Members of several generations of both the Hendrickson and Howder families were riverboat captains who mainly piloted towboats. George W. Howder, who was born to John and Mary (Morris) Howder on December 28, 1845 in Fayette County, Pa., began working on riverboats when he was eighteen. Eventually, he became a pilot working for Joseph Walton and Company. Howder married Rachel Cooley, and they had four children: Ida May, Mary L., John W., and George L.
John W. Howder also became a riverboat pilot who worked for the Hillman Transportation Company. His son, William M. Howder became a pilot, as well.
Ida Howder married Samuel Wesley Hendrickson, who was also a riverboat captain. Their son, Averil Samuel Hendrickson, born in 1803, became the youngest riverboat pilot in the Pittsburgh area at the age of twenty-two. He died in 1952 on the steamboat Mathies.
The Hendrickson-Howder Family Papers and Photographs consists of books, published reports, river navigation charts, photographs, and scrapbooks. The books and reports document the laws governing America's waterways, the importance of America's waterways during World War II, the history of towboats, and the rules for inspecting steamboats. The navigation charts are for the Allegheny, Ohio, and Monongahela Rivers. They include radar maps and steering directions. The photographs are mainly undated and unidentified. They document both intact and sunken boats, boats pushing barges, and people working on the boats. The scrapbooks include national newspaper and magazine clippings that pertain to Hollywood and the entertainment industry, riverboats, and the end of World War II.
None.
Gift from Sally Perzak in 2011.
Archives accession # 2011.0252
Hendrickson-Howder Family Papers and Photographs, 1900-c1960, MSS 0750, Thomas and Katherine Detre Library and Archives, Senator John Heinz History Center
Preliminary processing by Kelly J. Smith on 08/02/2012. Inventory created by staff in 2011
Property rights reside with the Senator John Heinz History Center. Literary rights are retained by the creators of the records and their heirs. For permission to reproduce or publish, please contact the Thomas and Katherine Detre Library and Archives of the Senator John Heinz History Center.