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  2. Constitution (1829 steamboat) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constitution_(1829_steamboat)

    Constitution is a former steamboat, registered in New Orleans, but it primarily serviced the ports within the Republic of Texas. The steamer was 262 tons and 150-feet long. [ 1 ] Constitution was designed as a riverboat, and built at a yard in Cincinnati in 1829.

  3. John H. Sterrett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_H._Sterrett

    Advertisement for steam packets between New Orleans and Galveston, 1852. John H. Sterrett was born around 1815 in Pennsylvania. He was already operating steamboats as early as 1838 in Ohio and Pennsylvania. He redeployed his small steamer, Rufus Putnam, to New Orleans later in 1838, and then to the Republic of Texas in January 1839.

  4. Anchor Line (riverboat company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anchor_Line_(riverboat...

    Anchor Line steamboat City of New Orleans at New Orleans levee on Mississippi River. View created as composite image from two stereoview photographs, ca. 1890. The Anchor Line was a steamboat company that operated a fleet of boats on the Mississippi River between St. Louis, Missouri, and New Orleans, Louisiana, between 1859 and 1898, when it went out of business.

  5. Buffalo Bayou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffalo_Bayou

    In 1986, the Buffalo Bayou Partnership, a nonprofit organization, was founded to leverage public and private financing towards renovating and expanding park space along the river. The Partnership's 2002 Buffalo Bayou Master Plan established a 20-year, $5.6 billion vision for the bayou centered on a series of linear parks through central Houston ...

  6. Avondale Shipyard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avondale_Shipyard

    The publication Bayou Worker, archived at Loyola University New Orleans, contains information related to the labor organizing efforts. [5] In 1998, the company won contracts worth $454.7 million for the construction of two ships by the U.S. Navy (a landing platform dock ship and the Navy's newest amphibious assault ship). [6]

  7. Bayou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayou

    Bayou Corne in Louisiana, October 2010. In usage in the Southern United States, a bayou (/ ˈ b aɪ. uː, ˈ b aɪ. oʊ /) [1] is a body of water typically found in a flat, low-lying area. It may refer to an extremely slow-moving stream, river (often with a poorly defined shoreline), marshy lake, wetland, or creek.

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