Lake Effect: Shipwrecks of the Great Lakes

The G.P. Griffith: Lake Erie’s Forgotten 1850 Steamboat Disaster

26 min · 30 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The G.P. Griffith: Lake Erie’s Forgotten 1850 Steamboat Disaster

Descripción

In 1850, the steamboat G.P. Griffith was crossing Lake Erie in the darkness, carrying families, immigrants, and travelers toward a new life. Before dawn, fire broke out aboard the wooden steamer, turning an ordinary overnight journey into one of the most terrifying disasters in Great Lakes history.This episode tells the story of the G.P. Griffith disaster, the panic on Lake Erie, the struggle to reach shore, and the haunting questions left behind after the flames faded.A forgotten Great Lakes tragedy. A burning ship. A shoreline just out of reach.This is the story of the G.P. Griffith.

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26 episodios

episode The Western Reserve: The Steel Freighter That Broke in Two on Lake Superior artwork

The Western Reserve: The Steel Freighter That Broke in Two on Lake Superior

In 1892, the Western Reserve was one of the proud new steel freighters of the Great Lakes — fast, modern, trusted, and built for the future. But on a late-summer voyage across Lake Superior, that future cracked open.With owner Peter G. Minch, his family, passengers, and crew aboard, the Western Reserve entered worsening weather after leaving Whitefish Bay. Then, far off the lonely shore near Deer Park, Michigan, the ship suddenly broke apart and sank in minutes. Only one man, wheelsman Harry Stewart, survived to tell the story.For more than 130 years, people debated what really happened. Did the ship’s steel fail? Was she too lightly loaded? Did Lake Superior expose a hidden weakness in a new generation of freighters? In 2024, the wreck was finally located in deep water — broken in two, just as Stewart had said.This is the haunting story of the Western Reserve: a record-setting steel freighter, a family voyage turned tragedy, a survivor’s impossible ordeal, and a shipwreck that warned the Great Lakes that progress could still break.

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episode The Vanishing of Marquette & Bessemer No. 2: Lake Erie’s Ghost Ship artwork

The Vanishing of Marquette & Bessemer No. 2: Lake Erie’s Ghost Ship

On December 7, 1909, the Marquette & Bessemer No. 2 left Conneaut, Ohio, bound for Port Stanley, Ontario, with a heavy load of railcars, a veteran captain, and a crew that knew Lake Erie well.Then the storm came.Caught in one of Lake Erie’s brutal December gales, the 338-foot railroad car ferry seemed to appear and disappear across the lake: whistles in the dark, lights through the snow, wreckage near Long Point, and one chilling discovery that only deepened the mystery.More than a century later, the ship has still never been found.This episode of Lake Effect follows the final voyage of the Marquette & Bessemer No. 2, the unanswered questions surrounding her disappearance, and the haunting clues she left behind.

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episode The Edmund Fitzgerald Crew: The Men Behind the Legend (Part 3 of 8) artwork

The Edmund Fitzgerald Crew: The Men Behind the Legend (Part 3 of 8)

In Part 3 of this 8-part Lake Effect series, we turn away from the steel, cargo, engines, and weather reports of the Edmund Fitzgerald and focus on the people who made the ship live.Twenty-nine men sailed aboard the Fitzgerald on her final trip. They were captains, mates, engineers, deckhands, oilers, cooks, porters, watchmen, fathers, husbands, sons, brothers, veterans, young men saving money for school, and older sailors nearing retirement. Before the final voyage begins, their stories deserve to be told.This episode looks at Captain Ernest M. McSorley, First Mate John “Jack” McCarthy, the officers, wheelsmen, engineers, oilers, deckhands, cooks, porters, and watchmen who made up the living world aboard the Mighty Fitz. Through family memories, personal details, and the everyday rituals of Great Lakes freighter life, we remember the men not as names in a song or figures in a tragedy, but as real people sailing toward home.The Edmund Fitzgerald was a ship.But the tragedy was human.

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