Photo Record
Images

Metadata
Catalog Number |
1999.053.047 |
Object Name |
Print, Photographic |
Accession number |
1999.053 |
Date |
Jan 1999 |
Description |
Color photos of Mrs.Mathilde McLelland's model of the steamer Nat. F. Dortch, which sank in Ninock Lake near her childhood home at Bear Point Plantation. See oral histories for more information. This model was made by Bill Atteridge of Arcadia. The Nat F. Dortch was built in Jefferson, Indiana by Howard in 1889 for the Lovell Line. It was named for a tobacco merchant in Nashville. The boat was sold and started to run along the Red River in 1894, captained by Matt F. Scovall. In March of 1895, it snagged in Ninock Lake and sank in five feet of water. The wreck was visible for many years after. Mathilde Gatlin McLelland, who grew up on Bear Point Plantation in south Bossier Parish, wrote about the Dortch in her memoirs. Their plantation bell was actually the bell from the Dortch! Mathilde's father, Thomas Gatlin II, rescued the bell and a boiler from the sunken boat. Both were about 15 feet down in the mud. Mathilde writes that the Dortch hit a large snag near Cotton Point Landing while it was carrying 828 bales of cotton and 119 sacks of seed. She found a detailed description of the steamer and asked Bill Atteridge of Arcadia Crafts to construct this model. |
Title |
Steamer Nat Dortch |
People |
Atteridge, Bill |
Search Terms |
Steamer, Nat F. Dortch Steamboats Ninock Lake Bear Point Plantation |
Caption |
Steamer Nat F. Dortch |
Lexicon category |
8: Communication Artifact |
Lexicon sub-category |
Documentary Artifact |
Imagefile |
005\1999053047048.jpg |
Orig/copy |
Original |
Inventoried date |
2023-08-21 |