainly at Point Defiance and even subbing as the inter-island ferry for a few summers in the San Juan Islands.
After the successful updating of the Steel Electrics, WSF decided to upgrade the Olympic and Rhody. The Rhody, already out of service, was sent in for overhaul first.
Much to the chagrin of WSF and the DOT, the Rhody was far more deteriorated than first thought. Much of her steel was completely wasted and the entire passenger cabin had to be rebuilt from the ground up using entirely new steel. The cost overruns were in the millions.
This spelled the end of any thought of refurbishing the Olympic, with her single engine already limiting where she could work. Her carrying capacity and limited over-height clearance made her of little use to the system, so plans for her overhaul were abandoned.
After the Rhody returned to service in 1993, the Olympic was mothballed at the WSF repair facility. The years ticked by until the state decided to surplus the vessel in 1997. She was put up for auction and sold to Darrell McNabb of Bainbridge Island for $71,000.00. McNabb hoped to turn the Olympic into a sightseeing vessel and museum. He towed her across the harbor to begin her new life.
Sadly, nothing was done with the ferry. She remained moored where McNabb towed her after the 1997 sale. Broken glass littered her car deck, rust streaking her sides. Nesting crows looked out from the wheelhouse.
In 2006 the vessel was cleaned up inside, with some new paint being added to the passenger cabin. There was some interest in returning her to her home waters, but aside from the purchase price there would be the expense of towing her back to Chesapeake Bay. In July 2009 the ferry went up for bid on eBay. The Olympic was facing eviction from her moorage at Eagle Harbor and had to move.
Shortly after, the Olympic changed hands and was moved to Ketron Island. She is currently moored at Ketron Island, where her new owner is slowly dismantling her on the beach.