Elwell Ferry

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Coordinates: 34°28′26.63″N 78°22′8.34″W / 34.4740639°N 78.3689833°W / 34.4740639; -78.3689833

Elwell Ferry is an inland cable ferry which has operated since 1905 on Elwell Ferry Road between NC Highway 53 and NC Highway 87, crossing the Cape Fear River and connecting the communities of Carver and Kelly in Bladen County, North Carolina.

Along with Parker's Ferry and Sans Souci Ferry, the Elwell Ferry is one of three remaining cable ferries operating in North Carolina.

History

In the absence of nearby river crossings, brothers Walter Hayes Russ and John Roland Russ[1] approached Bladen County officials and were granted authority to operate a crossing ferry.[1] Service began in 1905 with Walter Russ and later his son, Lee Roy Russ, operating the ferry. [2] The service was named for a local family.[3]

Initially constructed of wood, the 33-foot ferryboat was poled upstream and rowed back by hand and could carry a wagon and two mules. The county subsidized the ferry's operation for toll-free service six days a week, with a quarter on Sundays and a fifty cent toll for night crossings.[4]

In the 1930s, the North Carolina Department of Transportation incorporated its inland ferries into the state highway system, installing the first cable at Elwell and providing larger boats that could be guided with a pull stick. Walter Russ oversaw the modernization as well as the addition of a gasoline-powered engine on the boat in the late 1930s.

Until 1952, the Ferry was the only river crossing between Wilmington and Elizabethtown.[3]

Operations

The ferry travels a distance of 110 yards[5], shore to shore, with a travel time of five minutes,[6] has a maximum capacity of two cars cars or four tons by weight, operates without a toll, and operates daily, providing service from 6AM to 6PM, Spring and Summer, and from sunrise to sunset in the Winter and Fall.[6] There is no ferry service on Christmas Day or on days of high water or storm conditions. Vehicles arriving on the opposite shore from the ferry, summon the ferry by blowing their horn. Ferry traffic averages 60 to 80 vehicles daily.

The inland cable ferries located in North Carolina are operated by regional DOT divisional offices rather than the North Carolina Department of Transportation Ferry Division, with the Elwell Ferry operated by private contract[5] with DOT Division 6. [7] There are no plans to replace the Elwell Ferry with a bridge,[3] which would likely cost more than the service for the secondary road would justify.

Current design

Originally constructed of wood and since 1967 constructed of steel, the barge-like vessel features the controllman's room to one side, with the diesel engine sitting aside the control room.

As a powered cable ferry, the vessel is guided by a submerged steel cable drawn across the river, secured on each shore by steel anchors. Engine driven cogs or drums aboard the ferry pull the vessel along the cables, and as the ferry crosses the river, the force of the vessel's engine pulls the cable out of the water through rollers on each side of the ferry, in effect steering the ferry. The cables have considerable slack, allowing them to sink sufficiently as the ferry moves away and allowing river traffic to pass without interference. Stopping is controlled by the operator's throttle. As the ferry cannot turn around, each end includes a ramp, and alignment of the ferry at each end is automatic.

Fatalities, accidents and closings

Walter Russ, originator of the service, was the ferry’s first fatality, killed in a March 1942 explosion caused when poorly ventilated fumes ignited in the bilge.[3] A year later the ferry had been rebuilt and resumed service with safety improvements. In 1967 two men committed suicide by jumping off the ferry and in 1994 two men were killed trying to push an oversize vehicle onto the ferry. Prior to the use of wheel chocks, several vehicles had fallen overboard.

For two months in the summer of 2009, the ferry service remained closed, while pavement erosion from the Cape Fear River at the north and southern ferry landings was repaired. Service resumed in August, 2009.[6]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Elwell Ferry celebrating 100 years of moving connecting lower Bladen". Bladen Journal. 2005. http://www.bladenjournal.com/articles/2005/02/22/news/news02.txt. Retrieved 2007-05-27. 
  2. Elwell Ferry, Kelly, North Carolina. Centennial edition. Ed. J. A. McKoy and C. A. Carter. ([Kelly, N.C.]: Kelly Historical Society, 2005).
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 "Marker ID: I-84, Elwell Ferry". North Carolina Historical Markers Program. http://www.ncmarkers.com/Markers.aspx?ct=ddl&sp=search&k=Markers&sv=I-84+-+ELWELL+FERRY. 
  4. Elwell Ferry, Kelly, North Carolina. Centennial edition. Ed. J. A. McKoy and C. A. Carter. ([Kelly, N.C.]: Kelly Historical Society, 2005).
  5. 5.0 5.1 "Elwell Ferry, Kelly, NC". Living in Style, August/September 2008, Christopher E. Nelson. http://adserver1.harvestadsdepot.com/tnwsobsvr/ss/085850/074/074.shtml?074_001/074_001.shtml. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 "Elwell Ferry: When getting ‘away’ is closer than you think". Star News Online, Jim Hanchett, December 2, 2005. http://www.starnewsonline.com/article/20051205/COLUMNIST33/51202028?Title=Elwell-Ferry-When-getting-145-away-146-is-closer-than-you-think.  Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "closed" defined multiple times with different content
  7. "Division 6 FAQ". NC DOT. http://www.ncdot.org/doh/operations/division6/Organization/FAQMaint.html#16. Retrieved 2008-12-30. 

Elwell Ferry, Kelly, North Carolina. Centennial edition. Ed. J. A. McKoy and C. A. Carter. ([Kelly, N.C.]: Kelly Historical Society, 2005).

External links