OUR HISTORY
Overview
Founded in 1892, the historic Red and White Fleet is legendary for its
premiere San Francisco Cruises. Family owned, the Red and White Fleet is
committed to environmental sustainability and community education.
How It All Began
In 1892, seventeen year old Thomas Crowley launched the first of many
companies which would one day be a fixture of the San Francisco Bay.
Using $80 he had saved, he purchased a used Whitehall boat, and in so
doing entered the competitive boating business of the time. His
inaugural boat was just eighteen feet long and less than five feet wide,
and he rowed it alone through the waters of the bay.
Tom, like other boatmen in the area, transported not only miscellaneous
goods and supplies, but also professionals whose work relied upon such
travel. Serving the ship traffic twenty-four hours a day, Tom soon
expanded his fleet to three Whitehalls.
Reinvesting his profits brought by the Whitehalls, Tom soon bought several gas-powered launches which were bigger, faster and more efficient than those upon which he had previously relied. This new company was incorporated in 1906, and was to be called the Crowley Launch and Tugboat Company.
During the 1906 earthquake the fleet transported some of the coin and dollar deposits for the Bank of Italy (now the Bank of America) vault from the burning City of San Francisco in milk cans to the Berkeley Pier. There was just one escort as the Bank did not want to call attention to all this cash. Needless to say, we had no problems and customer expectations were exceeded!

However, in the aftermath of the 1906 earthquake, many ferry services
halted their operations. Crowley's operations not only continued, but in
fact increased, as his boats continually crossed the bay carrying people
and their belongings from the battered streets of San Francisco. One of
his launches actually anchored in the middle of the Bay, full of
securities from several damaged banks.
Tom Crowley, through these times, continued the expansion of his
business. With his purchase of the Piper-Aden company he now controlled
a fleet of scow-schooners, boats made specifically for the trafficking
of materials such as grain, lumber and sand. Simultaneously, he entered
into the tugboat business, competing with much larger companies such as
Shipowners and Merchants Tugboat Company.
In 1913, planning started for the Panama Pacific International
Exposition, a World's Fair to celebrate the opening of the Panama Canal.
Crowley Launch and Tugboat Company played an integral role in the
execution of the event, offering up manpower and equipment as supplies
were taken to the Exposition. It also was Crowley's first attempt at
offering excursions on San Francisco Bay to visitors of the fair.
This included exclusive sightseeing excursions via ferry to the U.S.
Battleship Oregon, which at the time docked in the bay. Two double-deck
boats, the Crowley 17 and Crowley 18, were constructed for this purpose.
During World War I, his vessels were used to carry goods between San
Francisco, South America and Australia. In the years following the War,
Crowley's influence in the boating and shipping industries in the Bay
continued to flourish. He became the general manager of the Shipowners
and Merchants Tugboat Company, once his primary competitor, and gained
economic control of several other competing firms.

Crowley's passenger services continued to flourish, relying strongly
upon tourists' desires to visit the several historic battleships docked
in the Bay. When the Bay Bridge and the Golden Gate Bridge were
completed in the 1930's Crowley's fleet of ships offered breathtaking
views of the bridges from the Bay below. In 1939, his vessels were also
present at the Golden Gate International Exposition, as more than 17
million people came to view the magnificent bridges. This was the origin
of Red and White Fleet's popular Golden Gate Bay Cruise, San Francisco's
longest running narrated tour under the Golden Gate Bridge and around
Alcatraz.
In the late 1940's, Crowley repainted the vessels - red and white - and
took the present name Red and White Fleet. New vessels were built and
the fleet was expanded.
The ticket booth formerly located at Pier 16, was re-opened at
Fisherman's Wharf, and the sphere of passenger services was expanded.
Throughout the 1950's the fleet began its ferry service between San
Francisco and Tiburon, and there was an increase in the frequency of
sightseeing excursions on the Bay.
In 1960, Tom Escher, grandson of the founder and the present owner,
started working as a sweeper and a mechanics helper on the vessels. New
vessels were added, and in 1982 ferry services were initiated between
Sausalito and Fisherman's Wharf.
In the immediate aftermath of the 1989 San Francisco earthquake, Red and
White Fleet provided free transportation to 15,000 stranded commuters
and initiated new service routes with an expanded fleet.
In 1997, Tom Escher purchased the Red and White Fleet to continue the
tradition of offering premiere San Francisco Cruises to visitors from
around the world.