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Coordinates: 45°18′00″N 122°41′35″W / 45.30012°N 122.69315°W / 45.30012; -122.69315
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|caption = The Canby Ferry in Oregon, with south bank of the Willamette in view
|caption = The Canby Ferry in Oregon, with south bank of the Willamette in view
|crosses = [[Willamette River]]
|crosses = [[Willamette River]]

Revision as of 22:51, 21 June 2011

Canby Ferry
The Canby Ferry in Oregon, with south bank of the Willamette in view
LocaleCanby, Oregon
WaterwayWillamette River
Transit typeElectric
RouteLocust Street (to the south)
Mountain Road (to the north)
CarriesMotor vehicles, bicycles, pedestrians
Terminals2
OperatorClackamas County, Oregon
Began operation1914
Predecessornone
Travel time3 minutes[1]
No. of vesselsM.J. Lee II
Daily vehicles350–400[1]
Yearly vehicles100,000+[1]
A car onboard the Canby Ferry

The Canby Ferry (formally the M.J. Lee II) is a ferry in the U.S. state of Oregon that connects Canby, and Wilsonville/Stafford in Clackamas County across the Willamette River. It has been in service since 1914. It has been replaced and updated several times, most recently in 2001. It is one of three remaining ferries on the Willamette River.

The ferry has room for six cars (or 75 tons) and a total passenger capacity of 49. A toll is charged for motor vehicles, whilst pedestrians and bicyclists travel for free. As of 2011, a passenger car costs $2.00, a motorcycle $1.00, and $12.00 is charged if a vehicle takes up the entire ferry.[2] The ferry, the M.J. Lee II, is a cable ferry powered by electricity provided by overhead lines and is guided across the river by an underwater cable 1.25 inches (32 mm) in diameter,[1] leaving the vessel relatively unaffected by the river's currents.

Canby Ferry Restricted Maneuverability Day Shape

The ferry is required by the Navigation Rules to display a day shape and, at night, certain lights that communicate to other vessels its (right-of-way) rights on navigable waters.[3] Because the ferry is guided by an underwater cable, and is fed electricity from an overhead cable, its ability to maneuver is restricted. Such vessels must display the day shape for restricted maneuverability which is a ball, diamond, and ball displayed vertically in the rigging. As the Canby Ferry is permanently with restricted maneuverability, the shipbuilders mounted a metal ball-diamond-ball on a mast. Before sunrise and after sunset, and during periods of restricted visibility, the ferry must display the red over white over red array of a vessel restricted in ability to maneuver.

The ferry is named after Millard Jerome Lee, the first child born in Canby. Lee was born in 1872, two years after the town was platted in 1870.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Tims, Dana (September 4, 2010). "A thing of the past fills a modern need". The Oregonian. Portland, Oregon: Advance Publications. pp. E1, E3.
  2. ^ http://www.clackamas.us/transportation/transit/ferry.htm
  3. ^ US Dept of Transportation, United States Coast Guard "Navigation Rules, International-Inland", COMDTINST M16672.2D, Paradise Cay Publications, Arcata, California ISBN 0-939837-49-8

45°18′00″N 122°41′35″W / 45.30012°N 122.69315°W / 45.30012; -122.69315

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