farmerden wrote:Build it somewhere else ,take it apart, move it ,rebuild it,steam it! I guess no-one told the americans it couldn't be done! And if someone did tell them -they did it anyway!!
Although this may sound a rather difficult way of doing things it was in fact quite a common practice .
Indeed if the intended area of operation was not industrial (precluding local construction) and the boat in question was too large to travel as deck cargo but too small to travel there under her own steam or if the final destination was inland , there was no other option .
Numerous steam boats were built by British ship builders for service in Africa and South America and assembled on site , sometimes under very difficult and primitive , in engineering terms , conditions .
Of course sods law means that I can't recall any specific names at the moment . No doubt somebody out there will oblige .
Slightly nearer to home (my home) the larger steamers on Windermere were built at Barrow-in-Furness but assembled at the lakeside . This however wasn't too difficult as the distance is only about 30 miles , so if the assembly party found that the shipper had forgotten to pack the boiler or similar it was possible to get the part quite soon . Not so simple from the shore of one of the great lakes of Africa or 2000 miles up the Amazon !
I'm sure this must have happened often within the USA when the West coast was undeveloped but industry in the East was booming and slightly later , as in the case of the AJ Goddard , when Alaska was undeveloped (some would say it still is) but the rest of the country was developed .