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Empress of the North

EmpressOfTheNorth.jpg
Empress of the North on the Columbia River in 2005
History
Name:
  • 2003–2013: Empress of the North
  • 2014–present: American Empress
Owner: 2013–present: American Queen Steamboat Company
Port of registry: Juneau, Alaska,  United States
Builder: Nichols Bros. Boat Builders - Freeland WA, USA
Cost: US $50 million (2003)
In service: 2003
Homeport: Vancouver, Washington, USA (2014)
Identification:
General characteristics
Class and type: River cruise ship
Tonnage: 5,975 GT
Length: 116 m (380 ft 7 in)
Beam: 29 m (95 ft 2 in)
Draft: 3.8 m (12 ft 6 in)

The American Empress is a 360-foot (110 m) diesel-powered paddle-wheeler that was formerly operated by Majestic America Line and named the Empress of the North. She was built in 2002 at the Nichols Brothers Boat Builders shipyard on Whidbey Island, in the U.S. state of Washington, for $50 million and debuted as a cruise ship in 2003. She is listed as accommodating 223 guests, and originally cruised Alaska's Inside Passage, the Pacific Northwest, and the Columbia River. While being operated by Majestic America Line, the ship was decorated with a 19th century Russian theme, but with Alaskan touches in the form of carvings and masks.

During the ship's time in Alaska, several smaller port cities such as Wrangell and Petersburg depended on the visits by the Empress of the North for a substantial amount of tourist-related commerce.

In 2013, the Empress of the North was acquired by the American Queen Steamboat Company, which in 2014 renamed the ship American Empress and placed her back into service on the Columbia and Snake Rivers, after five years out of service. The ship's home port is now Vancouver, Washington.

During her years as the Empress of the North, the ship ran aground five times. She hit bottom during her launching from the yard when the restraint system failed and some of the boat builders had to jump in the waters of Puget Sound to avoid being run over. She struck a navigation lock in October 2003 at the Ice Harbor Dam on the Snake River, and suffered another grounding in November 2003 near The Dalles in the Columbia River. She grounded again in March 2006 near Washougal in the Columbia River.


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Wikipedia

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