6 Theories of the Edmund Fitzgerald

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  • Опубліковано 9 вер 2024

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  • @Vindsvelle
    @Vindsvelle 6 місяців тому +886

    Choosing to remove a video after community feedback and undertake a comprehensive re-make is a serious integrity move. Few UA-camrs hold themselves to that high a standard.
    Thanks for your diligence and superior content.

    • @robert48044
      @robert48044 6 місяців тому +44

      I agree. This sinking is a touchy subject for many in the Great Lakes region at least Michigan. We all grow up learning about it. I think he gave mention towards the end about how all the parties don't want the blame placed on them. Touchy might not be the right wording but people have strong feelings still about it.

    • @kflow1379
      @kflow1379 6 місяців тому +26

      Superior content. I see what you did there

    • @kflow1379
      @kflow1379 6 місяців тому +20

      @@robert48044 I'm from superior, the town the Edmund left from. My daughter is 12 and has already learned all about the Edmund Fitzgerald. I wonder if it will ever stop being taught about.

    • @stevehomeier8368
      @stevehomeier8368 6 місяців тому +19

      I agree one hundred percent, another youtuber Oceanliner Designs did the same thing in an excellent video about Titanic’s engines

    • @brentmiller3951
      @brentmiller3951 6 місяців тому +12

      I come from a long line of commercial fishermen .I grew up on the Oregon coast and learned about this ship.as a kid in the 80's I just taught my youngest daughter about the Fits .I recently moved to Pittsburgh and am immersing my self in everything maritime greatlakes. I believe it will be taught for years

  • @imperialmodelworks8473
    @imperialmodelworks8473 6 місяців тому +376

    My grandfather sailed the lakes for 14 years, including on the Fitzgerald from 70 to 74. My Aunt was born in 72, Mom was born in 74, so he took a job in the shipyards so he wasn't gone most of the year. Had alot of stories to tell about the lakes, many of them pretty terrifying. He said the waves used to come onto ship on the rear, ride the length of the deck, and plow into the pilot house. He always subscribed to the theory that the Fitz nose dived, hit the bottom, and then twisted in half. He knew most of the men on the Fitz that went down that night. Grandma said it was a pretty rough ordeal for him, on many levels.

    • @illinoiscentralrailroadfan6015
      @illinoiscentralrailroadfan6015 6 місяців тому +16

      With the observed damage I would agree

    • @johnkirby8849
      @johnkirby8849 5 місяців тому +59

      I have followed this for years. It’s been kind of an obsession actually. My theory of what happened is my own and not necessarily the view of everyone else. Nor does it mean that’s what happened. But this is my thoughts in short version. She was steaming along in the storm just fine until they lost both radars. Whilst in contact with the Anderson I believe she was closer to the 6 fathom shoal than they realised. Fully loaded and low in the water. I believe she struck bottom with quite a force and she hogged. Thus snapping the deck fence and fractured the hull. The sudden rushing in of the water blew the vent caps off. So from there on she was sinking. And to develop a list so quickly fits the theory. The crew manned the pumps but unfortunately couldn’t keep up with the incoming water. She continued through the storm for another 3 or 4 hours until she was so low in the water, that the waves rolling up her deck pushed her bow down so far that it couldn’t recover. So here’s the next part of my theory. As she went down, and this part I believe happened very very quickly, she nose dived into the bottom, and the damage to the forward part of the ship supports this theory.so as the bow digs in to the bottom the prop still turning torque twisted her over, I believe she broke at the fracture point where she hit the shoal, and the 200 foot mid section disintegrated. By this time the stern is inverted and sank like a stone . Trapping most of the crew in the accommodation area. They had no chance of escape. I believe the actual sinking was extremely quick and almost instant. R.I.P to the 29 on board. May you all rest in eternal peace.

    • @danvetor1365
      @danvetor1365 5 місяців тому +18

      @johnkirby8849
      I had similar theory. I think the bow went under a wave and never able to recover and the engine drove her to the bottom.
      The part that doesn't fit the theory from everything I could find, divers couldn't find any scrape marks on the shoal.
      I was 10 years old at the time!
      I have always been fascinated with the Fitz sinking.

