History Blog
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The Hudson River Day Line was the premier steamboat line on the Hudson River from the 1860s through the 1940s, carrying millions of passengers between New York City and Albany with stops at the major towns in between. The elegant and speedy steamers of the Day Line were widely known and popular with the traveling public. Many travelers took the Day Line boats to the Catskill Mountains region for summer vacations accompanied by family and large trunks of clothes. Others took the boats to riverside parks like Bear Mountain State Park and Kingston Point Park where they could spend the day picnicking and relaxing, and then catch another steamer home again in the evening. Many groups from schools, clubs, and other organizations took yearly outings on the Hudson River Day Line. Whatever the reason for travel, the Hudson River Day Line provided its passengers with comfort, elegance, and some of the most beautiful scenery in the world at reasonable prices. The Hudson Highlands and West Point were known to travelers from Europe from illustrations in travel books, and a visit to New York was not complete without a trip on the Hudson to see these famous sights. A band or orchestra was always provided on board for pleasant travel, as was a fine restaurant and a cafeteria for less formal meals. Other amenities provided included writing rooms, news-stands, barber shops, and on one steamer, a darkroom for passengers to develop their own photographs en route. The term "floating palaces" aptly described the Hudson River Day Line steamers. Millions of people had happy memories of pleasant summer days on the Hudson River Day Line boats including the Chauncey Vibbard, the Daniel Drew, the Albany, the Hendrick Hudson, the Robert Fulton, the Washington Irving, the Alexander Hamilton, and the Peter Stuyvesant. The 1920s were perhaps the most successful years for the Day Line with nearly two million passengers carried in the peak year of 1925 when seven steamers were running. The Depression years of the 1930s, though, were down years for the Day Line, as they were for many other companies. After an upsurge of business during World War II in the 1940s because of gas rationing for cars, the company's fortunes declined. With a postwar return to prosperity, and a huge increase in the production of passenger cars, travel by steamboat seemed old-fashioned to many. The Hudson River Day Line of the Van Santvoords and the Olcotts, the original owners, finished with the sale of the company in 1948. In the early 1950s three steamers remained on the successor Day Line-the Robert Fulton, the Alexander Hamilton, and the Peter Stuyvesant. In the early 1960s there were two steamers left, and in September 1971 the last survivor of the Day Line, the Alexander Hamilton, finished the glorious run of the steamboat on the Hudson River.
58 Comments
Norman Gaines Jr.
11/5/2018 07:46:16 pm
I rode the Day Liner with my Mom when I was 4 and 5 years old.It gives me the opportunity to say that I rode between Poughkeepsie and New York by bus, car, train and Day Liner. Try that now!
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Wayne Gallup
1/23/2019 10:00:54 am
One of my greatest memories ,was going with my mother and a friend from Albany to Kingston for a picnic on either the Hendricks Hudson or thePeterStuyvesant around1949
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Rene
11/16/2021 09:36:26 am
Went every summer with my dad & mom.the best time of my life to experience this treasure.My sister and I will always remember this forever..😊
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BOB MAZUR
1/23/2019 11:38:04 am
My earliest recollection of the Day Line was going from Poughkeepsie to Bear Mountain on the Alexander Hamilton with my Dad, this was probably in 1952.
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7/15/2020 07:57:25 am
@Bob Mazur, it's always great to read accounts relative to passengers who travelled on these 'floating places' of note. Though I never had that experience I was able to connect with the heir of those boats and build models accordingly...regarding the ALEXANDER HAMILTON, you might like to visit my site which feature this vessel and many other steamboats that traveled the Hudson....https://rex-stewart.blogspot.com/2011/10/steamboat-model-alexander-hamilton.html
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Ori Siegel
2/10/2019 12:00:28 am
Every summer in the early '60s, they would take us from the day camp we were at in Fishkill across the river to Newburgh where we would catch the Dayliner to Poughkeepsie. We were picked up there and driven back to Fishkill. I can still hear the chuff-chuff-chuff of the steam engine from the open door to the engine room below! At other times, they would take us up the Mt. Beacon Inclined Railway. It was fun being a kid back then!
