SS Edmund Fitzgerald
SS Edmund Fitzgerald in 1971 | |
Location of Edmund Fitzgerald wreck | |
| History | |
|---|---|
| United States | |
| Name | SS Edmund Fitzgerald |
| Namesake | Named for Edmund Fitzgerald, chairman of Northwestern Mutual |
| Owner | Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company |
| Operator | Columbia Transportation Division, Oglebay Norton Company of Cleveland, Ohio |
| Port of registry | Milwaukee, Wisconsin |
| Ordered | February 1, 1957 |
| Builder | Great Lakes Engineering Works of River Rouge, Michigan |
| Yard number | 301 |
| Laid down | August 7, 1957 |
| Launched | June 7, 1958 |
| Maiden voyage | September 24, 1958 |
| In service | September 24, 1958 |
| Out of service | November 10, 1975 |
| Identification | Registry number US 277437 |
| Nickname(s) | Fitz, Mighty Fitz, Big Fitz, Pride of the American Side, Toledo Express, Titanic of the Great Lakes |
| Fate | Lost with all hands (29 crew) in a storm, November 10, 1975 |
| Status | Wreck |
| Notes | Location of wreck: 46°59′54″N 85°06′36″W / 46.9983°N 85.11°W |
| General characteristics | |
| Type | Lake freighter |
| Tonnage | |
| Length |
|
| Beam | 75 ft (23 m) |
| Draft | 25 ft (7.6 m) typical |
| Depth | 39 ft (12 m) (moulded) |
| Depth of hold | 33 ft 4 in (10.16 m) |
| Installed power |
|
| Propulsion | Single fixed pitch 19.5 ft (5.9 m) propeller |
| Speed | 14 kn (26 km/h; 16 mph) |
| Crew | 29 |
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 and remains the largest to have sunk there. 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.
For 17 years, Edmund Fitzgerald carried taconite (a variety of iron ore) from mines along the Minnesota Iron Range near Duluth, Minnesota, to iron works in Detroit, Michigan; Toledo, Ohio; and other Great Lakes ports. As a workhorse, she set seasonal haul records six times, often breaking her own record. Captain Peter Pulcer was known for piping music day or night over the ship's intercom while passing through the St. Clair and Detroit rivers (between Lake Huron and Lake Erie), and entertaining spectators at the Soo Locks (between Lakes Superior and Huron) with a running commentary about the ship. Her size, record-breaking performance, and "DJ captain" endeared Edmund Fitzgerald to boat watchers.
On the afternoon of November 9, 1975, she embarked on her final voyage from Superior, Wisconsin, near Duluth, carrying a full cargo of taconite ore pellets with Master Captain Ernest M. McSorley in command. En route to a steel mill near Detroit, she was caught the next day in a severe storm with near-hurricane-force winds and waves up to 35 feet (11 m) high. 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 (15 nautical miles; 27 kilometers) 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. The exact cause of the sinking remains unknown, though many books, studies, and expeditions have examined it. Edmund Fitzgerald may have been swamped, suffered structural failure or topside damage, grounded on a shoal, or suffered from a combination of these.
The disaster is one of the best-known in the history of Great Lakes shipping, in part because Canadian singer Gordon Lightfoot made it the subject of his 1976 popular ballad "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald". Lightfoot wrote the hit song after reading an article, "The Cruelest Month", in the November 24, 1975, issue of Newsweek. The sinking led to changes in Great Lakes shipping regulations and practices that included mandatory survival suits, depth finders, positioning systems, increased freeboard, and more frequent inspection of vessels.