The Loss of the Edmund Fitzgerald
The Coast Guard conducted a thorough search in the
next several days. On the 14th, a U.S. Navy plane with a special magnetic
anomaly detector located a strong contact about 17 miles northwest of Whitefish
Point. During the next three days, the Coast Guard cutter
Woodrush
located two large pieces of wreckage in the same area under about 535 feet of
water. A Navy underwater recovery vehicle on May 20, 1976, photographed the
wreckage. The pictures clearly showed the words "Edmund Fitzgerald on the stern
piece of the sunken ship.
Since the
Fitzgerald
never called for help and the ship’s lifeboats were found badly
damaged--indicating they were never launched but instead smashed while still
secured to the ship-the Coast Guard determined the ship sank abruptly. The Coast
Guard concluded these were the primary factors that caused the
Fitzgerald
to sink:
1. The
Fitzgerald
sat very low in the water, increasing the frequency and quantity of water that
could flood the deck.
2. The loose hatch covers allowed water spilling
onboard to enter the cargo area, causing the ship to sink even lower and take on
more and more water.
3. More water could have entered through damage in
the hull caused by the possible grounding near Caribou Island.
Although there is speculation that the
Fitzgerald
broke in half on the surface as the bow and stern rode the crests of the two
large waves that struck the
Anderson
earlier, the Coast Guard’s final report suggests the Fitzgerald instead
nose dived into a large wave, was unable to recover because it had lost so much
buoyancy, and plunged to the bottom of Lake Superior in seconds. As the heavy
cargo shifted forward quickly while the
Fitzgerald
was going down, the bow of the ship hit the bottom with such force that the
vessel snapped in two. Of course, there are no witnesses to verify these
conclusions.
Canadian songwriter Gordon
Lightfoot immortalized the loss of the
Fitzgerald
and all 29 aboard with his 1976 hit song "Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald." On
July 4, 1995, divers recovered the
Fitzgerald’s
bell from the bottom of Lake Superior, replacing it with a replica engraved with
the names of the crew. In a ceremony at the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum at
Whitefish Point on November 10, 1995, the bell was presented to the relatives of
the crew and rung 30 times:once for each member of the crew and a final time in
honor of all those who have lost their lives at sea. The bell remains at the
Shipwreck Museum today.
Posted: Thu - December
2, 2004 at 06:26 PM