Vanderbilt's company had had an exclusive contract ferrying passengers across the isthmus through
Nicaragua, but in 1856 the Nicaraguan government cancelled the agreement. The ship was then sold to Captain John Wright, renamed
Commodore and put on West Coast routes, including from its new home port of
San Francisco to
British Columbia, as gold prospectors travelled to the
Fraser Canyon Gold Rush. The ship played a small but symbolic role in the history of the state of
Oregon. After President
James Buchanan signed the bill admitting Oregon to the Union on February 14, 1859, the news was wired to
St. Louis, carried by stagecoach to San Francisco, and loaded on
Commodore on March 10. On March 15, the ship docked in
Portland, delivering the official notification of statehood to the people of Oregon. By 1861, the ship had fallen into disrepair and was sold again to the
California Steam Navigation Company, who
retrofitted it, restored the original name of
Brother Jonathan, and kept it on the northward route from San Francisco to Vancouver via Portland, allowing prospectors to work the Salmon River Gold Rush. Over the next several years, the vessel gained a reputation as being one of the finest steamers on the Pacific Coast, being the fastest ship to make the run, sixty-nine hours each way. However, in the summer of 1865 the ship suffered a collision with a
barkentine on the
Columbia River, damaging the
hull. Captain Samuel DeWolf, who had just assumed command of the vessel in June, recommended that the ship be repaired in
dry dock, but the company performed the repairs while still in the water, as there was so much business that a backlog of cargo began to form.
1862 smallpox epidemic When
Brother Jonathan traveled north from San Francisco and arrived in
Victoria, British Columbia, on 12 March 1862, it brought along a miner infected with
smallpox. When the disease began to infect Indigenous people camped around Victoria, colonial authorities forced them to leave but as they made their return trip home, they spread the disease throughout the
Salish Sea area and
Pacific Northwest, from
Puget Sound to southern Alaska. According to historian John Lutz, "The citizens of Victoria, one could say, panicked. Or, one could say, with a less charitable view, that they deliberately drove the Indigenous people out of town, and that spread the disease back to their home communities up and down the coast." Estimates of the death toll vary. Portland State University anthropologist Robert T. Boyd suggests that, by the end of 1862, 14,000 Indigenous people along the coast had died from the outbreak. Other estimates suggest that, over the next year, at least 30,000 Indigenous people in the region died. At least half of the population of Indigenous peoples along the coast died, leaving behind "mass graves, deserted villages, traumatized survivors and societal collapse" that facilitated the colonization of the area. ==Shipwreck==