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Pelican Valley Navigation Company

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photograph of small steamboat passing under a bridge

A steamboat on the Pelican River as it passes under a bridge just west of Detroit Lake (seen in the distance), 1910.

Flowing out of Detroit Lake to the southwest, short segments of the Pelican River connect a string of five large lakes and two small ones. From 1889 to 1918, steamboats, launches, and a system of locks and channels connected this chain of lakes, which stretches twelve miles southwest from the town of Detroit Lakes.

In 1888, John K. West formed the Pelican Valley Navigation Company. The Pelican River flowed out of Detroit Lake one and a half miles southwest of the downtown dock. West’s company temporarily drained the river and dredged a one-mile channel that passed through a wide marsh called Muskrat Lake. At the eastern shore of Lake Sallie, West commissioned the construction of a dam and Dunton Locks, with a five-foot, eleven-inch drop. During the late nineteenth century, this was the location of the Dunton Locks resort, which included a hotel, cabins, and a nightclub.

Two miles across Lake Sallie was Shoreham, a small resort community. The Shoreham Hotel was located next to the boat dock. The maiden voyage of the steamboat Lady of the Lake reached the hotel on July 25, 1889. Although service was extended beyond that point in 1891, Shoreham was the primary destination of the Pelican Valley Navigation Company over the years. Boats negotiated the narrow, shallow S-curving channel of the Pelican River across a narrow isthmus into Lake Melissa, which was nine inches lower than Lake Sallie. Frequent dredging kept the channel open.

After crossing Lake Melissa, boats entered the next stretch of the Pelican River, which widened into a millpond behind the Bucks Mill dam. This remained the end point of navigation until 1908, when a lock with a twelve-foot drop was built. The Pelican River was dredged for more than a mile below the dam, and another lock—the Johnson—was built with a three-foot drop. From there, boats entered Little Pelican Lake and traveled to the Pelican Inn, on the southwest shore.

After crossing Little Pelican Lake, boats negotiated yet another channel before reaching Big Pelican Lake, the largest in the chain. It is unclear whether they traveled all the way to the lake’s west end, but apparently they served multiple points on the shoreline. Old maps show landings on the north shore.

The company carried passengers, freight, and mail. The normal schedule was three round trips from Detroit (the town’s name was changed to Detroit Lakes in 1926) to Shoreham, and reduced service beyond. The running time to Shoreham was one hour, and three hours to Big Pelican Lake. After the 1908 extension beyond Bucks Mill to Big Pelican Lake, two boats were in service. The somewhat larger Mayflower shuttled between Detroit and Shoreham, and the smaller Dakotah left Detroit at 8 a.m. for Pelican Lake. From there it made a midday shuttle trip to Shoreham, where it met the Mayflower’s second trip. Returning to Pelican Lake, its last trip of the day ran through to Detroit.

During its existence, the company operated a total of nine small, canopied launches. Passage through the locks limited their size; each launch seated between thirty-five and forty passengers. In about 1912, the steamboats Mayflower and Dakotah were replaced by the gasoline-powered Shoreham and Pelican, each operated by a single crew member

The growing popularity of the automobile reduced the number of passengers, forcing the Pelican Valley Navigation Company out of business in 1918. The boats were scuttled in Muskrat Lake, where they remain. During World War II, the sunken hulls were stripped of metal for military use. Other traces of the steamboat line are still visible. For example, Dunton Locks is now a county park, and the village of Shoreham is largely intact. The Bucks Mill dam still exists, and below it are the deteriorated concrete walls of the lock.

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© Minnesota Historical Society
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Isaacs, Aaron. “Steamboats, Locks and Canals near Detroit Lakes.” Minnegazette (Summer 1999): 21–34.

Related Images

photograph of small steamboat passing under a bridge
photograph of small steamboat passing under a bridge
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photograph of two boats on a river
photograph of steamboat at a dock surrounded by passengers
photograph of steamboat at a dock surrounded by passengers
photograph of a steamboat going through a lock on the Pelican River
photograph of a steamboat going through a lock on the Pelican River
steamboat in a Lock between the Pelican River and Lake Sallie
steamboat in a Lock between the Pelican River and Lake Sallie
map indicating lakes of the Pelican River and transit routes
map indicating lakes of the Pelican River and transit routes
Print brochure advertising the Pelican Valley Navigation Company
Print brochure advertising the Pelican Valley Navigation Company
print brochure advertising the schedule of the Pelican Valley Navigation Company
print brochure advertising the schedule of the Pelican Valley Navigation Company

Turning Point

In 1908, the Pelican Valley Navigation Company boat route is extended into Big Pelican Lake for the first time.

Chronology

1888

John K. West’s Pelican Valley Navigation Company is formed; a channel is dredged through Muskrat Lake.

1889

Dunton Locks is built, and boat service from Detroit Lakes to Shoreham begins.

1891

A channel is dredged to reach Lake Melissa and Bucks Mill dam, and service extends to the dam.

1908

The Bucks Mill and Johnson locks are built, the Pelican River is dredged to Little Pelican Lake, and boat service is extended to Big Pelican Lake.

1918

The Pelican Valley Navigation Company closes, ending boat service in the area.