Go back

Beach Launches

2021.87.82

THE BEACH BOATS Today easy trips to the beach are taken for granted. We forget that once a trip to the Lake Michigan shore required a ferry ride and a long walk through woods. Or a horse and buggy ride across the bridge and through the countryside to the Douglas beach. For sure, just getting there cut way down on the beach time ! But by the early 1900s local opportunists were offering a better way. Making this possible was the development of the marine gasoline engine.. These little engines – the first were four horsepower - made practical the beach boats and created a new way to go swimming. The beach launches followed a regular schedule, usually four trips a day, operating from the Saugatuck and Douglas waterfront docks to the piers. The fare was two-bits round trip. Before the new cut was complete the beach was in the same location as today. Starting in 1906 the popular beach became the “basin” – a duned wide spot in the river just inside the new piers. The beach boats were practical and simple craft 35 to 50 feet in length carrying up to 50 passengers. Basically they were water-borne busses, crafted by Saugatuck boat builders and owned by local businessmen. In those days there were few governmental regulations – so an entrepreneur could get into the business with a boat, a place to dock and a sign! In addition to the beach ferry trade, the boats were rented for private parties, and made occasional trips to New Richmond and Holland. The photos here recall the mood and the vessels of the era that lasted until 1936 when the road to the Oval was built and the family roadster became the way to head to the beach. By Jack Sheridan

Remembering When

Winthers, Sally

Digital data in CatalogIt

Georgie R (boat)Affinity (boat)Carey, Rob 1928-2019Sheridan, John "Jack" O. 1938-Tuscarora (boat) 1906Schmiechen, James A.Douglas, The (boat)Wolverine (boat) c1915-1939Gladys (boat) 1897-1949

Local Observer

01/01/2022

11/18/2023