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Craig Munsart
5/2/2022 09:24:07 pm
Ah. The Hudson River Day Line and Mt. Beacon Incline Railway. Brings back fantastic memories for a kid who grew up in the Bronx in the forties and fifties
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Lois Kopp
3/28/2019 09:39:54 am
I have many fond memories of taking the Dayline boat from Manhattan to(originally) Indian Point (before the atomic power plant was there) with my mom and my sister. At least once each summer mom would pack lunches in shoe boxes and off we'd go. The Point was beautiful for picnicking and boating. After that location closed our trip was to Bear Mountain for a few years. The last time for me was 1954.
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Lauren A Devonshire
9/13/2020 09:18:07 pm
Wasn't there a park with rides there? I remember that when I was a kid. We moved from NYC in 1959.
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Craig Munsart
5/2/2022 09:27:50 pm
Our cub scout pack had a fabulous day trip up to Indian Point in the early fifties. I still have memories of the father-son softball game. The Day Line provided access to lots of special places, and fabulous scenery along the river. Too bad economics killed.
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Mark prysor-jones
5/20/2019 04:45:12 pm
We have been clearing a house of a relative in England and have found a metal bear with a brass tag saying ps Alexanda Hamilton, does anyone know of any connection.
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jayson
7/2/2019 07:23:19 pm
i need help finding a dayliner in 1868 that left castle garden and came to albany, can anyone help me?thanks
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Noreen
9/16/2019 03:58:20 pm
My father was Captain Edward M. Grady. He was Captain of the Hamilton. He passed away July 19,2019
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Phill
10/19/2019 10:22:27 pm
I’m sorry for your loss. He probably had some seriously incredible stories though.
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7/15/2020 07:42:51 am
Noreen, my belated condolences concerning your father Edward M. Grady. You might want to view my build of the ALEXANDER HAMILTON and read some of the literature behind it by visiting https://rex-stewart.blogspot.com/2011/10/steamboat-model-alexander-hamilton.html
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Antoinette C. Cleary
12/1/2020 09:57:46 am
I will remember Captain Grady from the Hudson River day line every July 19th. I traveled as a child from Manhattan to Bear Mountain many times and I loved the engine room and the decks and the glory of it all! Thank you Captain Grady, may you rest in peace. Antoinette
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Kathleen S
4/25/2021 10:19:02 am
I was a kid in the 60’s & my Dad would take us on the Alexander Hamilton a couple of times a year. We loved it & each trip we would visit the engine room and also got to speak to your father. He was a nice man. I’m sorry for your loss. We thoroughly loved our trips on that ship & loved getting to speak with him each time. What I thought was pretty amazing is that he actually took time to be available for the guests to speak with him
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stephen safka
2/17/2022 01:26:44 pm
Thanks for. The information As a young boy Grandma took me on the Robert Fulton sidewheeler and I became fascinated by the machinery and eventually became a plant engineer for RCA !Life experiences plan your future well
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Cynthia Beckford
5/26/2024 05:42:02 pm
I ❤️ the Hamilton as Little Girl Age 5-10 My Family Travel on the Hamilton 2 Bear Mountain had Our Family Reuion Picnic I Rember Yor Dad Saying Hello 2 Everybody Especially the Kids They had a Band that Played Hony Tonk I Remember Grand parents Aunts n Uncles Dancing there All Gone Now I had Bought A Red n White Alexander Hamilton Crew Hat WE Were On the Last Voyage n NY Travels Of Moving I Lost tge Hat But tge Memories Of tge Good Times on the Hamilton Will Never B 4gotten I Still Tell Stories
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Richard Crane
10/22/2019 01:02:53 pm
I have a picture of the Hendricks on the Hudson River plus a picture of the Highlands on the river. Thanks
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Benjamin Tropiansky
11/19/2019 04:02:17 pm
I believe there were two dayliners that I remember. One was the Alexander Hamilton and the other the Peter Stuyvesant. They were most certainly sister ships.
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jayson romanczuk
11/19/2019 08:44:54 pm
in 1868 is there any passenger info as they came from castle garden?
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R. Drennen
6/20/2020 11:40:04 am
I believe "The Washington Irving" was a sister ship. It had 3 stacks!
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7/15/2020 07:37:31 am
@Benjamin Tropiansky, the ALEXANDER HAMILTON and PETER STUYVESANT weren't sister ships.Both were built differently, as the HAMILTON was a doubled-stacked sidewheeler and the STUYVESANT was screw-propeller. However, they were the last to run opposite each other before ceasing service on the river.
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10/21/2024 03:00:15 pm
Imagine, 4 years hence and I'm responding to your comment...I was merely referring to them as sister ships because they both essentially did the same things. I did manage to wander down to the engine room of one of them to marvel at the huge piston arms coming at me like huge fists. But regarding your expertise in the matter...I am humbled.