    • @autopartsmonkey7992
      @autopartsmonkey7992 5 місяців тому +15

      good friend of mines grand father was suposed to be sailing on the fitz,,and he decided to stay home this trip to do some work at home. lucky guy,,and lucky for my friend or she would never have been born. she said he was reallly freaked out about it for the rest of his life.

    • @Seafarer62
      @Seafarer62 5 місяців тому +14

      I'm no expert. But looking at the wreckage, I agree with your grandfather. Sure looks like she went down in one piece and then broke with the hard impact. The two parts of the ship are fairly close together. If she had split on the surface, the parts would likely not be so close together. It is the old adage called "Ocaam's Razor." The most obvious explanation is most often the correct one.

  • @yakacm
    @yakacm 6 місяців тому +588

    It's mind blowing that the Arthur M Anderson is still in service today.

    • @jrggrop
      @jrggrop 6 місяців тому +99

      Fresh water does wonders for vessel life expectancy.

    • @sking3492
      @sking3492 6 місяців тому +35

      Hell, that is living history.

    • @sking3492
      @sking3492 6 місяців тому +33

      The Gordon Lightfoot song as well as the footage was very haunting, l felt so sad l was in tears

    • @cliffbonds1472
      @cliffbonds1472 6 місяців тому +32

      It is floating proof of the term "They don't make em' like they used too". Sadly ALOT of that eras ships had some or ALOT of bad, brittle steel that took far too many.

    • @michaelcogrove967
      @michaelcogrove967 6 місяців тому +45

      When I was working on the Bob-Lo ships in the 80's and 90's there were a few ships from 1890's and 1900's in service still. Ours were 1902 and 1910.

  • @johnvanzoest4532
    @johnvanzoest4532 6 місяців тому +238

    To say:
    " okay I get your point of view, I'll take your comments on board and re do this video"
    marks you out as someone to watch further. I don't subscribe often, but your humility and teachability commend you .
    To be able to look at a situation from multiple angles and adapt your point of view is a mark of maturity.

  • @Megabob777
    @Megabob777 6 місяців тому +237

    R.I.P Gordon Lightfoot and the 29 sailors who were lost

    • @rodertera
      @rodertera 6 місяців тому +16

      I did wonder if anyone else made this connection!

    • @richardstever3242
      @richardstever3242 6 місяців тому +8

      He played at the Port McNicol Inn several times but I was too young to get in. "I'm going to play you a song in the key of Bm"..."it was just the same old chords played with a capo on, but the people thought something really special was happening so I just went along with it". Greetings from Ontario

    • @Megabob777
      @Megabob777 6 місяців тому +4

      @@richardstever3242 ayyy a fellow ontarian

    • @richardstever3242
      @richardstever3242 6 місяців тому +5

      @@Megabob777 I love the lakes, especially my home waters of Georgian Bay. The Arthur M Anderson was dressed up as the Fitzgerald for a movie and docked at Tiffin Elevator in Midland.

    • @Megabob777
      @Megabob777 6 місяців тому +6

      @@richardstever3242 man you definitely know a lot more about great lakes shipping than I do lol, wish i knew more tbh

  • @tonyhartford8442
    @tonyhartford8442 6 місяців тому +123

    I grew up in Toledo Ohio and my dad was a shipkeeper for ASC. It amazes me that so many more of these freighters haven’t gone down. Every winter they come into Toledo and lay up for the winter and most if not all of them would have to have the bottoms welded back together as they’d constantly split. Instead of retiring these old freighters they just continue welding them. I’ve heard atleast 3 captains and chiefs say that the company would rather pay out a wrongful death suit than to replace the ship because it was cheaper. But man did I love staying up on these big boats throughout the winter and summers when they’d be layed up throughout the year. Nothing more relaxing than throwing a mattress down on the floor of the pilot house, crank the ac, and listen to the radio traffic and watch the thunderstorms. 🌩️ I really miss it though.

