Video shows The Western Reserve, which went down by Whitefish Point, Michigan, in 1892.
MADISON, Wis. — Twenty years before the Titanic changed maritime history, another ship touted as the next great technological feat set sail on the Great Lakes.
The Western Reserve was one of the first all-steel cargo ships to traverse the lakes. Built to break speed records, the 300-foot (91-metre) freighter dubbed “the inland greyhound” by newspapers was supposed to be one of the safest ships afloat. Owner Peter Minch was so proud of her that he brought his wife and young children aboard for a summer joyride in August 1892.
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15 Famous Shipwrecks in Canada Thousands of ships lay submerged in Canadian waters, some found after decades and even centuries, while others have yet to be discovered. One of the most famous shipwrecks in history – the Titanic – was lost more than 600 kilometres off the coast of Newfoundland for 73 years.
SS Atlantic
Sank: April 1, 1873 Where: Nova Scotia
The largest North Atlantic marine disaster prior to the Titanic occurred on the shores of Nova Scotia.
The SS Atlantic was making its way from Liverpool, England, to New York City when it was diverted to Halifax due to low coal supply.
(Source: SS Atlantic)
SS Atlantic
However, the ship was swept about 25 kilometres off course and, at 3:15 a.m. on April 1, 1873, smashed full speed into rocky shores just outside of Halifax.
More than 550 people were killed and another 370 people were rescued from the half-sunken ship and from a rock.
(Source: Nova Scotia Archives)
SS Atlantic
The Atlantic's captain, James Agnew Williams, remained in Halifax for about three weeks after the disaster.
(Source: Nova Scotia Archives)
Africa
The 45-metre vessel was an American steamship that sank in October of 1895 while carrying coal from the United States to Owen Sound across Lake Huron.
Eleven people died on the Africa when it sank. Among them, Captain Hans Larsen who, in a coincidence, is the namesake of the village Drebert and Melnick call home.
(Source: Inspired Planet)
Africa
While the Africa is intact, it is encrusted in invasive quagga mussels.
(Source: Inspired Planet)
SS Arlington
Sank: May 1, 1940 Where: Lake Superior, Ont.
A Second World War-era shipwreck was found in over 183 metres of water in Lake Superior, about 56 kilometres north of the Keweenaw Peninsula, on Feb. 12, 2024.
A WWII-era shipwreck was found in over 183 metres of water in Lake Superior. (Credit: Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society)
This image provided by the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society shows the wreck of the bulk carrier Arlington, a merchant ship loaded with wheat that sank in Lake Superior during a storm on May 1, 1940. The Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society announced Monday with shipwreck researcher Dan Fountain that the Arlington’s wreck has been discovered in about 650 feet of water some 35 miles north of Michigan’s Keweenaw Peninsula. The ship’s crew survived the 1940 sinking but the Arlington’s captain went down with his ship. (Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society via AP) (AP)
SS Arlington
All crew on board made it off that ship and onto the Collingwood, which was also on Lake Superior that day. The Arlington’s veteran captain, Frederick 'Tatey Bug' Burke, did not make it off the ship and no one knows why.
This image shows the wreck of the bulk carrier Arlington, a merchant ship loaded with wheat that sank in Lake Superior during a storm on May 1, 1940. (Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society via AP)(AP)
Robert Kerr
It was then towed to Vancouver in 1885, and was later dubbed the ‘ship that saved Vancouver’, when residents boarded the vessel amid a huge fire that tore through the city in 1886.
(Source: Underwater Archaeological Society of British Columbia)
Robert Kerr
It was then towed to Vancouver in 1885, and was later dubbed the ‘ship that saved Vancouver’, when residents boarded the vessel amid a huge fire that tore through the city in 1886.
(Source: Underwater Archaeological Society of British Columbia)
SS Valencia
Sank: January 22, 1906 Where: Vancouver Island, B.C.
SS Valencia was an American iron-hulled passenger steamer that began operating in 1882.
On January 22, 1906, Valencia missed the entrance to the Strait of Juan de Fuca during stormy weather during a passage from San Francisco to Victoria. The ship struck a reef off Pachena Point on Vancouver Island's west coast.
HMS St. Lawrence
The ship was decommissioned after the War of 1812, and was sold off in 1832 to a brewery where it served a pier. It was later towed out to Lake Ontario and deliberately sank. It now serves as a popular dive site off waters in Kingston, Ont.
HMS St. Lawrence is one of three War of 1812 shipwrecks that lay today off waters in Kingston, Ont., and is a popular site for divers.
(Source: YouTube)
SS Valencia
Valencia is considered to be the worst maritime disaster in the ‘Graveyard of the Pacific’, a dangerous stretch of water along the Pacific coast where thousands of wrecked ships lay.
Parts of the wrecked Valencia can be seen today along the shores of Pachena Bay, B.C.
