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Ohiogal

(31,910 posts)
Fri Nov 1, 2019, 12:52 PM Nov 2019

If you're into Great Lakes history

The ore freighter Edmund Fitzgerald met its demise on Lake Superior 44 years ago this month -- November 10, 1975.

The Fitzgerald launched June 7, 1958, as the largest ship on the Great Lakes at the time. She remains the largest shipwreck there.

The ship carried iron ore from Duluth, Minnesota, to Detroit, Toledo and other ports. She set seasonal haul records six times.

The storm that sunk the Fitzgerald included hurricane-force winds and waves up to 35 feet high. The boat never sent a distress signal, though it did report taking on water and listing earlier in the day.

But about 7:10 p.m., 17 miles from Sault Ste. Marie, the ship sunk in Canadian waters 530 feet deep. The captain’s last message had been, "We are holding our own."

A U.S. Coast Guard report suggests the Fitzgerald sunk because ineffective hatch closures allowed water to gradually enter the hold. A National Transportation Safety Board report said the hatch covers collapsed, allowing waves to flood the cargo hold. The Lake Carriers Association said the ship hit a shoal, in part because its radar wasn’t working. Another theory suggests waves caused a stress fracture in the hull.

more:
https://www.cleveland.com/news/2019/10/wreck-of-the-edmund-fitzgerald-national-museum-of-the-great-lakes-offers-schoonmaker-freighter-tour-to-make-sense-of-mystery.html

3 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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If you're into Great Lakes history (Original Post) Ohiogal Nov 2019 OP
My favorite story telling song ever AJT Nov 2019 #1
The waves of November. gibraltar72 Nov 2019 #2
i think most people outside the Great Lakes region wnylib Nov 2019 #3

wnylib

(21,340 posts)
3. i think most people outside the Great Lakes region
Mon Nov 25, 2019, 09:46 AM
Nov 2019

don't realize how deadly storms on the lakes can be. And storms coming off the lakes --thunderstorms in summer and blizzards in winter.

The lakes are large enough to have major environmental and meteorological effects in the regions around them.


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