November 10th marked the 50th anniversary of the sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald in Lake Superior. I was reminded of this when my social media was flooded by people who did remember and were quoting Gordon Lightfoot's The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald. The following has been adapted from Wikipedia to provide background.
SS Edmund
Fitzgerald was an American Great Lakes freighter that
sank in Lake Superior during a storm on November 10, 1975, with the
loss of the entire crew of 29 men.
When launched on June 7, 1958, she was the largest ship on
North America's Great Lakes. The Edmund Fitzgerald was the
first laker built to the maximum St. Lawrence Seaway
size, which was 730 feet (222.5 m) long, 75 feet (22.9 m) wide,
and with a 25-foot (7.6 m) draft. The vertical height of the
hull) was 39 ft (12 m). The hold depth (the inside height of the
cargo hold) was 33 ft 4 in (10.16 m).
Edmund Fitzgerald's three central cargo
holds were loaded through 21 watertight cargo hatches, each 11 by 48
feet (3.4 by 14.6 m) of 5⁄16-inch-thick
(7.9 mm) steel. Loading Edmund Fitzgerald with 26,535 t of taconite pellets (a variety
of iron ore) took about four and a half hours, while unloading took
around 14 hours.
For 17 years, Edmund Fitzgerald carried taconite from
mines along the Minnesota Iron Range near Duluth, Minnesota, to
iron works in Detroit, Michigan; Toledo, Ohio; and other Great Lakes
ports, passing through the Soo Locks (between Lakes Superior and
Huron) and St. Clair and Detroit rivers (between Lake
Huron and Lake Erie),
A round trip between Superior, Wisconsin, and Detroit,
Michigan, usually took her five days and she averaged 47 similar trips per
season. The vessel's usual route was between Superior, Wisconsin, and Toledo,
Ohio. By November 1975, Edmund Fitzgerald had logged an
estimated 748 round trips on the Great Lakes and covered more than a
million miles, "a distance roughly equivalent to 44 trips around the
world."
Edmund Fitzgerald left Superior, Wisconsin, at 2:15 p.m. on the
afternoon of November 9, 1975, under the command of Master Captain
McSorley. She was en route to the steel mill near Detroit, Michigan, with a full cargo of taconite ore pellets and soon
reached her full speed of 16.3 miles per hour (26.2 km/h). Around 5 p.m., Edmund Fitzgerald joined
a second freighter under the command of Captain Jesse B. "Bernie"
Cooper, Arthur M. Anderson, destined for Gary, Indiana.
The weather forecast
was not unusual for November, and the National Weather Service (NWS)
predicted that a storm would pass just south of Lake Superior by 7 a.m. on
November 10. At 2:00 a.m. on November 10, the NWS upgraded its warnings
from gale to storm, forecasting winds of 65–93 km/h. The NWS later altered its
forecast, issuing gale warnings for the whole of
Lake Superior. Arthur M. Anderson and Edmund
Fitzgerald altered course northward, seeking shelter along the Ontario
shore, but sailed directly into the storm at when the wind shifted. Edmund
Fitzgerald reported winds of 52 knots (96 km/h; 60 mph) and
waves 10 feet (3.0 m) high.
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| Routes usually taken vs actual trackline |
After
1:50 p.m., Arthur M. Anderson logged winds of
93 km/h, wind speeds again picked up rapidly, and it began to snow at
2:45 p.m., reducing visibility; Arthur M. Anderson lost
sight of Edmund Fitzgerald, which was about 16 miles (26 km)
ahead at the time.
Shortly after
3:30 p.m., Edmund Fitzgerald began taking on water and
had lost two vent covers, both radars, and developed a list. Shortly
after 4:10 p.m., Captain McSorley said that he would slow his ship
down so that Arthur M. Anderson could close the gap between
them to within a 10-mile (16 km) range so she could receive radar guidance
from the other ship.
For a time, Arthur
M. Anderson directed Edmund Fitzgerald toward the
relative safety of Whitefish Bay; then, at 4:39 p.m., McSorley
contacted the USCG station in Grand Marais, Michigan, to inquire whether
the Whitefish Point light and navigation beacon were
operational and was informed later that the light was active, but the navigation
beacon was not.
By late in the
afternoon of November 10, sustained winds of over 93 km/h were recorded by
ships and observation points across eastern Lake Superior. Arthur M.
Anderson logged sustained winds as high as 107 km/h while
waves increased to as high as 25 feet (7.6 m) by 6:00 p.m. Arthur
M. Anderson was also struck by 130 to 139 km/h gusts and rogue
waves as high as 35 feet (11 m).
In a broadcast
shortly afterward, the United States Coast Guard (USCG) warned all
shipping that the Soo Locks had been closed, and they should seek
safe anchorage.
Sometime after 5:30 p.m., Edmund Fitzgerald reported
being in difficulty; at 7:10 p.m., Captain McSorley sent his last message,
"We are holding our own". Shortly after 7:10 p.m., Edmund
Fitzgerald suddenly sank in Canadian (Ontario) waters 530 feet (88
fathoms; 160 m) deep, about 17 miles (27.36 km) from Whitefish
Bay near the twin cities of Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan,
and Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario—a distance Edmund Fitzgerald could
have covered in just over an hour at top speed. Her crew of 29 perished, and no
bodies were recovered.
She was located in deep water on November 14, 1975, by a
U.S. Navy aircraft detecting magnetic anomalies, and found soon afterwards to
be in two large pieces.
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| Position of the wreck in a relatively small area |
The exact cause of the sinking remains unknown. Several hypotheses have been put forward (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Edmund_Fitzgerald from where this post was extracted and adapted. None explain satisfactorily how the Edmund Fitzgerald split almost exactly in two and came to rest with half upside down and half right side up, with iron ore pellets scattered over only 2 acres.
Edmund Fitzgerald is among the largest and best-known
vessels lost on the Great Lakes, but she is not alone on the Lake Superior
seabed in that area. In the years between 1816, when Invincible was
lost, and 1975, when Edmund Fitzgerald sank,
the Whitefish Point area had claimed at least 240 ships.



I recently read that Gordon Lightfoot wrote his ballad after seeing the ship misnamed the SS Edmond Fitzgerald in Newsweek and thought that was very disrespectful to the 29 crew who died.
ReplyDeleteThat could well be. I know he wrote it about the end of Novemeber of 1975 and released it early in 1976.
DeleteForever immortalized by Lightfoot's epic song.
ReplyDeleteFor sure
DeleteI always like the song "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald", and often wondered about the facts behind it. Thanks for satisfying my curiosity! :-)
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome. I too was curious so I did what I usually do. Learn. Some good stuff on YouTube too
Delete