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Ship Information

  Ship Caption The sternwheeler ''Discovery III'' on the Chena River near Fairbanks, Alaska
  Ship Builder Nichols Brothers shipyard, Whidbey Island , Washington
  Ship Laid Down 1986
  Ship Launched 31 May 1911
  Ship Christened May 9 , 1987
  Ship In Service July 4 , 1987
  Ship Out Of Service Active in service As Of 2007
  Ship Homeport Fairbanks, Alaska
  Ship Displacement 280 tons
  Ship Length 156 feet
  Ship Beam 34 feet
  Ship Draught 3 feet
  Ship Propulsion 2 540hp 12V71 diesel engines by Emerson Diesel powering a hydraulic propulsion system which turns a 20-foot diameter paddlewheel
  Ship Capacity 900
  Ship Complement 5-9 (Captain, First Mate, Lead Deckhand, 2-6 Deckhands)
  Ship Nickname "D3"


Discovery III, built in 1987, is the third of three Discovery sternwheel riverboats operated by the Riverboat Discovery company. ''Discovery III'' is still in use as a tour vessel on the Chena and Tanana rivers near Fairbanks, Alaska .


HISTORY

''Discovery III'' came into being in 1987 as a result of increased tour traffic to the Riverboat Discovery. Due to increased passenger numbers, the company frequently had to turn away potential guests due to the limited capacity of ''Discovery II'', their primary tour boat. As a result, in 1986 Captain Jim Binkley and his three sons began planning for the construction of a third sternwheeler for the company, which would be named ''Discovery III''.

Plans for ''Discovery III'' were finalized by the fall of 1986, and the Binkley family hired the Nichols Brothers Boat Builders, Inc. to build the superstructure of the boat's hulls and decks. Construction began in the late fall of 1986 at the Nichols Brothers shipyard in Whidbey Island , Washington .

Construction of ''Discovery III'' was completed 8 months later, in early May of 1987. The boat was christened May 9, 1987, in Langley, Washington , and afterward was taken by barge north to the mouth of the Yukon River at St. Marys, Alaska.

Once in St. Marys, the barge was sunk from underneath ''Discovery III'' and she began the trip up the Yukon River to Fairbanks, Alaska. In order to make the journey as quickly as possible, ''Discovery III'' was driven up the river almost non-stop, with only occasional landings at villages for fuel and brief tours of the vessel by village residents. After a nine-day journey over 1,000 miles up the Yukon River drainage, the ''Discovery III'' arrived in Fairbanks on July 3 , 1987. She was put into passenger service the following day, on July 4 .

Since 1987, ''Discovery III'' has been the primary tour vessel operated by the Riverboat Discovery. She makes twice-daily trips throughout the summer from mid-May to mid-June on the Chena and Tanana Rivers.