    • @richardstever3242
      @richardstever3242 6 місяців тому +14

      Climbing up on them and jumping off before the cops could catch you was so much fun when I was growing up in Ontario. The Sir James Dunn was retired in my hometown and my friends could often be found "down at the Dunn".

    • @DriveLaken
      @DriveLaken 5 місяців тому

      @@richardstever3242 youth 😊

    • @thedude3620
      @thedude3620 5 місяців тому +8

      Go back to those days bro...Just quit your job and leave your house and go to the ship and chill there for as long as you can

    • @richardstever3242
      @richardstever3242 5 місяців тому +9

      @@thedude3620 I keep trying to back to the 'good old days", but the sun goes down, the rains come and the buzz fades away...dammit!

    • @timmellin2815
      @timmellin2815 4 місяці тому +3

      Speculation.......who knows ? Probably a combination of all the factors.

  • @joshanderson361
    @joshanderson361 5 місяців тому +48

    I worked at a medical supply store in Brainerd with someone from Castle Danger near Two Harbors. He said his brother sailed on the Fitz around 1973 and after a short time, “Couldn’t wait to get off that death trap.” The ship had had problems with hogging from what I’ve read. I also believe it’s a combination of things as not one of the theories by themselves explain everything.

  • @SoloSailing77
    @SoloSailing77 6 місяців тому +88

    I am a Great Lakes Sailor. Weather can turn a calm lake, into a washing machine. The Fitz actually had a double bottom. They filled the bottom with water when empty to make it ride smoother. When loaded, it's empty. If they hit the schoal, it could have filled the bottom. That would have allowed them to keep going with the pumps running. The "3 sisters" hit the first one, followed closely by the 2nd and 3rd. It's brutal!

    • @MrBill34786
      @MrBill34786 5 місяців тому +3

      What boat do you work on? I worked on the tug boat Undaunted, and also worked on the Oberstar for a time.

    • @kylerjones4411
      @kylerjones4411 5 місяців тому +7

      I've been out on Lake Ontario, a calm lake compared to Superior, many times and it can get rough. We call them lakes but they're really inland seas with most of the same effects a sea experiences.

    • @SoloSailing77
      @SoloSailing77 4 місяці тому +3

      @@MrBill34786 I solo sail a 34 foot sailboat! Been a Great Lakes sailor, since 1982. I soloed a 41 footer when I was 13, from Muskegon to Chicago. Don't think anyone would allow that now a days!

    • @WizzRacing
      @WizzRacing 3 місяці тому +3

      I believe you. As once they encountered the three sisters. It was all over for them. It broke the ship in half and sank so fast. Not even a call went out. They never had time to send one..

    • @unitedwestanddividedwefall5098
      @unitedwestanddividedwefall5098 15 днів тому

      @@SoloSailing77that’s awesome. I don’t know anything about sailing. But my dream is to retire and sail the Caribbean 😂

  • @stevesellers-wilkinson7376
    @stevesellers-wilkinson7376 5 місяців тому +60

    I think it's brilliant that this guy has read people's comments, looked into it further and floated other theories. Responding to the comments is a great thing to do!

    • @waterlinestories
      @waterlinestories  5 місяців тому +13

      It's interesting. No matter how much I research, the collective knowledge of this audience is incredible. I always learn more about an incident after I post a video from the comments.

    • @sydney.g.sloangammagee8181
      @sydney.g.sloangammagee8181 3 місяці тому +1

      To think, I almost didn't click into this . . . "another one on the Fitzgerald!!! It's probably one I've already watched . . . " BUT you had me hooked with that first line & you did not disappoint !!! AWESOME & BRILLIANTLY CONSIDERATE!

    • @waterlinestories
      @waterlinestories  3 місяці тому +1

      @sydney.g.sloangammagee8181 Thanks, I really appreciate that

  • @thindigital
    @thindigital 6 місяців тому +87

    I'm not a mariner, I don't even swim well, but i enjoy your content and how carefully and considerately you present these stories
    Thank you.

    • @Triggernlfrl
      @Triggernlfrl 6 місяців тому +4

      The best mariners don't swim well...

