05/24/2026
Sunday on a Steamboat 5/24/2026 DISTRICT of COLUMBIA
The DISTRICT of COLUMBIA was built in 1925 in Wilmington, Delaware, for the Norfolk and Washington Steamboat Company and was the last vessel constructed for the line.
Steel-hulled, the DISTRICT of COLUMBIA measured 298 feet in length, with a 51-foot beam and a 16-foot depth of hold. She carried up to 600 passengers and featured 165 staterooms. The September 13, 1924, issue of the Ledger-Star (Norfolk, Virginia) described her as “modern in every way,” highlighting amenities such as running ice water, hot and cold bathing water, private tiled bathrooms, steam heat, mechanical air-cooling equipment, electric fans, mahogany-finished saloons, a barber shop, steam steering gear, and mechanically operated lifeboat davits. The newspaper also emphasized her “extra watertight steel safety bulkheads” — a reassuring feature only twelve years after the TITANIC disaster.
Despite her modern design, the DISTRICT of COLUMBIA experienced several mishaps. In 1932, she collided with the freighter YAMACHICHI near Old Point Comfort, suffering severe damage to her upper works. In January 1935, carrying only 75 passengers and 29 automobiles, she ran aground seven miles above Colonial Beach while navigating through dense fog. Two years later, on April 26, 1937, she encountered a violent storm after departing Old Point Comfort, facing 65 mph winds and 30-foot waves that wrecked her dining room.
Her worst disaster came on October 31, 1948. In dense “pea soup” fog, the DISTRICT of COLUMBIA departed Old Point Comfort, sounding her bells and whistle as required, when she sideswiped the tanker TEXACO GEORGIA. Investigators believed a strong tide pulled the steamer to starboard despite efforts to steer to port. The collision tore away roughly 75 feet of the ship’s starboard side, destroying ten cabins. Tragically, one passenger, still in her cabin, was killed, and several others among the 59 passengers onboard were injured.
At the time, the DISTRICT of COLUMBIA was the Norfolk and Washington Steamboat Company’s only remaining vessel. Already facing declining revenues, the company was overwhelmed by the cost of catastrophic damage and a lawsuit filed by Texaco, ultimately forcing it into bankruptcy.
Purchased by the Old Bay Line for $75,552, ($1.06 million today) the DISTRICT of COLUMBIA was repaired, converted from coal to oil, and equipped with radar. She returned to service on the Potomac — a new route for the Old Bay Line — but continued declines in passenger traffic led to reduced service and eventual retirement. After the Old Bay Line ceased operations in 1962, the steamer was sold to private owners in New England and was destroyed by fire in 1969.
All photos from the Jack Shaum Collection. Many thanks to Jack for his lifelong passion for the history of steamboats.