As railways began to be completed along the banks of the Columbia, the steamboats, tied to the river which required too much loading and unloading of passengers and cargo, proved to be unable to compete, and one by one they were taken off the Middle River. The turn of the
Hassalo came on Saturday, May 26, 1888, under the command of
Captain James W. Troup. The event had been announced well in advance, and three thousand people gathered along the banks of the Columbia to watch. The channel through the Cascades was six miles (10 km) long. Describing the excursion up river, the Sunday Oregonian wrote: The excursion boats arrived at the Cascades, and the excursionists disembarked on the north, Washington Territory, side. There was a scramble up the bank to board the portage train which was to take the crowd to the Upper Cascades where the run was to start. There weren't enough seats on the train, so a part of the crowd had to wait for the train to run up to the Upper Cascades and return. People had also come down from The Dalles on the Harvest Queen, which ran down to the Cascades with the Hassalo. Other people came up on a train from Bonneville so that there were about 3,000 excursionists overall. As the crowds assembled, both
Hassalo and
Harvest Queen were at the Upper Cascades wharf with all flags flying. When everything was finally ready, the scene was described by the Sunday Oregonian's correspondent:
Hassalo, with just 15 people on board, passed by the people on the bank in just 30 seconds and disappeared from sight around a bend in the river. As she ran down the rest of the six-mile (10 km) run, she exchanged whistle blasts with locomotives on the railway tracks besides the river. Once at the end of the rapids, which she ran in seven minutes, Captain Troup took
Hassalo down the Columbia and up the
Willamette River to Portland. Remarkable as this was, even the run of
Hassalo was not the fastest through the Cascades. On June 3, 1881, captain Troup had taken
R.R. Thompson, one of the same boats that was to run on the
Hassalo excursion seven years later, through the Cascades, completing the run twenty seconds faster, and this speed was bested exactly one year later by the
R.R. Thompson, itself, when, then, under the mastery of the earlier mentioned and unrivaled riverboatman, Captain
John McNulty. For those times there were not 3,000 people to watch, nor was a famous photograph taken, so the
R.R. Thompson runs are largely forgotten by history. ==Puget Sound service==