    • @richardstever3242
      @richardstever3242 6 місяців тому +2

      Many of the Captains don't have drivers licenses either.

  • @cmaylo
    @cmaylo 6 місяців тому +159

    A half hour Waterline Stories to start off the weekend, most excellent. Love the longer form videos, keep it up!

    • @user-bd3zy6wo7l
      @user-bd3zy6wo7l 6 місяців тому +1

      Going into an ad read is WILD

    • @Quattro_Joe
      @Quattro_Joe 6 місяців тому +4

      Fully agree 👍

    • @jakobquick6875
      @jakobquick6875 6 місяців тому +4

      ❤ the fact tht he took down older video to improve 👍 😊
      Great job folks. Love all but longer is better❤
      👋 hello and thank you from southern Canada 🇨🇦

    • @jakobquick6875
      @jakobquick6875 6 місяців тому +5

      She was a beautiful monster Ol Fitzgerald😢
      Sad tragedy. Here one minute, gone the next 😞

    • @waterlinestories
      @waterlinestories  6 місяців тому +7

      Hope you enjoyed👍🏻

  • @Ob1sdarkside
    @Ob1sdarkside 6 місяців тому +121

    I always liked the idea of a rogue wave, but I think it's a combination of factors. The welds, the keel separating, and a large wave. Given she was the first of her type to use compartmentalised construction, it might not have been as strong as later ships using that method. She must have gone down quickly that there was no mayday.

    • @arourallis
      @arourallis 6 місяців тому +22

      As they say, safety standards are written in blood...

    • @castlekingside76
      @castlekingside76 6 місяців тому +12

      They did a quick repair of the Fitzgerald not long before its fatal voyage. They were quick cheap welds on the spine of the ship. Plus several bulk head welds. The ship clearly had a lot of wear and tear.

    • @shariys1
      @shariys1 4 місяці тому +1

      I'm with you on that one.

  • @tbagurmam
    @tbagurmam 5 місяців тому +47

    My grandfather was on the Anderson that night! As he told me the fitz was picked up from the stern by the first wave of the three sister's and was driven into the lake bed!! The subsequent 2 other waves swamped the rest of the ship and the bow never came out of the first wave, cheers

    • @scottbutkowski5803
      @scottbutkowski5803 5 місяців тому +13

      That is exactly what my late father told me he suspected the cause of the sinking to be. It's never been a popular theory, But I've always thought it might be the correct one.

    • @joeskis
      @joeskis 4 місяці тому +3

      why is it broken in two though?

    • @minnesotajack1
      @minnesotajack1 4 місяці тому +3

      Not many people realize the ship was 200 feet longer than the depth of the water it sank in…so that’s a possibility

    • @Roadrunner4447
      @Roadrunner4447 4 місяці тому

      Ok supposed she took a nose dive where then is the ore that should have slid to the bow? They have looked in the bow cargo holds and they are empty

    • @minnesotajack1
      @minnesotajack1 4 місяці тому

      @@Roadrunner4447 well the ship is split in two and half of it is upside down.
      …and in a larger sense, every last ounce is at the bottom of the lake somewhere

  • @j.a.armour2427
    @j.a.armour2427 5 місяців тому +35

    Whatever theory or combined theories that would explain how the Edmund Fitzgerald sank so quickly is probably correct. I think of Captain McSorely (sp?) being on the bridge of the Edmund Fitzgerald in that dire situation. He had to be very close to a radio or phone. However, he didn't even have a chance to say that his ship was sinking. That's how fast it happened. That's telltale in and of itself.
    Could it be that one or both of those 30'-35' waves that Captain Cooper of the Anderson reported somehow caused the bow of the Edmund Fitzgerald to dip below the surface of the water and then pointing downward she just keep right on going to the bottom as if it was swallowed by the heavy seas? That combined with the fact that she was listing and had already taken in a lot of water makes sense to me as to why the Edmund Fitzgerald not only sank but did so very suddenly and rapidly.
    Great video! Very no-nonsense, clear and to the point!

