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History of Uncle Sam Boat Tours - Part 1, Early Years


Early Years

Now that the river has once again awoken from its winter slumber the familiar sight of Uncle Sam tour boats cruising through the 1000 Islands will be welcomed by both local residents and tourists alike. Each year Uncle Sam Boat Tours gives thousands of people the opportunity to share in the natural beauty of the islands and to create lasting memories of their visit to the area. The company also has a significant economic impact on the region through the employment of local residents and the dollars spent in the community by the tourists it attracts.

The Uncle Sam boat line has a rich history in the village of Alexandria Bay and the company's origins can be traced back to the late 1800's.

Most historians will agree that the first commercial tours through the islands were pioneered by Captain Elisha Washington Visger in the 1870s with his small steam powered boat, the "Cygnet". The Visger family capitalized on the growing popularity of the region and built a thriving business serving the tourists with a fleet of steam ships that included the "Castanet" and the "Captain Visger".

Captain Visger, however, wasn't the only person in Alexandria Bay who recognized the potential of the burgeoning tourist business. A young man by the name of Clarence Stewart Thomson, better known simply as "Cap" (short for “Captain”), began a boat livery service to cater to the needs of both the tourists and local islanders. His business began with several St. Lawrence skiffs which were rowed to the desired destinations by well-muscled oarsmen and guides.

When the gasoline-powered marine engine was introduced early in the twentieth century it didn't take "Cap" Thomson long to embrace this new technology and he had soon built up a sizable fleet of motorboats to serve his growing clientele.

He named most of his boats either "Overland", which had dark mahogany hulls, or "Niagara", which were painted white. Two exceptions were the "New Niagara" which was the newest and largest tour boat of the group, and another runabout named “Brownie”. At one point in time Captain Thomson's boats, with their modern Redwing inboard engines, were among the speediest craft on the river. In 1924 Clarence incorporated his business and it became officially known as "Capt. C.S. Thomson's Motor Boat Tours, Inc.".

Around the same time Captain Thomson and William E. McDonell purchased the Crossmon House, a grand resort hotel located on the shore of the St. Lawrence River in Alexandria Bay. This new business venture was also incorporated in 1924 and Captain Thomson held a fifty percent ownership stake. This strategic acquisition not only gave the two gentlemen a foothold in the rapidly growing tourist hospitality market, it also ensured that "Cap" maintained a well-located base of operations for his tour boat business.

The introduction of the smaller and faster gasoline powered tour boats quickly lead to the demise of the steam powered vessels. It also meant that more men could afford to buy this type of craft and, before long, there was a very large and competitive tour boat industry operating out of Alexandria Bay. One of the earliest operators was Captain D. H. Haas who owned "Haas' MotorBoat Tours, Inc." and used the Cornwall's Dock for his boats. The Haas tour boats, which were all locally built, included the "Thousand Islander", "Shamrock", and "Shamrock II".

Another of the early tour boat entrepreneurs operating out of "The Bay" was Captain W.E. Adkins who ran the "Maxine" fleet of boats from the Thousand Island House Dock. In an advertising brochure from the time the flagship of Captain Adkins' fleet, the sixty-eight passenger "Maxine V", is described as, "the staunchest, most luxuriously appointed and roomiest motor boat in the Thousand Island district".

In 1927 Captain Haas and Captain Adkins decided to merge their operations and the new company that resulted was incorporated as "Combined 1000 Island Boat Tours, Inc.". The following year Captain Thomson realized that it was probably in his best interest, from a business perspective, to join the new boat line company, and he did so. A fourth boat line, "The Sis Thousand Island Boat Tours, Inc.", controlled by Claude R. Van Dresar and Harry Wagoner, also decided to join forces with the new company in 1928.

In 1930 a fifth company, "Ward Independent Boat Line", elected to join the "Combined" operation and they added their fleet of three “New Island Wanderers” to the mix. The Ward line was owned by Clifton Ward and his son Glen. At the time of the merger Clifton decided to retire and Glen assumed his responsibilities. The officers of the new company at this point in time were President, D.H. Haas; 1st Vice-President, C.S. Thomson; 2nd Vice-President, C.R. Van Dresar; 3rd Vice-President, Glen Ward; Secretary, Harry Wagoner; Treasurer, W.E. Adkins and the company’s stock was split evenly among the six men. Following the latest amalgamation the Combined Boat Tours had a fleet of twenty-one boats operating from several prime locations in Alexandria Bay.

