The first ferry service began in 1872 and proved popular. The Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Steamboat Company was subsequently founded in 1883 by several backers, including entrepreneur
P.T. Barnum, and Port Jefferson seaman Charles E. Tooker. The ferry company originally operated steamship service, but the acquisition of the ''Martha's Vineyard'' in 1968 ended steamship service. Since then, the company has been referred to in signage and conversation as the Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Ferry, but the term Steamboat Company is still used legally. Since 1980, the President has been Brian McAllister who also owns one hundred percent of the company's shares. The McAllisters purchased the company in 1960 from Joseph Tooker, Charles Tooker's grandson. During the 1980s, the ferry company offered year-round service for the first time in company's history. The entrances of the
Grand Republic (not to be confused with the current Grand Republic, built in 2003) and the
Park City into service in 1983 and 1986, respectively, were each met with skyrocketing ridership. In 1999, with the entrance of the
PT Barnum into service, the ferry company began operating hourly, three-vessel service on weekends, holidays, and during the summer. The ferry company still operates only two vessels on off-season weekdays and during periods of vessel maintenance, with departures every 90 minutes. A new
Grand Republic entered service in 2003, while the old one was sold to
Cross Sound Ferry and renamed the
Mary Ellen. On May 29, 2009, the
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit upheld a
United States District Court for the District of Connecticut ruling that the Bridgeport Port Authority was unconstitutionally collecting taxes from the ferry company and passengers and using the tax money for purposes other than for the benefit of the ferry company and passengers. In 2013, the ferry company unveiled plans to move its Bridgeport dock across
Bridgeport Harbor to a new and larger terminal on Seaview Avenue at the former site of Turbana Corporation. The city approved the plan in April 2014, and the new terminal was slated to open in 2020; however, due to delays owing to environmental and legal issues and the COVID-19 pandemic, construction on the new terminal has yet to commence as of 2025. In June 2016, the Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Ferry made significant changes to its ticketing system. Tickets were for many years purchased while on board the vessel (at a purser's booth) and turned in to a crew member before walking or driving off. However, in June 2016, the new ticket system was implemented, where tickets are purchased and turned in before boarding the vessel. Tickets are sold online, over the phone, and inside the terminals. The new tickets contain bar codes, which are scanned prior to boarding, and can also be displayed on a cell phone or mobile device.
Incidents On July 26, 2024, the
Park City collided with a construction barge after losing propulsion as she was docking in Bridgeport. No injuries occurred, while the
Park City suffered minor damage, and re-entered service two weeks later after undergoing repairs. ==Ports==