(Source: British Columbia Archives)
HMS Investigator
The Parks Canada team members have undertaken thousands of dives in Canadian and international waters, but none had taken part in a dive in a location as remote as the site of the sinking of the HMS Investigator.
HMS Terror
Flatware are seen on shelving in the interior of the HMS Terror shipwreck, in an undated handout still image taken from video footage, in Terror Bay, Nunavut. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Parks Canada(HO/THE CANADIAN PRESS)
SS Edmund Fitzgerald
The Anderson, about 16 to 24 kilometres behind, kept watch on the Fitzgerald during the storm. The Fitzgerald never called for help, and the ship’s lifeboats were found badly damaged, indicating it sank very quickly.
Canadian music legend Gordon Lightfoot turned the tragedy into a hit song in 1976 called, 'Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald.'
HMS Terror
Sank: 1845 Where: Terror Bay, Nunavut
While the Erebus wreck is considered more vulnerable and has been the focus of recent dives, the Terror lies in water 48 metres deep and is better preserved.
Terror Bay where the sunken ship the HMS Terror lies, near Gjoa Haven Nunavut, on September 3, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson(Jason Franson/THE CANADIAN PRESS)
SS Edmund Fitzgerald
The ship was in radio contact with another ship, the SS Arthur M. Anderson. The Fitzgerald and Anderson were in relatively close proximity when the storm entered the Great Lakes, and they agreed to take a northerly course across the lake.
(Source: Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum)
HMS Erebus
Subsequent expeditions uncovered clues like equipment and graves, but the ships remained lost for generations. By combining Inuit oral history with new technology, the Erebus and Terror were finally discovered on the seafloor in 2014 and 2016.
Parks Canada underwater archaeologist Marc-André Bernier carefully excavates a seamen's chest in the forecastle (crew living quarters) on the lower deck of HMS Erebus, September 17, 2023. (Brett Seymour/Parks Canada)(Brett Seymour)
Sweepstakes
The Sweepstakes was damaged after hitting a rock off Cove Island in Ontario on Aug. 23, 1885. It sank in shallow water, and was then towed to Big Tub Harbour where it sank again in September 1885.
(Source: Blue Heron Cruises)
HMS Investigator
A nine-member Parks Canada team discovered the wreck of HMS Investigator after a sonar search of about 15 minutes in July 2010, when ice cleared temporarily on Mercy Bay.
Parks Canada divers analyzed the wreck of the HMS Investigator in great detail, taking measurements from stem to stern, as well as underwater notes of their findings.
HMS Investigator
Like Franklin's ships, the 122-ton Investigator became stuck in the ice and the crew was forced to abandon it after two years -- though the expedition was later miraculously rescued.
Parks Canada archaeologist swimming over the bow of HMS Investigator. The Canadian Press Images PHOTO/Parks Canada(BRETT SEYMOUR/THE CANADIAN PRESS IMAGES)
RMS Empress of Ireland
It sank in just 14 minutes in the St. Lawrence River on May 29, 1914, resulting in the deaths of 1,012 of its 1,477 passengers.
The Empress of Ireland at Liverpool, UK. SOURCE: Wikicommons
Capt. Oscar M. Johnson drove the damaged ship onto rocks and Valencia stayed afloat for 36 hours, but a rescue was not possible in the treacherous waters.
136 people died in the wreck, including all women and children on board. Only 37 people survived the disaster.
Sweepstakes
The hull of the vessel is still relatively intact and sits in just six metres of water in the Georgian Bay of Lake Huron.
Sweepstakes is a popular tourist attraction and is frequently visited by divers and glass bottom boat tourists.
(Source: Blue Heron Cruises)(Jack Salen)
HMS Erebus
Sank: 1845 Where: Terror Bay, Nunavut
Led by Capt. John Franklin, HMS Erebus and HMS Terror set sail from England in 1845 to search for a Northwest Passage through the Canadian Arctic.
Parks Canada underwater archaeologist Jonathan Moore observes a washing basin and an officer's bedplace on the lower deck of the wreck of the HMS Erebus during a dive in this September 2022 handout photo in the Northwest Passage. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO, Parks Canada, Marc-Andre Bernier)(Marc-Andre Bernier/The Canadian Press)
Sweepstakes
Sank: Aug. 23, 1885 Where: Tobermory, Ont.
The Sweepstakes is one of 22 shipwrecks clearly visible in waters off Tobermory, Ont., and is considered to be one of the most beautiful in the world.
The schooner was built in Burlington, Ont. in 1867, and measures 36.3 metres in length.
(Source: Blue Heron Cruises)
RMS Titanic
Sank: 1912 Where: Atlantic Ocean, off Newfoundland
The Titanic is probably the best-known shipwreck in history, but you may not be familiar with its Canadian connection.
