Thursday, August 31, 2006

The Governor Stanford


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The Governor Stanford
The tourism business was picking up well enough that W.H. Lapham of South Tahoe built a double decked steamer in 1872. The Governor Stanford was named after Central Pacific director turned politician Leland Stanford. This steamboat was 92 feet long, 15 feet wide and drew four feet when fully loaded. Her base was, as many steamers that came to be in the 1870s, Tahoe City.

Up to 125 passengers could be carried, making her the first large scale steamer on Tahoe. It took a crew of six to man the $15,000 vessel, Lapham himself being the captain. The size made the Governor Stanford a slow ride, only running at 6 knots at full boiler pressure.

An 1873 newspaper reporter complained about the slow speed, poor seating accommodations, a short smokestack that spewed cinders and ash on the deck passengers and the lack of an awning to keep the sun off the passengers who sat on the upper deck. Meals had to be taken standing up in the saloon, and the alcohol was not of a high quality. Still the scenery made the trip worthwhile.

In mid-1873 Lapham installed a new steam boiler, increasing her speed to an advertised 14 knots, but it was still considered barely faster than a sailboat.

The Governor Stanford was fast enough to make a complete trip around Lake Tahoe in a day quite comfortably. It would leave Tahoe City at 8 a.m., reaching Emerald Bay at 10 a.m., Lapham’s on the South Shore at Noon, then back north to Glenbrook on the east shore at 2 p.m., then steaming to Hot Springs on the North Shore before returning to Tahoe City by 5 p.m.

Stage connections allowed a visitor to leave Truckee at 6 a.m., meet the steamer, travel around the lake and take a return stage to Truckee in the evening. More leisurely travelers would stop at one of several lakeside resorts for a day or two and enjoy the scenery. Another stage connection from Glenbrook would take passengers to Carson City, where they met the Virginia & Truckee Railroad.

The Governor Stanford steamed her way around Tahoe until 1883, when the machinery was removed and she broke up in a winter storm.

By Gordon Richards
Echoes From the Past

August 22, 2006

Gordon Richards is the Research Historian for the Truckee Donner Historical Society. Please visit the Truckee Donner Historical Society Web site at http://truckeehistory.tripod.com. The e-mail address is tdhs@inreach.com. You may leave a message at 530-582-0893. Past articles by Gordon Richards are available at www.sierrasun.com in the archives.

http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php
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Transcribed by Dee Sardoch
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The San Andreas Independent
San Andreas, Calaveras County, CA
Saturday, 29 October 1859
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CHANGED RESIDENCE -- Mr. L.W. LAPHAM, late and for many years a resident of Murphy’s, and one of the original proprietors of the Big Tree ranch, has taken up a permanent residence on the shore of Lake Bigler, Nevada Territory. His house is directly on the Placerville stage road. It is his intention to construct a number of sail-boats this winter, and on the opening of spring, to launch them on the lake for the accommodation of excursionists, who may feel an interest in minutely exploring that beautiful sheet of water, or taking therefrom some of its scaly tenants. By the way, it is said that the trout of Lake Bigler often reach the enormous size of 25 or 30 pounds.

BTW, Lake Bigler is now known as Lake Tahoe.

Monday, August 07, 2006

Lowell Winship Lapham March 20, 1922 – February 8, 2006

Lowell Winship Lapham, M.D., passed away on the 8th of February 2006 in the Cleveland Clinic at the age of 83. Dr. Lapham was a professor of neuropathology at the University of Rochester from 1964 to 1992. He "retired" in 1992, but continued to be active academically as an Emeritus Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine working on neuropathologic studies with the Republic of Seychelles and the Seychelles Child Development Study. Dr. Lapham had been residing at the Kendal retirement community in Oberlin, Ohio. His family -- wife Miriam, M.F.A. (Oberlin graduate, 1944); children Joan, Steven, Judy, and Jennifer; and four grandchildren -- had all visited recently. He was with family, comfortable, and listening to his favorite classical music when he died.

Dr. Lapham's professional career was long and brilliant. Born in New Hampton, Iowa, he grew up in Charles City, Iowa. He graduated from Oberlin College Phi Beta Kappa in 1943 and AOA from Harvard Medical School, cum laude, in 1948. He trained in clinical medicine (internal medicine and neurology) at Boston City Hospital under Dr. Derek Denny-Brown and Dr. Joe Foley, and at the Neurological Institute of New York under Dr. Houston Merritt. His fellowship in neuropathology was taken at Massachusetts General Hospital under the guidance of Dr. Raymond D. Adams. His first faculty appointment was at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1955. In 1964 he moved to the University of Rochester to serve as Head of Neuropathology. After retiring he traveled extensively, often with family members, to such destinations as China, Africa, Australia, Ireland, Papua New Guinea and Fiji. Dr. Lapham's retirement years at Kendal recapitulated his college years, both happily based in Oberlin.

Dr. Lapham was both a bona fide "bench scientist" and a world-class clinical neuropathologist. His contributions to the field of neuropathology were substantial, consisting of many original studies published in major journals as well as training several leaders in the field. For his local contributions to the University of Rochester and Strong Memorial Hospital, he was chosen to be the Henry C. and Bertha H. Buswell Distinguished Service Fellow in 1980-1981. In 1994, in recognition of his scholarly achievements, he received the Award for Meritorious Contributions to Neuropathology from the American Association of Neuropathologists, the premier neuropathologic organization, with an international membership. At the time of his retirement, Dr. Lapham was recognized for his significant contributions to the neurosciences and neuropathology program and to medical student and resident education at the University of Rochester Medical Center.