Manufactured for the Stikine River service sistership of Minto'', in 1898
Minto was one of three steamboats built of steel and wood that were intended for service on the
Stikine River during the
Klondike gold rush. The other vessels were
Moyie and
Tyrrell. The Canadian Pacific Railway which commissioned the vessels had hoped to develop an "All-Canada" route to the Yukon gold fields that bypassed the other routes, generally through
Skagway,
Dyea, or from
St. Michael on the
Bering Sea all the way up the long
Yukon River. All the parts for these steamers were manufactured in
Toronto, Ontario and shipped to the west coast of Canada for assembly.
Reassigned to Arrow Lakes When the Stikine Route to the Klondike proved to be a failure in the first three months of its opening in 1898, the C.P.R. was left with a number of steamers, including
Minto (then in a disassembled state) for which it needed to find routes. The C.P.R. decided to assemble
Tyrrell in Vancouver,
Moyie on
Kootenay Lake, and
Minto at the Bulger shipyard on upper Arrow Lake at
Nakusp.
Minto was needed on the Arrow Lakes because the C.P.R.'s big new steamer
Nakusp had been destroyed by fire in 1897. It is possible that some preliminary assembly work was done on
Moyie and
Minto in Vancouver before they were shipped inland still in pieces. The construction program for the Stikine River service, and the eventually assembly of
Minto and her sisters, was supervised by the veteran steamboat captain
James W. Troup, the superintendent of C.P.R.'s Lake and River service. C.P.R. decided to assemble
Moyie first, and her composite steel and wood hull was riveted together first at
Nelson, BC. The assembly crew then moved over to
Nakusp on upper Arrow Lake and on and then on July 26, 1898, began work on the
Minto. Reportedly there were literally 1,000 pieces for each sternwheeler. ==Durable hull design==