Posted on 12/09/2025 7:29:23 PM PST by SunkenCiv
A fiber-optic cable survey of the lake from Buffalo to Toronto alerted experts to an anomaly sitting on the lakebed, leading experts to surmise it could be the Rapid City vessel, an 1884-built schooner lost in 1917.
Now, though, they don't think it can be that recent a wreckage.
James Conolly, Trent University archaeologist and diver, said there were features that just weren't common for ships built after 1850, a period that experienced a bit of a technological leap for Great Lakes ships. Post-1850s ships had metal rigging, whereas the one found is rope-rigged. "It immediately puts it into, likely, the first half of the 19th century," Conolly said.
Other features were different than what the team was expecting to find, including the ship having no wheel on the aft deck, an early windlass design, and no centerboard winch that became a standard movable keel for Great Lakes ships during the 1850s.
While the 1850s may have seen a modern boon for shipbuilding in the Great Lakes, the previous 50 years helped kickstart lake-travel trade, even if the ships built were commonly lost due to storms and mishaps. Much of the history of the era is also lost.
(Excerpt) Read more at popularmechanics.com ...
Decades ago I saw a solo folk musician who performed a lot of maritime stuff (he closed his show with what I call the Dreaded Lightfoot Song) and had an interesting patter. One of the historical tidbits he mentioned (dunno if it's 100 percent on the mark) was that, during the first 150 years of documented travel on the Great Lakes (commercial and otherwise I suppose), on average a watercraft of some kind/size went down every six days.
The ‘intact’ standard is different for wrecked ships.
Illegals.
The fair maid was running the rigging again when the ship went down. That’s her skeleton tangled in the ropes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bjBQM3Tf8cQ
A short soundless video of parts of the wreck:
https://www.foxweather.com/lifestyle/canadian-divers-discovery-200-year-old-shipwreck
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfcxXS-1yXw
this is also interesting, differet Lake, different wreck:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfcxXS-1yXw
(one of my ancestors survived a wreck on Lake Erie, which it turned out was very good for me)
Love it!! The call of the blood....
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