On more than one occasion, journalist Lynnette Hintze took notes by flashlight from a windowless newsroom at the Daily Inter ...
The Western Reserve, a 300-foot steel steamer, broke in two as it wrecked in 1892 about 60 miles northwest of Whitefish Point ...
The only survivor was Wheelsman Harry W. Stewart of Algonac, Michigan. According to a report in the Chicago Tribune on Sept. 3, 1892, when Stewart reached shore, he walked 12 miles to the nearest life ...
After 132 years, the final resting place of the 300-foot steel steamer Western Reserve has been discovered roughly 60 miles northwest of Whitefish Point in Lake Superior. The Great Lakes Shipwreck ...
The freighter set forth from Cleveland for Two Harbors, Minnesota, on what turned out to be its ... The ship had smooth sailing up until Aug. 30, when it arrived at Lake Superior's Whitefish Bay. The ...
In August 1892, the Western Reserve set sail from Cleveland bound for Two Harbors, Minnesota ... it passed the Iroquois Lighthouse in Lake Superior’s Whitefish Bay later that day, the weather ...
He reportedly took his young family on the ship for a cruise through Lake Huron to Two Harbors, Minnesota. The society said the weather was pleasant until they reached Whitefish Bay and the crew ...
Using a remotely operated vehicle, teams were able to find the wreck of the Western Reserve steamship, which sank on Aug. 30, ...
The freighter set forth from Cleveland for Two Harbors, Minnesota, on what turned ... when it arrived at Lake Superior's Whitefish Bay. The wind picked up and the weather shifted.