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The Claiborne-Annapolis Ferry Company ran both passenger and automobile ferry service across the Chesapeake Bay from 1919 to 1952. The initial service was between Annapolis, Maryland, on the western shore and Claiborne, Maryland, on the eastern shore. In July 1930, a second shorter route was added between Annapolis, Maryland, and Matapeake on Kent Island, Maryland. Business increased so rapidly at that point that another ferryboat was added. In May, 1938 the Claiborne route was changed to run from Claiborne to Romancoke, Maryland, on the lower end of Kent Island, from which passengers could then connect to the Matapeake to Annapolis run. In 1943, the Annapolis United States Naval Academy absorbed the property where the ferry terminal had been, so service was switched from Annapolis to a new terminal at Sandy Point on the western shore. By May 1951, the ferries were handling 1 million vehicles and 2 million passengers annually. Ferry service stopped running in 1952 when the Chesapeake Bay Bridge was completed. ==History== The first Claiborne-Annapolis run was June 19, 1919, with the sidewheeler ''Gov.'' ''Emerson C. Harrington'', named for the 48th Governor of Maryland and later President of the Claiborne-Annapolis Ferry Company. As governor, Harrington had been instrumental in getting the ferry started. In 1915, the State Roads Commission had appropriated $50,000 to establish a state-owned ferry. With the beginning of World War I, planning was put on hold until 1919. At that time a group of businessmen headed by J. P. Mehaham, of St. Louis, and Frank McNamee, of Albany, and at the urging of Gov. Harrington, formed a private company named the Claiborne-Annapolis Ferry, Inc. The state funds were instead diverted toward subsidizing the new private company. The "Old Harrington", as the boat became known, made two round trips daily, crossing the Chesapeake Bay in 1 hour 20 minutes. In 1921, the company was in bankruptcy, but Gov. Harrington, his term as Governor over, became President of the company and instituted reforms to make it more profitable. Not until 1924 did the company begin to see receipts exceed expenses. In 1921, a bus route was added to carry passengers to Easton, Hurlock, and Cambridge. In 1928 the company was reorganized and renamed the Claiborne-Annapolis Ferry Company. The ''Gov. Emerson C. Harrington'' was retired in 1937 and replaced by the ''Gov.'' ''Harry W. Nice'', a double-ender which could hold up to 68 cars. Other boats were to include the ''General Lincoln'', ''Majestic'', ''Albert C. Ritchie'', ''John M. Dennis'', ''Gov. Harry W. Nice'', ''Gov. Emerson C. Harrington II'', ''Governor Herbert R. O'Conor'', and the ''B. Frank Sherman'', the last named for the company's General Manager from 1924-1952. Serious discussion about building a bridge across the Chesapeake Bay had been around since at least 1907, but did not take hold until the 1930s. Since the bridge would put the ferry out of business, the State decided it had an obligation to the ferry owners to purchase the company. In 1941, the company was purchased for $1,023,000 by the Maryland State Roads Commission (now the Maryland State Highway Administration), and was renamed the Chesapeake Bay Ferry System. At the time the company was purchased by the State Roads Commission, it had approximately 120 employees. Service on the ferry was continued across the Chesapeake Bay until July 30, 1952, the same day the new Chesapeake Bay Bridge was opened. During a final run by the ''John M. Dennis'' a few weeks before the bridge opening, it "accidentally" rammed the new bridge (on the cause of the "accident" can be found between newspaper accounts and recollections by family members of the ship's Captain Edward C. Higgins ). The last run from Claiborne to Romancoke was on December 31, 1952, by the ''Gov. Emerson C. Harrington II''. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Claiborne-Annapolis Ferry Company」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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