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Movies => Press Releases and Film News => Topic started by: Allhallowsday on June 25, 2010, 01:11:48 AM



Title: Lake Michigan shipwreck found after 112 years
Post by: Allhallowsday on June 25, 2010, 01:11:48 AM
Lake Michigan shipwreck found after 112 years 
MILWAUKEE – A great wooden steamship that sank more than a century ago in a violent Lake Michigan storm has been found off the Milwaukee-area shoreline, and divers say the intact vessel appears to have been perfectly preserved by the cold fresh waters.

Finding the 300-foot-long L.R. Doty was important because it was the largest wooden ship that remained unaccounted for, said Brendon Baillod, the president of the Wisconsin Underwater Archaeology Association.

"It's the biggest one I've been involved with," said Baillod, who has taken part in about a dozen such finds. "It was really exhilarating."

The Doty was carrying a cargo of corn from South Chicago to Ontario, Canada in October 1898 when it sailed into a terrible storm, Baillod said. Along with snow and sleet, there were heavy winds that whipped up waves of up to 30 feet.

The Doty should have been able to handle the weather. The ship was only five years old, and the 300-foot wooden behemoth's hull was reinforced with steel arches.

But it was towing a small schooner, the Olive Jeanette, which began to founder in the storm after the tow line apparently snapped, Baillod said. The Doty probably sank when it came to the schooner's aid. All 17 of its crew members died, along with the ship's cats, Dewey and Watson.

As a maritime historian Baillod spent more than 20 years researching the shipwreck. He knew that swaths of debris had washed up afterward in Kenosha, about 40 miles south of Milwaukee. But he found news accounts that it had last been seen closer to Milwaukee, near Oak Creek.

Meanwhile, a Milwaukee fisherman in 1991 reported snagging his nets on an obstruction about 300 feet under water. The observation was largely forgotten for decades until diving technology improved enough to enable exploration at that depth... 

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100624/ap_on_re_us/us_shipwreck_discovered_wis_5 (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100624/ap_on_re_us/us_shipwreck_discovered_wis_5) 

The Doty is so well-preserved because it's in a cold, freshwater lake. It's also far enough below the surface that storms don't affect it.

Those same factors mean the crew's corpses are likely intact as well, Baillod said. Their bodies are probably still in the boiler room, where the sailors must have huddled as the ship went down, he added.


Title: Re: Lake Michigan shipwreck found after 112 years
Post by: Nukie 2 on June 29, 2010, 02:47:41 PM
"It's the biggest one I've been involved with,"  "It was really exhilarating."

That's what she said! :bouncegiggle:


Title: Re: Lake Michigan shipwreck found after 112 years
Post by: BoyScoutKevin on July 13, 2010, 05:34:03 PM
If any of the seventeen dead crew members have any relations still living, this should bring release to the relations, knowing how and where the crew died.

The find also brings up the question, if you know where the crew may be, do you leave their final resting place undisturbed, or do you go down there and bring up the bodies for a proper burial on shore?