  • @csx8709
    @csx8709 4 місяці тому +12

    I heard a variant of the bottoming out theory. It involves the strength and viscosity of water. There is a point at which water becomes as hard as concrete if it can’t get out of the way fast enough. It’s possible they took damage from the shoals without actually making contact with the rocks.
    I also heard the vent covers that were missing led to ballast tanks, which could point to the tanks being crushed. The flexing of such an event could also explain the railing.
    The middle 1/3 of the ship is folded under the rest of the wreck, and the forward section ends right about at those vents, indicating a weakness there.

  • @bigballz4u
    @bigballz4u 6 місяців тому +134

    9:47 Theory 1: Poor maintenance
    11:16 Theory 2: Overloaded
    12:47 Theory 3: Deck hatches insecure
    16:53 Theory 4: Lost vent covers
    17:52 Theory 5: Hull damage from scraping on shoal
    21:39 Theory 6: The Three Sisters

    • @zodiestones735
      @zodiestones735 6 місяців тому +21

      This comment: the lords work

    • @sunnsupremacyy
      @sunnsupremacyy 6 місяців тому +12

      I personally think it’s 12346 combined

    • @saucejohnson9862
      @saucejohnson9862 6 місяців тому +10

      Captain of the Anderson said there was a double rogue wave, I hate when people overlook the shoal hitting because the Anderson survived the double wave, the Fitz had to have hit bottom beforehand.

    • @imperialmodelworks8473
      @imperialmodelworks8473 6 місяців тому +23

      ​@@saucejohnson9862 not necessarily. With the keel loose the way it was, the ship could have sprung leaks in the belly without grounding. There were several lake freighters that broke in two without grounding due to the same issue. A big problem with the Fitz was how much it would flex and twist from side to side, and worked alot of things loose, including the keel. If I recall correctly, there were only 3 or 4 bulkheads in the cargo hold of the Fitz, and it was much less laterally stable than the Anderson and most other ships of its size.

    • @TillerG7
      @TillerG7 6 місяців тому +23

      I don’t buy the loose hatch cleats theory. My opinion is she bottomed out which caused a stress fracture and that’s why she lost a fence rail. She took on so much water that a rogue wave caused that water to shift forward and push the cargo all towards to the bow. She nosed dived within seconds and once the bow hit bottom, there was still 200’ of stern section sticking out of the water, that’s when she broke apart. Those poor men didn’t stand a chance to send a mayday call. It happened far too fast.

  • @cameronsienkiewicz6364
    @cameronsienkiewicz6364 6 місяців тому +78

    I’d be willing to bet my bottom dollar that the keel issue, combined with the three sisters waves, and the fact that it had taken on MORE weight from water intrusion is probably what did her in ..
    if they had loaded the ship to over its freeboard would allow , then MORE weight in the form of water got in, and if the fitz hit the three sisters, it would have overcome the ships ability to stay together with the broken keel, and it would’ve broke Fitzgeralds back and that’s why she disappeared soo fast and is lying in two pieces on the bottom .. the life rafts being torn and ripped from the derricks is a good sign that the three sisters did in fact hit the fitz.. the Anderson was able to survive the three sisters because her keel was still fully intact, but even she sustained substantial deck damage from them .. I don’t believe the 6 fathom shoal had anything to do with it..
    The two sections are two far apart for it to have broken up when it hit the sea floor .. it broke apart at the surface and hydrodynamic forces caused them to separate fairly far apart, much like the titanic

    • @fernandomarques5166
      @fernandomarques5166 6 місяців тому +9

      A broken back would also be in line with the "loose railing" mentioned on radio to the Andersen

    • @br-v388
      @br-v388 6 місяців тому +9

      Completely incorrect about the sinking... why is the Fitzgerald the only ship with such extensive damage to the midsection, and why is the length of missing midsection equal to the difference between the length of the vessel and the depth of water she rests in (~200ft)? Why do you say the sections are too far apart when they are actually CLOSER together than other wrecks of lakers that are confirmed to have broken in two on the surface? Why did McSorley report taking on a list AFTER passing Six Fathom Shoal and not before if there is no causal link?