Even after the merger of the five boat lines into the "Combined Boat Tours" company there were still several competing tour operators in Alexandria Bay. Among them were the "Paul Boat Line" operated by Captain Edgar Snyder and the newly created "Ward's Independent Boat Line" whose principals were Earl and Carl Ward. Several independent operators, such as Captain Joseph Truesdell with his boat "Carlotta II" and Captain W.J. Shepherd and the "Chum" were also battling to get their own piece of the tourist business pie.

Along with the conventional wooden tour boats the "Combined" boat line also had a couple of beautiful wooden speed boats in the fleet. Harry Wagoner of the "Sis" boat line was a part owner of the "Wagoner and Powers Speed Line, Inc" which ran the "RIOT" Chris-Craft speed boat from the Upper James Street dock and it too was merged into the new company. Advertised as being able to skim over the waves at 50 miles per hour, the "RIOT" added an extra offering for the thrill seekers among the tourists. It wasn't too long before the "RIOT II" and the "RIOT III" were also racing around the river giving their passengers an exciting ride.

In 1950 Captain Thomson purchased the outstanding shares of the Crossmon House from the McDonell estate after William passed away and established a partnership in the business with his son, A. Graham Thomson. As a result of this transaction the Thomson family now had complete ownership of the resort. A few years later the family also purchased the Pine Tree Point estate with plans to build another waterfront resort on the property. The family's accommodation businesses were run under the corporate umbrella known as "Thomson Resorts".

Also in 1950, the “Combined 1000 Island Boat Tours, Inc.” purchased the Peacock Yacht House from the Thousand Islands Club to serve as a maintenance and storage facility for the large fleet of wooden tour boats that the company was running. Tragically, the yacht house burned to the ground in 1992 and the old “Uncle Sam II”, which was being stored in the building at the time, was destroyed. (See Rick Tague's article on the Peacock Yacht House from March 2009 issue of T.I. Life)

Of the twenty-one boats that were operated by the "Combined" boat line only one was originally named "Uncle Sam". It was built in 1926 by Captain Van Dresar and proved to be very popular with the tourists. In 1930, the "Maxine II", one of W.E. Adkins' boats, was renamed "Uncle Sam II". It got to the point that the "Uncle Sam" boats were so popular that the passengers would wait for one of them and the other boats would have to run their tours at less than full capacity. In 1952 "Cap" Thomson, who was now President of the boat line, decided to change the name of the company to "Uncle Sam Boat Tours" and formed a new corporation under that name. All of the boats in the fleet were renamed as "Uncle Sam". The "Maxine III" became "Uncle Sam Jr.", the "Capt. Adkins" became "Uncle Sam IV", the “New Island Wanderer” became “Uncle Sam V” and so on.

The rebranding of the operation to the "Uncle Sam" moniker proved to be a wise decision as it gave the business a more unique identity and was very recognizable to the tourist market.

In 1955 a large consortium of Alexandria Bay businessmen formed a new boat line which was named "Pilgrim Boat Tours", presumably hoping to cash in on the patriotic theme that "Uncle Sam" had established. The beautiful old varnished Hutchinson launch "Pilgrim" that was built in 1923 became part of the fleet. The boats that were owned by Earl and Carl Ward, "Captain Cliff" and "Commander", became "Pilgrim II" and "Pilgrim III" respectively, while the old "Sis V" became "Pilgrim IV". In 1958 the brand new sixty-four foot long "Pilgrim V" was launched. With an extraordinarily large beam of over seventeen feet, the new "Pilgrim" flagship had a passenger capacity of 144. The new boat line even had their own speedboat, the "Pilgrim Jr.", to compete with the "RIOT" boats for the thrill seekers.

As the year 1960 approached "Cap" and Graham Thomson were forced to take a hard look at the business. Their fleet of "Uncle Sam" tour boats was aging and the new, larger "Pilgrim V" only reinforced the fact that the competition was making inroads into the market. Something definitely needed to be done to re-establish "Uncle Sam Boat Tours" as the premier boat line in Alexandria Bay.

