Little Harbor Launch (Unknown)
Gallery
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Historic Image of a Gasoline Launch at a Regatta in Bayfield, Wisconsin
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Historic Postcard of Launches Docked as Part of the Fishing Fleet in Erie, Pennsylvania
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Historic Postcard of the Dock at Eagle River, Wisconsin with a Similar Launch in the Foreground
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Historic Postcard of a Similar Launch on Okauchee Lake Circa 1908
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A Similar Gasoline Launch named Intrepid
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Overview of the Photogrammetry Model of the Little Harbor Launch. View it Here: https://skfb.ly/oVKnO
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Top View of the Photogrammetry Model of the Little Harbor Launch. View it Here: https://skfb.ly/oVKnO
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View of the Bow of the Photogrammetry Model of the Little Harbor Launch. View it Here: https://skfb.ly/oVKnO
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View of the Hull of the Photogrammetry Model of the Little Harbor Launch. View Here: https://skfb.ly/oVKnO
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Stern View of the Photogrammetry Model of the Little Harbor Launch. View it Here: https://skfb.ly/oVKnO
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The Cutwater, Stempost and Bow as Visible from the Port Side Looking Aft
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The Little Harbor Launch's Stern Deck, Steerage Hatch and Transom.
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View of Chain Locker, Ship's Bell and Fuel Tank with Filler Neck
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Little Harbor Launch's Collapsed Standing Roof, Fragments of Stanchions and Exhaust Stack.
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The Exhaust Manifold of the Marine Engine Under the Collapsed Standing Roof of the Little Harbor Launch
By The Numbers
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Built
Sank
0
Lives Lost
0
Depth (ft)
 
 
Service History

After extensive research, very little is known specifically about the Little Harbor Launch. Research is ongoing to discover the vessel's identity and story. The Little Harbor Launch wreck provides historians and archaeologists the opportunity to study these once common vessels. The Little Harbor Launch represents a class of vessels that were once common on Wisconsin's waterways: the gasoline launch. These type of boats were used for fishing, hunters, light cargo, workers, and vacationers. On inland waterways they were the early tour boats of the Wisconsin Dells region and along the Door County Peninsula they were also used to transport fruit pickers to the various orchards.


These launches were the very first boat that was made widely available to the average American consumer. They could be built to a variety of sizes, for a variety of uses and could be fitted with multiple different engines. They could be powered by gasoline engines like the Little Harbor Launch, steam engines, diesel engines, naphtha engines and even electric engines. These vessels could be built to whatever specification the consumer desired. Steam engines became reliable, efficient and economical for use in small boats. As steam engines were used more and more, regulation increased. In 1878 the US Treasury Department recommended licensed for engineers and pilot of all steam launches in the United States. This restriction and the cost of licensing spurred innovation of alternative power sources for marine engines. This included Naphtha engines, Naphtha is a flammable liquid hydrocarbon mixture that was brought to boiling in an enclosed boiler like a steam engine. Launches like the Little Harbor Launch were constructed and used between 1890 and 1930.


Today

The wreckage of the Little Harbor Launch was first discovered in 2021 by a Wisconsin Coastal Management Bathymetric Survey of Green Bay.
 
Nearby
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