    • @zoozoc1
      @zoozoc1 6 місяців тому +6

      ​@@br-v388 The fact that all of the experts agree that the ship would have sunk very soon after hitting the shoals seems to make it the cause unlikely.

  • @derekheuring2984
    @derekheuring2984 5 місяців тому +19

    The Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum located at Michigan's Whitefish Point Light-Station is a must see for anyone interested in the loss of the Edmund Fitzgerald or any of the other hundreds of ships lost along the Lake Superior Shipwreck Coast. My wife and I finally made it to the museum last year and were deeply moved by the displays there, especially of the Edmund Fitzgerald's ship's bell. It was a both gratifying and poignant visit there. Gratifying in that as a young man I got to meet Phil Nuytten, the inventor of the "Newtsuit" several times and actually listened to him ponder on the idea of a hard shell exo diving suit before he finally invented it in 1979. His Newtsuit was used to explore the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald. Poignant in that there is an observation platform from which, if the weather had allowed the lights of the Edmund Fitzgerald would have been visible from Whitefish Point just before it sank.

  • @samuelhepfner
    @samuelhepfner 6 місяців тому +92

    I admire you for saying that you could do better and you did! great job man, thanks for sharing with us all this research you did

  • @fatovamingus
    @fatovamingus 6 місяців тому +41

    Great presentation. You know the Birkenhead makes you proud, Shackleton & the Endurance is proof of the best in us but that picture of the Fitzgerald at the bottom of the lake makes you understand and feel the personification of ships. She looks like she suffered . And it's heartbreaking to look at somehow.

  • @johnwatts8758
    @johnwatts8758 4 місяці тому +8

    In 2010, I was in Duluth Minnesota and saw Arthur Anderson coming to port . People on shore applauded the ship when they came in . I'm sure people remember them going to look for the Edmond Fitzgerald . In bad weather risking their own lives . ❤

  • @Pandora4224
    @Pandora4224 6 місяців тому +35

    Ever since I found this Channel about 6 months ago I absolutely adore watching all of the videos and catching up on all the other videos. As much as I want to I simply cannot watch this video. My parents had just gotten married and he sailed on the lakes for a job. I can tell you she was so scared because at that time they didn't know who had gone down. My dad sailed the Munson that year but he knew every man on board the Fitz. I've heard the stories from him over the years and the last words anyone ever heard from them "We're holding our own" has always been gut wrenching. One thing I can say is the chief mate would NEVER have sailed unless everyone single hatch was dogged securely. He was well known for that on every trip not just the last one. I have no doubt that he double checked every one of those hatches especially because they knew what weather they had. All the years my dad sailed I hated Novembers the most. November Witches are no joke and I was worried every time. I wish I could watch this episode but I just can't. It's just too close to home. Even now that my dad retired it's still hard. I just know all about the Fitz and hate to have reminders even all these years later.
    I am looking forward to next video though.

    • @sydney.g.sloangammagee8181
      @sydney.g.sloangammagee8181 3 місяці тому

      Pandora, bless your heart ! ! !
      I have seen all of his videos, especially these on the Fitzgerald & if you could watch any of them, this would be the one . . . he is very carefully considerate about every detail of collected & accumulated information that he presents in a very gracious manner!!!
      I'm delighted you got to have your dad with you to raise you - a tribute to your dad in memory of those who weren't there to raise their kids. God bless your parents!!!