Next month - Part 2 - Uncle Sam Boat Tours Reinvents Itself

Addendum

While doing research for this article I made use of many different resource materials, such as the NYS Historic Newspapers of Jefferson County, a searchable database of old newspapers (http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/titles/places/new_york/jefferson/) and several pieces of tour boat related memorabilia from my personal collection. I also made extensive use of Bowling Green State University's Historical Collections of the Great Lakes database.

As an example, while searching the historic newspapers I came across an article from the June 24, 1925 edition of Ogdensburg's "The Republican Journal" about an explosion and fire that destroyed the Haas' boat lines tour boat, "Thousand Islander", at M.J. King's dock in Ivy Lea. The "Thousand Islander" pictured below (Figure 15) was built in 1926, so it was obviously a replacement for her namesake that was destroyed the previous year.

 

Figure 16 King The Great Lakes Vessel Online Index entry for the tour boat "Thousand Islander". Used with the permission of the Historical Collections of the Great Lakes, Bowling Green State University.

Acknowledgements

 

I would like to thank the following individuals and organizations for the assistance that they offered during the preparation of this article:

  • Ron Thomson of Uncle Sam Boat Tours who provided a great deal of valuable historical information regarding the Thomson family and the Uncle Sam boat line. (http://usboattours.com/ )
  • The Cornwall Brothers Store and Museum for allowing me access to their archival material related to the history of the local tour boat industry. (http://alexandriahistorical.com/)
  • Robert Graham, Archivist for the Historical Collections of the Great Lakes at Bowling Green State University, for allowing me to use information from their on-line database in the article. (https://www.bgsu.edu/library/cac/collections/hcgl.html)
  • Rick Roberts of Global Genealogy for assisting in gathering genealogical information for the article. (http://globalgenealogy.com/)

 

 

By Tom King

Tom King and his wife Marion have lived in Milton, Ontario for the past 30 years, where they both worked and raised their family of three children; Kris, Mike and Becca. Tom still has a strong attachment to the Thousand Islands, having grown up in Gananoque and being a “river rat” from a very early age. The family tries to return to the islands every summer and for the past several years have been renting a cottage on Sampson (a.k.a. Heritage) Island, just out from Gananoque.

Editor’s note:  The King family is well known in the region as the “J.W. King Water Filtration Plant”, which stands on the shore of the St. Lawrence River in the Gananoque Marina Basin, was named after Tom’s father, in recognition of the contributions that he made to the upgrading of the Town’s water system, while acting as Chairman of the P.U.C.   Click here to see all of Tom’s articles.

Please feel free to leave comments about this article using the form below. Comments are moderated and we do not accept comments that contain links. As per our privacy policy, your email address will not be shared and is inaccessible even to us. For general comments, please email the editor.