Henry Turner
8/19/2021 08:15:24 pm
There were five Day Liners when I was a kid the Henry Hudson a side wheeler , The Robert Fulton and one more I think it was D Clinton plus the Stuyvesant and the A Hamilton
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10/21/2024 02:48:35 pm
Imagine that...4 years hence and I'm reading your comment. I was merely calling them sister ships because they both did essentially the same things. I did creep down to the engine room to witness those huge piston arms coming at me like huge fists. But as to your expertise...I am humbled.
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edward garrett
4/17/2020 08:00:30 am
my great uncle Charles Caulfield worked onboard the Dayliners for many years after his service in the US Navy during Spanish American War. Would love to be able to access Dayliner records to obtain some documentation of his service with them
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Robert Sharrott
6/20/2020 08:33:08 pm
Sailed up the Hudson many times in the sixties on the Day Line cruises. Always got off at West Point, my college of choice. It was wonderful to sit on the top deck and enjoy the sunshine. Passed Grants Tomb, the Mothball battle fleet, Bear Mountain. I have wonderful memories
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Alice Avouris
7/31/2020 06:20:24 pm
I have an old photo of the Robert Fulton
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Nancy Haley
8/15/2020 09:57:51 pm
My dad's first job was with the Dayline. He talked about how much he enjoyed it often.
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Linda Semilof
8/16/2020 09:18:10 am
When I was in grade school, I lived in Cold Spring and would go down to the river to watch the Day Liner. It was a wonderful memory and I wish I had been able to take a trip on one of these ships. Later I lived in Kingston which is where the Day Liner also visited. There were some interesting stories about some of the Passengers, one being Father Devine.
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William P Gallagher
8/16/2020 09:22:44 am
Took the day liner from Bear Mountain up to Kingston several times with stops at West Point and Poughkeepsie.
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Tony LaRosa
9/4/2020 11:21:21 pm
I guess that every summer when I was still in grade school,the family made our annual trip from Manhattan to Albany to visit relatives.It was a long boring all day affair for my mother who hated it .But my father was enamored with the Hudson River Valleyand enjoyed every minute of watching the beautiful scenery pass by.I was thrilled watching the steam engines at work.
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Julie Steinke
10/19/2020 02:45:14 pm
My great great grandmother was a nurse on the Albany. If anyone has information on that topic I’d love to hear more!
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Gerald T Cecil
1/25/2021 03:56:39 pm
Do you have any photos of the stone inscriptions at West Point (taken from the River) that were carved to commemorate battles of American history....such as Bunker Hill, Yorktown, Mexico City, etc.
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Emelie Rogers
2/19/2021 01:25:41 am
I have a photo my grandfather took of the Hendrick Hudson at a port with a covered dock. It was taken between 1920-1925. Not sure where it is docked
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Keith Faccone
2/20/2021 11:18:58 am
My dad recounts being a deck hand on the SS Americana (he says it was a sister ship to the Stuyvesant) in the late 1940’s. It steamed day trips between Jersey City and Rye Beach; leaving around 8am and returning 7pm, six days weekly. Any info anyone has would be fun.
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Greg
5/24/2021 08:40:35 am
One of the fun memories growing up in Stony Point (small river town on the Hudson) was jumping the big wake waves from the day liner as it steamed pass our sleepy town. In my cousin's small run about we would completely fly out of the water at top speed as the crowd on board the day liner cheered us on. The joys of youth (our parents would have been mortified if they knew).
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Robert Cabrera
6/17/2021 05:18:24 pm
As a child in the 1930's I traveled on Hudson River Day Liners with my parents from NYC to Catskill NY and Albany several times. On at least 2 voyages the Engine Room was glass enclosed so that passengers could view the mechanical elements in action. What were the names of the side wheeler ship or ships that had this feature? Thanks in advance.
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nicholas solomos
6/20/2021 10:40:29 am
I regret never having been on a day liner. Of coarse I was born in 1942 so it was not my decision.