  • @petoasaurus
    @petoasaurus 6 місяців тому +8

    Another fact not usually mentioned: The Fitz was a weather reporting ship, and was required to make reports regularly every 6 hours. On Nov 10, she made her 7 AM report, but did NOT make her 1 pm report. To not do this tells me there was an urgent problem going on, that required the captain's and deck officer's attention. The ship would have been near Otter Head, preparing to turn to the southeast. I think theories 1 & 2 are the primary cause,, especially the loose keel, that worked itself more loose as the ship worked in the heavy seas. Theory 5 comes in as well - they made their damage report to the Anderson immediately after exiting the shallow waters north of Caribou Island. Something serious must have happened while in the shallows. The lower freeboard, combined with even more loss of freeboard from the ship taking on water via the loose keel, caused her to scrape bottom, probably on six fathom shoal. It occurred below the lost vent caps, and the ship's hogging at that time caused the fence rail to tighten beyond its limits and snap. The vent caps were lost either by the recoil of the snapped fence cable, the internal pressure in the ballast tanks from the impact blowing them off, or both. The grounding punctured a hole in the ballast tanks (probably 2 of them, since 2 caps were lost) but did not puncture the cargo hold. However, the hole was large enough to overcome the pump's ability too remove the water. The 2 ballast tanks quickly flooded, and this ship took an immediate list.

  • @kalkuttadrop6371
    @kalkuttadrop6371 6 місяців тому +10

    According to Cooper, what he thinks happened is that the ship was taking on water from the vents, and probably mildly hit bottom on the shoals. She was riding low and listing, but not in immediate danger of sinking and in better weather would have limped home.
    Then she got hit by the three sisters which had hit the Anderson. The first one probably swamped the deck, second one probably fully dunked the ship, at which point with a list and the whole ship underwater top to bottom, the ship's screw could have propelled it into the ground with force like a diving submarine(this is called breaking deep), breaking her in half as she hit the lakebed.
    It couldn't be the waves alone, she was in trouble prior and the Anderson handled them. But it also couldn't just be damage prior, if they were leaking bad enough they were in immediate danger of sinking they'd have called for help or indicated trouble. The ship was damaged, but limping, and the rogue waves finished her off.

  • @prospector14
    @prospector14 5 місяців тому +10

    I grew up in Windsor, across from Detroit on the Detroit River. I remember as kid watching the ships go by. I distinctly remember the Arthur M because of the loader on deck, and remember the Fitz because it was a monster of a ship. Been to Whitefish Bay and I’ve boated on Lake Superior. Even on a nice day, it is an intimidating body of water.

    • @user-fr9bm7wb4w
      @user-fr9bm7wb4w 3 місяці тому

      I lived in Grosse pointe shores and used to sit on the bank of Lake St Claire listening to my boombox watching the ships in the distance. Now in Arizona, I do miss the lakes.

  • @walterathow5988
    @walterathow5988 6 місяців тому +21

    the 3 sisters drove the ship down, as the fist wave ran up her deck it drove the bow down, then the second wave lifted the stern and the screws just drove her to the bottom with the ship being longer then the depth when the bow hit bottom the stern broke off the center of the ship just desinagrated. Cpt Cooper said they were the biggest waves he had ever seen. Thanks for the video. 💚💙👍👍👏👏👏

    • @JesMcdld-nb6pg
      @JesMcdld-nb6pg 5 місяців тому +3

      I know they say 3 sisters but the captain of the Anderson said two rouge waves and huge up to 50 ft high and he knew those two waves heading towards the Fitz would do her in with the list ice build up from freezing rain they said they never found proof that it scraped the reef but being so heavy with a list and even the normal seas were up around 20 footers but he said when he did his interview when it happened that those two rouge waves were massive took her down fast makes most sense and he was right there why they didn't listen to him more when a very experienced captain says he was hit by these waves and they were heading towards a ship already having trouble he knew what happened I've been on Superior and it's beautiful on the water and it can change so fast or we would get hit by a big roller we called them they come out of nowhere and Superior is famous for its big rollers even in Summer time the water is a wake up when you jump in so cold they say most of the crew are still in their ship and the cold prevents them from floating up and keeps them in almost same condition even now so many years ago so bad but sorry got off topic but agree with you and captain from Anderson that those waves were the finishing swamping it rip

    • @johnphillips4342
      @johnphillips4342 4 місяці тому +1

      I am out of breath reading this.....punctuation?!?! 😊

    • @walterathow5988
      @walterathow5988 4 місяці тому

      @@johnphillips4342 sorry.. 😎

  • @joeljenkins2876
    @joeljenkins2876 5 місяців тому +6

    Amazing that after all these years, the Fitz is still talked about so vigorously. One thing not mentioned about the shoal grounding theory is Captain Cooper's statement that he got a call from McSorley not long after the Fitz passed over Six Fathom, stating that he had 'a fence rail down, a starboard list, and a couple of vents missing'. Remember, this was not long after passing through Six Fathom shoal. That would make it seem that SOMETHING happened as they passed over the area. Just my humble opinion.

