Save the Delta Queen: A private initiative to save the steamboat Delta Queen A private initiative to save the steamboat Delta Queen
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  • Delta Queen Memories

    I was born in 1950, right around the transition from steam to diesel. I still remember the sound of those chime whistles in the night.
    I was lucky enough to live near Cincinnati, OH, then home port of the Delta Queen. I often heard it’s large 10” Lunkenheimer, whistle, which was made in Cincinnati. I also enjoyed hearing its steam calliope. Although we nearly lost the Delta Queen in 1970 due to a misinterpretation of the Safety at Sea Law, a campaign to Save the Queen prevailed and the Delta Queen was granted an exemption. Cincinnati continued as the home port of the Delta Queen through the 1970s and into the 1980s. Even when the home port was moved, the exemptions have always been granted until this year. I hope that President Elect Barack Obama can reverse Representative Oberstar’s decision.
    In 1985, my wife, Patty and I moved to Paducah, KY where she grew up. We now have a son, Stephen, who turned 15 in April. We still got to occasionally see and hear the Delta, Mississippi and American Queens when they passed through Paducah, but it appears this era may be ending. I hope for the sake of future generations that this is not the case.
    — Richard & Patty Weisenberber

  • Share your memories!

    Would you like to share your Delta Queen memories here, too? Please send me an e-mail with your memories (keep it short, please!) along with a picture of yourself, or alternatively a Delta Queen picture from the time your memories are dating back. E-Mail: franz.neumeier@steamboats.org

The Delta Queen Nominated as One of America’s Most Endangered Historic Places

Jan 13, 2009

The Delta Queen has been nominated for inclusion on the National Trust for Preservation’s 2009 list of America’s Most Endangered Historic Places. The nomination was submitted in December by noted Kentucky preservationist and longtime Trust member Donald E. Clare, Jr.

Whether you are a member of the Trust or not, please contact them, by phone, fax, letter, or email to second Don’s nomination. You don’t need to go into detail. A simple "Please include the Delta Queen on your 2009 list of America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places" will do the job.

National Trust for Historic Preservation
Communications Office/11 Most Endangered
1785 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202-588-6141
Fax: 202-588-6038

Email: 11Most@nthp.org

And here’s where you can learn more about the 11 Most Endangered List: www.preservationnation.org/issues/11-most-endangered/

About the Delta Queen

The Delta Queen is the last traditional steamboat carrying overnight passengers on America’s inland waterways. For that reason, she has been designated a National Historic Landmark.

Vicki Webster, leader of the grassroots Save the Delta Queen Campaign, said, “We are still hopeful that the President will act to save this literally unique and irreplaceable part of our history. If he does not, we will continue our efforts on the legislative front when the 111th Congress convenes in January. In 1970, the only other time we had difficulty renewing the exemption, the Trust’s then-president James Biddle played a crucial role in our victory. We are counting on the Trust to come to our aid once again.”

Mr. Biddle was also the key player behind the boat’s 1970 inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places. It was a joint designation by the Department of the Interior and the National Trust for Historic Preservation. This is an excerpt from the Trust’s announcement of the listing: The Delta Queen is the last survivor of a once thriving fleet of steam paddleboats plying the inland waters of the United States, and deserves to, indeed, must survive as a living reminder of an important era of America history. . . . The loss of the Delta Queen as an operating vessel carrying overnight passengers on the Mississippi and its tributaries would be an irreplaceable one and would remove the last remaining link with the steam-boating tradition of nineteenth and early twentieth century America.
 

1 Comment »

One Response to “The Delta Queen Nominated as One of America’s Most Endangered Historic Places”

  1. Neal Kapp Says:

    It Can Bee A s Simple As this, here it is QUANTITY not quality. We have enough reference material here to back it…

    To Whom it may concern,

    Please add this email as show of support to add the Delta Queen to the 11 most endangered list.

    Thanks and regards,
    Neal Kapp
    Anaheim, Ca

    SAVE THE DELTA QUEEN
    This Historic Landmark needs your help!
    Find out what you can do, at
    http://www.save-the-delta-queen.org
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=FdD0LYHv2N4
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=O-CTFrDCjj4

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