Comments

Jayne Baker Tremaine
Comment by: Jayne Baker Tremaine
Left at: 6:18 PM Thursday, April 14, 2016
Nicely done. Thank you.
Joyce Byne Saladin
Comment by: Joyce Byne Saladin
Left at: 6:58 PM Thursday, April 14, 2016
Very interesting. I remember the Uncle Sam tour boats well.
I grew up in Clayton and recall tour boats there as well. Any history of that line? I forgot the name of the company. I enjoyed many tours there and they even had moonlight tours. Lovely memories.
Deane Parkhurst
Comment by: Deane Parkhurst
Left at: 8:12 PM Thursday, April 14, 2016
How well I remember. Best part of swimming on the "rocks" at 1000 Island Park was waiting for the tour boats to come by. Grab your inner tube and ride the wake as they passed by. Carl Ward was Dick Ward's Dad, knew him well as Dick or "Ace" as he was known, a part of our River Rat gang way back when. They had a cottage on Headland Ave. at The Park. Years later visiting the folks and going to Boldt Castle with the wife and kids I recognized the shuttle boat as the Maxine V, then named Uncle Sam Whatever. Said so to the "elderly" driver. His reply: "Looks like you know your boats." That kind of thing does wonders for the ego. Looking forward to Part Two.
Doug King
Comment by: Doug King
Left at: 9:24 AM Friday, April 15, 2016
Well done Tom !! I am looking forward to your next installment.
Mike
Comment by: Mike
Left at: 9:52 AM Friday, April 15, 2016
Tom - wonderful article, I recall a lot of these boats in the 60's near Clayton, very classic lines to them and added beauty to the already beautiful islands. Keep bringing this good info to us.
Mike
Mike
Comment by: Mike
Left at: 9:55 AM Friday, April 15, 2016
Tom - wonderful article, I recall a lot of these boats in the 60's near Clayton, very classic lines to them and added beauty to the already beautiful islands. Keep bringing this good info to us.
Mike
Mike
Comment by: Mike
Left at: 10:01 AM Friday, April 15, 2016
Joyce - I agree with you, Tom's article is very interesting! I am so happy that ThousandIslandsLife.com brings this info to us each month!
To answer your question, you may be thinking of the American Boat Line. You can find a few articles on this website, just look up past issues and my name (Mike Fesko) under Authors. Two of the three articles are about the ABL. In addition, I found some of those old tour boats a couple years ago, and documented that on my site at (http://www.1000islandssteelking.com/where-are-the-old-1000-islands-tour-boats/).
Mike
Peter Glazier
Comment by: Peter Glazier
Left at: 11:28 AM Friday, April 15, 2016
Some sleuthing may be required, but does anybody know the origins of the tour boat that was pulled out near Trois Isles?? The appearance looked like it was from the 20/30's.Its long gone now, but back in the 60"s [?] it was visible on the little island next to Hill as you crossed the small span of the Canadian bridge. Thanks in advance.
Eric Schulz
Comment by: Eric Schulz
Left at: 8:25 AM Saturday, April 16, 2016
Hi Peter I remember it well it was there up until about 1970. I've often wondered what boat she was too. I also remember the burned hulk of "Bacardi" [I believe] which burned at the dock on Constance I and was pulled ashore on Huckleberry I if I remember. The rusted engine was visible for many years in the 70's. Ring a bell?
Peter Glazier
Comment by: Peter Glazier
Left at: 9:30 PM Sunday, April 17, 2016
Yes...I wondered where that came from..
Steve King
Comment by: Steve King
Left at: 10:33 AM Monday, April 18, 2016
Great article Tom, brings back a lot of memories form past years seeing those old beauties on the St. Lawrence. Look forward to part 2+
Dick Thomas
Comment by: Dick Thomas
Left at: 5:33 PM Tuesday, April 19, 2016
I grew up on Thousand Island Park and enjoyed swimming from the rocks out to Bath House Shoal. It was great catching the Uncle Sam waves, but nothing like the waves from the Gananoque boats. I remember riding on an Uncle Sam boat as it was being passed by the competitor. As a child, I thought that the narrow beamed Uncle Sam was going to roll over as a result of the other's wake.
Where did the tour boat come from that is now serving as a guest house off of Murray Island on the Clayton side?
Tom King
Comment by: Tom King
Left at: 8:23 AM Wednesday, April 20, 2016
I believe the cottage that Dick Thomas is referring to is "The Tour Boat Cottage" on Wintergreen Island. The vessel that was used for the cottage was the lovely old Edith II which was operated by the Yacht Edith Lines out of Clayton. She was built in 1926 and was reported as "dismantled" in 1964. Here is a link to the cottage rental website which has a few pictures. http://www.wintergreenislandrentals.com/#!cottages/c1jh6
Deane Parkhurst
Comment by: Deane Parkhurst
Left at: 8:23 PM Wednesday, April 20, 2016
Just re-read the story and noticed the post card of the "Riot" speed boat. It was owned by one the the Alex Bay resorts, available for rides for their guests Judge Yahle owned an identical Chris Craft based in the family boat house on 1000 Island Park. (Wish I could remember his first name. He was a children's court judge in Syracuse.) Six kids in the family, the two youngest Carol and Alan, members of my old River Rat gang. The Judge could never resist getting into a race whenever the two met on The River. Even if it was when they were on the way to Clayton on Sunday morning to attend Mass. I recall stories of his wife's disapproval. The Yahle boat was named Black Falcon. Wonder what happened to her.
Mark Adkins
Comment by: Mark Adkins
Left at: 9:22 AM Tuesday, January 1, 2019
I have often wondered about my grandfather, “jolly”. I know almost nothing about our families past. Thank you.