Built in Belfast, Northern Ireland for transatlantic passage between England and New York City, it was the largest and most luxurious ship of its kind at the time and was reported to be unsinkable.
The RMS Titanic is shown in a file photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP(THE ASSOCIATED PRESS)
HMS Investigator
Sank: 1853 Where: Mercy Bay, Nunavut
The Investigator, under the command of Capt. Robert John Le Mesurier McClure, had been dispatched from Britain in January 1850 on a mission to rescue the expedition led by Sir John Franklin, which had gone missing after setting sail from Britain five years earlier.
HMS Investigator is shown on the north coast of Baring Island in the Arctic in this 1851 drawing. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Public Archives of Canada(The Canadian Press)
RMS Titanic
The Titanic left Southampton, England on April 10, 1912 with 2,240 passengers and crew on board.
On April 15, 1912, the Titanic struck an iceberg off the coast of Newfoundland. It broke apart and sank to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean. More than 1,500 people died in the shipwreck, and the disaster was depicted in the famous 1997 movie, ‘Titanic.’
Constructed during the war of 1812, HMS St. Lawrence was built in Kingston, Ont. and launched in 1814.
It was the largest and most heavily-armed warship of its time serving on fresh water, but it didn’t leave Ontario waters and never went into battle.
Painting, by C.H.J. Snider, showing HMS St. Lawrence on lake patrol with two smaller ships, one on either side. (Source: Royal Military College of Canada)
RMS Empress of Ireland
Sank: May 29, 1914 Where: St. Lawrence River, Que.
The RMS Empress of Ireland is often referred to as ‘Canada’s Titanic’. The 170-metre ocean liner provided passenger service from the United Kingdom to Canada until it collided with a Norwegian vessel near Pointe-au-Père, Que.
The Empress of Ireland is shown at its launch in an undated photo. (HO, Guy D'Astous, rms-empress-of-ireland.com / THE CANADIAN PRESS)
A Parks Canada underwater archaeologist examines the belaying pins still in place on the port side of the HMS Terror in a handout photo. They would have been used to fasten the ship's ropes. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Parks Canada-Thierry Boyer MANDATORY CREDIT (Thierry Boyer/THE CANADIAN PRESS)
Parks Canada diver Brandy Lockhart picks up a decanter bottle recovered from the HMS Erebus during a dive in August of 2019 in this handout photo. It was as if the past literally reached out and touched him. Parks Canada archaeologist Marc-Andre Grenier spent last summer diving into the wreck of the HMS Erebus, the flagship of the Franklin expedition, which sank around 1848 in the waters of what is now Nunavut while searching for the Northwest Passage. This day, he and his colleagues swam into the pantry of Captain John Franklin himself. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO, Charles Dagneau, Parks Canada *MANDATORY CREDIT* (Charles Dagneau/THE CANADIAN PRESS)
The massive, overturned hull of a seemingly ancient ship has appeared without warning along Newfoundland's southwestern tip as shown in this handout image provided by Corey Purchase. Wanda Blackmore says her 21-year-old son, Gordon, came roaring into her house last Saturday morning after spotting the long shadow beneath the water just off the beach in Cape Ray, N.L.THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Corey Purchase
**MANDATORY CREDIT** (Corey Purchase/The Canadian Press)
The massive, overturned hull of a seemingly ancient ship has appeared without warning along Newfoundland's southwestern tip as shown in this handout image provided by Corey Purchase. Wanda Blackmore says her 21-year-old son, Gordon, came roaring into her house last Saturday morning after spotting the long shadow beneath the water just off the beach in Cape Ray, N.L.THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Corey Purchase
**MANDATORY CREDIT** (Corey Purchase/The Canadian Press)
Niagara Iron Scow
For 101 years, the boat remained lodged in the rocks and didn’t move, but in 2019, a strong Halloween storm pushed it 50 metres closer to the brink.
A century old iron scow sits grounded in the upper rapids above the Horseshoe Falls after moving about 50 metres downstream following a storm last Thursday in Niagara Falls, Ont., Monday, Nov. 4, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Tara Walton(Tara Walton/THE CANADIAN PRESS)
Niagara Iron Scow
Two men were on the boat when it broke free, but were successfully rescued by emergency crews the following day.
A century old iron scow sits grounded in the upper rapids above the Horseshoe Falls after moving about 50 metres downstream following a storm last Thursday in Niagara Falls, Ont., Monday, Nov. 4, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Tara Walton(Atlantic Productions/The Associated Press)
Niagara Iron Scow
Two men were on the boat when it broke free, but were successfully rescued by emergency crews the following day.
A century old iron scow sits grounded in the upper rapids above the Horseshoe Falls after moving about 50 metres downstream following a storm last Thursday in Niagara Falls, Ont., Monday, Nov. 4, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Tara Walton(Tara Walton/THE CANADIAN PRESS)
HMS Erebus
Subsequent expeditions uncovered clues like equipment and graves, but the ships remained lost for generations. By combining Inuit oral history with new technology, the Erebus and Terror were finally discovered on the seafloor in 2014 and 2016.
