- This week in Louisiana history. October 7, 1829. Gov. Derbigny suffers fatal accident when thrown from carriage.
- This week in New Orleans history. On October 7, 1816 the
Washington, built by Henry M. Shreve, was the first
double-decker. steamboat to arrive in New Orleans and became
the model for the classic style of Mississippi river boats —
flat-bottomed, two stories, steam-powered paddle wheel mounted
on the stern, two smoke-stacks. First used to carry cargo it
was soon open for passenger transportation. The Washington
moved at lightning speed compared to other boats on the rivers
— 16 mph upstream and downstream at as much as 25 mph.
Shreve launched the boat earlier that year on the Monongahela River just above Pittsburgh. Shreve's cleverly designed Washington had all the features that would soon come to characterize the classic Mississippi riverboat: a two-story deck, a stern-mounted paddle wheel powered by a high-pressure steam engine, a shallow, flat-bottomed hull, and a pilothouse framed by two tall chimneys. Perfectly designed for the often-shallow western rivers like the Mississippi and Missouri, the Washington proved itself on its inaugural voyage the following spring. Steaming upriver against the current with full cargo, the Washington reached Louisville in only 25 days, demonstrating that the powerful new generation of steamboats could master the often-treacherous currents of the mighty western rivers. Soon the Washington began to offer regular passenger and cargo service between New Orleans and Louisville.
- Postcard from Louisiana. Isis Lovestone reads Bruce's cards in Jackson Square.
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