The ferry Contra Costa, sister ship to Solano c.1917
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History | |
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Namesake: | Solano County, California |
Owner: | Central Pacific Railroad |
Launched: | 1878 |
In service: | 1879 |
Out of service: | 1930 |
Status: | Scuttled for breakwater c.1931 |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Railroad ferry |
Length: | 424 ft (129 m) |
Beam: | 116 ft (35 m) |
Propulsion: | Sidewheels |
The Solano was a large railroad ferry, built as a sidewheel paddleboat that operated across the Carquinez Strait between Benicia and Port Costa in California.
She was constructed and operated by the Central Pacific Railroad to ferry entire trains on the Central Pacific transcontinental line to and from the San Francisco Bay Area. Once in service, the transcontinental railroad was re-routed to the sea level ferry crossing from its original course into the Bay Area via the Altamont Pass. Before her sister ship, Contra Costa, was constructed, Solano was the largest ferryboat ever built.
Solano, named for the county in which Benicia sits, was built in 1878 in Oakland, California. She was 424 feet (129 m) long and 116 feet (35 m) wide and was capable of carrying entire passenger trains or a 48-car freight train and locomotive. She was in service from 1879 to 1930.
Her sister ship, Contra Costa, was built in 1914 and also ran until 1930. She was slightly larger than Solano, and remains the largest rail ferryboat ever built. Contra Costa was named for the county in which Port Costa is located.
By 1927, the two ferries had reached their maximum capacity. On 31 May 1928 the Southern Pacific, successor to the Central Pacific in operations of the ferries, authorized construction of a railroad bridge from Benicia to Martinez just east of Port Costa. The railroad bridge opened in November 1930 and continues to serve the Union Pacific and Amtrak railroads.