• When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

Edmund Fitzgerald

U.P. Michigan is just beautiful , Winter and Summer - Lake Effect Snow where my three favorite words for over twenty years

Visiting the museum in Whitefish Point gives you the chills , especially when you just overlook Lake Superior

I knew about the hatches from reading books




I don’t think I ever read this before about why Lightfoot actually wrote the song


"And my dad would have been very proud to know that he’s still remembered," added Debbie Champeau, Buck's daughter. She was just 17 years old when her father died.

What does Debbie think about the song from Gordon Lightfoot that details how her father died?

"At 17, I couldn’t listen to it, to be honest. And it took me a while. In fact, I was in a grocery store when they played it and I’m like, 'I think I’m out of here,'" Debbie shared.

And then she had the opportunity to meet Lightfoot.

"And I asked him, 'Why did you write the song? What was the reason? The words? Because it’s kind of eerie?'" she said. "And he said, 'I did it to bring noticeability to the fact that ships are going out un-seaworthy.' And the ship was unseaworthy. It wasn’t up to code. There were violations."

Just 10 days before the Fitz sank, it's been reported a routine inspection by the U.S. Coast Guard found hatch covers to seal the cargo hold wouldn’t close properly, which would allow water on deck to leak in. The Coast Guard's investigation into the sinking revealed a loss of buoyance, resulting from massive flooding of the cargo hold, as the most probable cause.
 
We were at the Door County Maritime Museum yesterday. They have a special Fitz exhibit on display right now. 2 of the crew were from Door County - including Debbie Champeau's father. She lent some things to the exhibit. We visited the Whitefish point museum some years back. It's interesting to see what's there.
 
https://www.boreal.org/2018/06/11/174945/driven-to-keep-edmund-fitzgerald-crewmans-memory-afloat

1762798320318.png
 
The Great Lakes are some of the most treacherous lakes, much like the North Atlantic Ocean is. Many have compared them to it, as they have claimed some very large ships and taken countless lives...cr8crshr/Bill :usflag: :usflag: :usflag:
 
We went out fishing when I was a kid on Lake Ontario.
Just a mile or two east of Irondequoit Bay on a sunny warm summer day.
We were out a couple hours perhaps when it suddenly became cloudy and the wind picked up out of the Northwest.
It went from 18" waves to 7 foot waves in 15 minutes.
We were in a 14' aluminum boat.
I thought we would drown I'll bet it took a half hour to get back to the inlet.
 
My Dad spent about 30years (40's-70's) in the USCG he told me those lakes were very dangerous.
Unpredictable storms and parts of the lakes were shallow.
 
I remember that day very well. I went to Michigan Tech and on that day the weather was insane. We did not know about the sinking until a day later. The Fitz only had about 15 more miles to go to make it to Whitefish point and safer waters. I do recommend that if folks can, to make the trip to the museum there and then go outside and just look at Lake Superior.
 
Just curious, would this wreck be famous if there wasn’t a song written about it?
I believe a better word would be infamous and that's the reason for the tribute to it.
(my 2 cents)
 
Back
Top