Every shipwreck has its own story, but some are just that much more tragic,” the executive director of the Great Lakes ...
The wreckage site of the 300-foot steel steamer ‘Western Reserve’ has been found, according to a Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum ...
The only survivor was Wheelsman Harry W. Stewart of Algonac, Michigan. According to a report in the Chicago Tribune on Sept.
The 300-foot "Western Reserve" sank in August 1892, killing 27 people after both lifeboats capsized. Harry W. Stewart, the ...
The Western Reserve, a 300-foot steel steamer, broke in two as it wrecked in 1892 about 60 miles northwest of Whitefish Point ...
Lake Huron, Lake Erie and Lake Ontario, have seen numerous shipwrecks due to their harsh weather conditions. Around 200 ships have sunk in Whitefish Bay, the same place where the Western Reserve ...
The Western Reserve, a 300-foot steel steamer, was discovered about 60 miles northwest of Whitefish Point in Lake Superior by ...
The Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society said they found "The Western Reserve" in more than 600 feet of water.
On Aug. 30, 1892, Minch took his wife, two young children, sister-in-law and niece on a late-summer cruise aboard the Western Reserve up through Lake Huron when bad weather in Whitefish Bay forced ...