Parks Canada underwater archaeologist Marc-André Bernier carefully excavates a seamen's chest in the forecastle (crew living quarters) on the lower deck of HMS Erebus, September 17, 2023. (Brett Seymour/Parks Canada)(Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)
As the ship entered Lake Superior’s Whitefish Bay between Michigan and Canada on Aug. 30, a gale came up. With no cargo aboard, the ship was floating high in the water. The storm battered it until it cracked in half. Twenty-seven people perished, including the Minch family. The only survivor was wheelsman Harry W. Stewart, who swam a mile (1.6 kilometres) to shore after his lifeboat capsized.
For almost 132 years the lake hid the wreckage. In July, explorers from the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society pinpointed the Western Reserve off Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. The society announced the discovery Saturday at the annual Ghost Ships Festival in Manitowoc, Wisconsin.
“There’s a number of concurrent stories that make this important,” the society’s executive director, Bruce Lynn, said in a telephone interview. “Most ships were still wooden. It was a technologically advanced ship. They were kind of a famous family at the time. You have this new ship, considered one of the safest on the lake, new tech, a big, big ship. (The discovery) is another way for us to keep this history alive.”
The Western Reserve, a merchant ship that sank in Lake Superior This image provided by Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society shows a sketch of The Western Reserve, a merchant ship that sank in Lake Superior in 1892 off Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. (Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society via AP)
Search lasted more than two years
Darryl Ertel, the society’s marine operations director, and his brother, Dan Ertel, spent more than two years looking for the Western Reserve. On July 22 they set out on the David Boyd, the society’s research vessel. Heavy ship traffic that day forced them to alter their course, though, and search an area adjacent to their original search grid, Lynn said.
The brothers towed a side-scanning sonar array behind their ship. Side sonar scans starboard and port, providing a more expansive picture of the bottom than sonar mounted beneath a ship. About 60 miles (97 kilometres) northwest of Whitefish Point on the Upper Peninsula, they picked up a line with a shadow behind it in 600 feet (182 metres) of water. They dialed up the resolution and spotted a large ship broken in two with the bow resting on the stern.
Confirmation day
Eight days later, the brothers returned to the site along with Lynn and other researchers. They deployed a submersible drone that returned clear images of a portside running light that matched a Western Reserve’s starboard running light that had washed ashore in Canada after the ship went down. That light was the only artifact recovered from the ship.
The Western Reserve, a merchant ship that sank in Lake Superior This image provided by Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society shows the Western Reserve cargo ship beneath Lake Superior, on July 30, 2024. (Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society via AP)
“That was confirmation day,” said Lynn, the society’s executive director.
Darryl Ertel said that discovery gave him chills — and not in a good way. “Knowing how the 300-foot Western Reserve was caught in a storm this far from shore made a uneasy feeling in the back of my neck,” he said in a society news release. ”A squall can come up unexpectedly…anywhere, and anytime.”
Lynn said that the ship was “pretty torn up” but the wreckage appeared well-preserved in the frigid fresh water.
The Great Lakes can be more dangerous than the oceans
The Great Lakes have claimed thousands of ships since the 1700s. Perhaps the most famous is the Edmund Fitzgerald, an ore carrier that got caught in a storm in November 1975 and went down off Whitefish Point within 100 miles of the Western Reserve. All hands were killed. The incident was immortalized in the Gordon Lightfoot song, “The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald.”
Assistant Wisconsin State Climatologist Ed Hopkins said that storm season on the lakes begins in November, when warm water meets cold air and winds blow unimpeded across open water, generating waves as high as 30 feet (9.1 metres). The lakes at that time can be more dangerous than the oceans because they’re smaller, making it harder for ships to out-maneuver the storms, he said.
The Western Reserve, a merchant ship that sank in Lake Superior This image provided by Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society shows a the bell from The Western Reserve, a merchant ship that sank in Lake Superior in 1892 off Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. (Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society via AP)
Brittle steel may have played a role in sinking
But it’s rare to see such gales form in August, Hopkins said. A National Weather Service report called the storm that sank the Western Reserve a “relatively minor gale,” he noted.
A Wisconsin Marine Historical Society summary of the Western Reserve sinking noted that the maritime steel age had just begun and the Western Reserve’s hull might have been weak and couldn’t handle the bending and twisting in the storm. The steel also becomes brittle in low temperatures like those of Great Lakes waters. The average water temperature in Lake Superior in late August is about 60 degrees Fahrenheit (16 degrees Celsius), according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
The summary notes the Titanic used the same type of steel as the Western Reserve and that it may have played a role in speeding up the luxury liner’s sinking.