The
small river steamer Cayuga,
the first commercially successful steamboat in Texas, played an
important role during the Texas Revolution.qv
She carried supplies for the revolutionary army,qv
transported government officials and refugees, and was the floating
capitol of Texas in April 1836. The Cayuga, an
eighty-eight-ton side-wheeler, was built in 1832 in Pittsburg,
Pennsylvania. She was 96'11" long, 17'4" wide, and 5'4" deep. The
Cayuga had one deck, two boilers, a high-compression engine, a
cabin on deck, a plain head, and a pointed stern.
The steamer's first owners were Pennsylvanians who sold her to Mississippi interests; they in turn sold to J. F. Aisles of New Orleans. William P. Harris and Robert Wilson,qqv Texas entrepreneurs and partners, bought the vessel in 1834 from Aisles. Having been in the Mississippi steamboat trade, Harris and Wilson knew the virtues of river transportation, and in order to finance their purchase they secured pledges from Texas investors for 5,000 acres of land and $800. The Cayuga cleared New Orleans for Galveston Bay on August 1, 1834, under Capt. John E. Ross.qv
The Cayuga was the only steamer in Texas at this time. She operated on the Brazos River during the fall of 1834 under the command of Capt. William P. Harris and ascended the river as high as Washington. The necessity of waiting for three different rises of the river in running upstream and three in going downstream gave Harris the opportunity to clear and plant corn on 300 acres of the pledged land. On January 8, 1835, a ball was given in San Felipe, the capital of Stephen F. Austin'sqv colony, in honor of the arrival of the Cayuga. The steamer left San Felipe on January 15 and ran aground downstream. Throughout 1835 she continued to ply the Brazos River, Galveston Bay, and Buffalo Bayou, where Harris and Wilson maintained a store, warehouse, and sawmill at Harrisburg.
In April 1836 David G.
Burnet,qv ad interim president of
the new Republic of Texas,qv
impressed the Ca
yuga
for public service. The ship began transporting provisions to the
Texas army and rescuing officials and citizens fleeing the advancing
Mexican armies. On April 15 Captain Harris, in command of the
steamer, evacuated Harrisburg just ahead of Gen. Antonio López de
Santa Annaqv and his troops. The
refugees included President Burnet, his cabinet, and all the
inhabitants of the town. After stopping at Lynch's Ferry and New
Washington the Cayuga preceded to Anahuac and Galveston,
where the passengers disembarked. The cabinet members remained
aboard and on April 19 were rejoined by Burnet, who had left the
steamer at Lynch's Ferry to get his family and had narrowly escaped
being captured by the Mexicans at New Washington. The business of
the republic was conducted through April 26 on the Cayuga,
the temporary capitol. During this time the republic bought the
steamer for $5,000 from Harris.
The Republic of Texasqv spent $300 for repairs on the Cayuga and by the end of the year authorized the secretary of the navy to sell it. The steamer was sold at auction on December 15, 1836, at Lynch's Ferry. The new owners refitted the vessel and renamed her the Branch T. Archer; she was thus one of two Texas ships named after Branch Tanner Archer.qv The Archer remained in the Houston-Galveston trade during 1837 and 1838. In June 1838 the ship was reported to have ascended the Trinity River as far as the Coushatta Indian Village. John E. Ross was captain of the vessel during these years.
The last mention of the little steamer was a Liberty County sheriff's sale on September 4, 1839, advertising all the right, title, and interest of John Huffman in the steamboat Pioneer, the late Branch T. Archer, together with the tackle and furniture. The vessel lay near the residence of Robert Wiseman in the Old River. The sale was to settle claims of John E. Ross and Robert Adkinson.
Bibliography: William Fairfax Gray, From Virginia to Texas, 1835 (Houston: Fletcher Young, 1909, 1965). Telegraph and Texas Register, November 26, 1836, June 9, 1838, September 4, 1839. John H. Jenkins, ed., The Papers of the Texas Revolution, 1835-1836 (10 vols., Austin: Presidial Press, 1973). Pamela A. Puryear and Nath Winfield, Jr., Sandbars and Sternwheelers: Steam Navigation on the Brazos (College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1976).
Jean L. Epperson
Taken From the Texas Handbook Online - CAYUGA
NOTE:
The Texas Navy was the official navy of the Republic of Texas.
There were three Texas Navies. The second was re-established in 1958 by Governor Price Daniel. This re-established navy became the third navy of Texas. The purpose of the third Navy was to "assure the survival of Texas' Naval History, water resources, boundaries, and for civil defense of Texas.
For more in depth information please visit the Official Website of the Texas Navy