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John
7/3/2021 05:05:15 pm
I recall sailing on the Alexander Hamilton in June of each of my highschool years in the Bx. It was the day all the students looked forward to with great anticipation. We would board the boat someplace in the vicinity of South Ferry in Manhattan and sail to Rye Beach for the day. A girls hs joined us on board and it was a very special time, to say nothing of the activity at the pool and playland. I recall returning to Manhatan in my senior year and engaging with a classmate my plans for military service after high school. He was in the same boat literally and figuratively. Over 50 years later we met by chance at the HS at an event honoring VN veterans, some of whom were classmates. He recalled the conversation like it was the day before.. I also recall Linda, the gal I met on the boat, yet that is more personal and will remain so. Ah, what memories the Alexander Hamilton, a great boat and a great day
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Henry R Turner
8/19/2021 08:03:14 pm
I was one of the boys diving for money when the bouts docked. I was 10 years old in 1947. I would make $20 to $30 a week.
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9/23/2021 10:42:01 am
Love the history of my hometown, which includes my boat rides.
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Thomas Courtien
9/23/2021 01:27:11 pm
As a kid the day camp would take us twice a summer on the Dayliner to Bear Mountain from Yonkers. This was the late 1960's.
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Michael Heckman
1/19/2022 01:22:48 pm
In the summer of 1948, my parents decided to spend a week in the Catskills. As we had no car, we traveled on the Alexander Hamilton to Catskill where a car from the hotel in Purling picked us up. A week later, the car dropped us back at the dock at Catskill Point where we waited for the Robert Fulton. Both boats were sidewheelers, but the Fulton was much older model with a walking beam engine. I still have a picture my father took of me and my little brothers watching the Fulton approach.
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Stephen
1/31/2022 08:11:14 pm
My dad used to be in the orchesture occassionaly
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J M Laughlin
2/4/2022 08:26:21 am
I am seeking information about the Hudson River Day Line Auxiliary. I am a volunteer genealogical researcher with the International Quilt Museum, and the museum has recently added a quilt that is 'signed' by the Hudson River Day Line Auxiliary. I need to add to the information that I have gleaned from your website.
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Charlie Malarkey
4/6/2022 12:34:52 pm
I remember taking the Alexander Hamilton when I was young and lived near Garrison, NY. Maybe the rising costs of gas will bring this great idea back.
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Robert Wallace Graham
10/24/2022 03:18:44 pm
Our father took us on the Day Line out of NYC in the late 1950s. I was 9, maybe 10 years old. I don't know why but I remember it was the "Alexander Hamilton". At that time I had no idea who he was. Only upon reading just today an autobiography he (my father) wrote did I realize his own history, as he wrote that a highlight of his own early years (1910s) were the annual trips HIS father took with his the family on the Day Line.
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Jim Marquardt
6/14/2023 12:38:12 pm
Does anyone know if the Dayline used steamboats that formerly sailed on Long Island Sound?
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10/21/2023 08:15:09 pm
Born as a Queens resident in 1943, I rode the "Dayline" almost every year from 1949 thru 1957, with Mom and my two grandma's. Generous box lunches were the norm. I remember 2 round-trips to Poughkeepsie..the others were to Bear Mtn. We rode on all three boats..Fulton, Stuyvesant & Hamilton. The first stop took on passengers at 125th Street. Stop 2 was West Point, then Bear Mtn. & Poughkeepsie. Along the way we passed the Castle on Bannerman's Island and near West Point, the mothballed fleet of hundreds of Liberty Ships..surplus from WWII. They were parked row upon row, side by side, bow to stern.."gray ghost"s.
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12/29/2023 10:09:27 am
This operation became nationally famous from a line in the 1938 Academy Award winning song, "Thanks for the Memories," with the reference to trips on the Hudson River Line, by the couple, on a par with "Castles on the Rhine" and "Candelight and Wine." The operation is truly a National Prize.
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Robert Cabrera
3/11/2024 04:31:12 pm
In the summer of 1944 my brother and I traveled to and from Manhattan and Kingston NY on the HR Day line. I've forgotten the name of of the vessel. Which one could it possibly have been?
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Stephen Rabinowitz
8/12/2024 11:28:26 am
My dad used to be in the band on some weekends
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Henry turner
8/12/2024 11:51:49 am
I used to dive for money at Indian point when they would dock it was in the late 40s I was nine or ten years old , Indian point had the biggest pool
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Don Dykes
10/21/2024 09:40:01 pm
The “Ticonderoga” was a sidewheeler with a walking beam that ran on Lake Champlain until the 1950’s. It was then taken to the Shelburn Museum in Vermont, near Burlington, where it still resides. It is similar to the Robert Fulton Dayliner, and is worth a visit
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