The ocean gives you time to sink. The Great Lakes swallow you whole before you can even reach for the radio.
On November 10, 1975, the SS Edmund Fitzgerald, the pride of the American side of the Great Lakes, sailed directly into a monstrous winter storm. Carrying a massive load of iron ore, the 729-foot titan was considered virtually unsinkable. Without a single distress call, the ship vanished from radar, taking all 29 crew members to the freezing bottom of Lake Superior.
To this day, the exact mechanics of its sudden plunge remain a fiercely debated engineering mystery. Did she snap in half on a shoal, or was she buried by a freak sequence of rogue waves? This book strips away the folklore to focus on the brutal physics of inland maritime logistics.
You will explore the unique, destructive wave patterns of Lake Superior that tear steel apart with far more violence than the open ocean. It exposes the corporate pressures of late-season shipping and the fatal design flaws of mid-century bulk carriers.
Face the fury of the Great Lakes. Uncover the terrifying reality of what happens when human engineering meets the unstoppable, freezing wrath of nature.
Edward A. Smith
Author
edmund fitzgerald great lakes shipping maritime disasters shipwreck history naval engineering lake superior storms american maritime history