Gateway Clipper Fleet

The Gateway Clipper Fleet, founded by John E. Connelly, is a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based fleet of riverboats. The fleet cruises the three rivers of Pittsburgh - the Monongahela, Allegheny, and Ohio. The fleet is named after the city of Pittsburgh, which in earlier times was known as the "Gateway to the West".[1] The original riverboat was Gateway Clipper, which set sail in 1958. By the mid-1960s, the fleet was composed of three craft, Gateway Clipper, Party Liner, and Good Ship Lollipop. In 1999 it added its fifth ship. In 2008 the Gateway Clipper Fleet celebrated its 50th year of sailing on the Three Rivers. In 2013, the fleet added its sixth ship, the all-steel classic paddle wheel Three Rivers Queen.[2]

The Gateway Clipper fleet's PS Duchess

Today there are six ships in the fleet:[3]

Ship namePassenger
capacity
Size
(length vs width in feet)
Year joined
the fleet
Former name(s)Notes
Majestic 1,000227 X 501987n/afleet flagship, houses main kitchen for entire fleet
Empress 600212 X 501966Party Linera barge pushed by a towboat named the Empress II
Princess 400120 X 351999Keystone Belleall-steel traditional paddlewheel with floor-to-ceiling windows
Three Rivers Queen 338110 X 322013Arkansas Queen3-deck paddlewheel built in 1994
Duchess 310125 X 351975Liberty Bellbuilt in 1965, now carries most "Good Ship Lollipop" named cruises
Countess 15055 X 141979City of Champions
Good Ship Lollipop
open air riverboat, fleet's fastest ship
The Gateway Clipper fleet's PS Majestic

The Gateway Clipper Fleet offers many types of cruises, from sightseeing cruises and day trips for school groups to party and formal dinner cruises including wedding receptions. Shuttle service to PNC Park and Heinz Field is available on days of Pittsburgh Pirates, Pittsburgh Steelers, and Pitt Panthers home games.

The fleet is believed to be the largest inland riverboat fleet in the United States.[4]

The fleet was once moored at the Monongahela Wharf, but since the 1980s[5] has been moored at Station Square, where the dock and loading bay are.


References

  1. "Title unknown". Archived from the original on January 3, 2007.
  2. Riely, Kaitlynn (May 29, 2013). "Pittsburgh's three rivers get a new sight-seeing boat". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved May 29, 2013.
  3. "Boats of the Fleet". Retrieved May 29, 2013.
  4. "The Gateway Clipper Fleet Story". Gatewayclipper.com. Retrieved May 29, 2013.
  5. "Getting Around: Reggie Wright's Mon Wharf more than a place to park". old.post-gazette.com. Retrieved Dec 30, 2020.
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