  • @steaglesfan5686
    @steaglesfan5686 Місяць тому +2

    "The Searchers all say they'd have made white fish Bay if they put 15 more miles behind her"

  • @FischerFan
    @FischerFan 5 місяців тому +4

    I put my trust in the theory of Bernie Cooper, the late Captain of the Arthur Andersen. He was of the opinion that the Fitzgerald either developed a stress factor in the hull, or had simply bottomed out.
    The first sign of trouble came in mid-afternoon, when one of the ship's fence rails snapped. When that happens, it is usually correlated with the ship, not sagging, but hogging on something. This may very well have been around the time the Fitzgerald reached the Six-fathom shoal. It's also around that time when the Fitzgerald started taking on more water than it could pump out. McSorley soon found himself taking on a starboard list.
    With no working radar systems left to guide him and no visibility on the lake, he's sailing blindly into a tempest.
    Then came the rogue waves. The Arthur Andersen survived them, but I believe they were the knockout punch to the Fitzgerald.

    • @tomsisk6811
      @tomsisk6811 4 місяці тому +2

      Bernie Cooper has one on all the speculators...He was in the midst of it all ... He has my respect.

  • @Chris-eh3du
    @Chris-eh3du 6 місяців тому +25

    Kudos and mad respect for listening to the comments, and making constructive content out of it! I wasn't involved, but it's something you don't see every day anymore people being open minded to feedback.

  • @chloehennessey6813
    @chloehennessey6813 6 місяців тому +14

    If you look at the bow you’ll see the visor around the windows.
    We know that there was reports of rogue waves. The steel visor around the windows is bent down further; like a Ruffles chip. She got bowed by one of the waves and the second one coming on she went straight in to and to the bottom, her bow strikes the bottom under propulsion; the stern breaks off from the stress.

    • @franks471
      @franks471 6 місяців тому +4

      basically, yeah that's the waves doing her in. bad hatches are another, wet shifting cargo causing the list. A heavy bow can cause hogging over the crest of a wave and that explains the broken railing. Then come the three witches. Bow in a trough, stern raised up, and the second wave sends her nose to the bottom. I think the sinking really came as a shock it was so fast.

  • @laurensleator9402
    @laurensleator9402 6 місяців тому +18

    Thank you for updating your episode on the Edmund Fitzgerald. I appreciate the additional context and discussion of the many possibilities of what could have happened.

  • @stuartbothwell6399
    @stuartbothwell6399 4 місяці тому +3

    Two hull sections says catestrophic failure of the keel and gunnles, allowing for no mayday call, essentially turned the EF into a submarine. If the life boats were wrenched away from their stations, we're talking seconds to where the bridge was completely submurged at speed.

  • @jjcalvillo
    @jjcalvillo 6 місяців тому +9

    Fitz was built when load limits were at a specific number. The load limits were increased, I believe more than once. Each increase of load limit meant the boat sat lower in the water. The profit motive/greed sank the Fitz, it had to carry loads it hadn’t been designed to carry, which it did successfully, until it had to do it in an excessively heavy a gale.

  • @frankcelle744
    @frankcelle744 6 місяців тому +20

    As someone who is from Michigan and fascinated by shipwrecks, it always crazy to think about how nasty these lakes can get. I dont think people outside of the greatlakes region realizes how absolutely insane the waves and weather can get on the great lakes. Its like the north or bering sea's.

    • @christinagowan8116
      @christinagowan8116 6 місяців тому +3

      You definitely learn to respect the lakes. I'm also from Michigan

    • @susanmacdonald4288
      @susanmacdonald4288 3 місяці тому +1

      I live on Lake Ontario, right where it joins the St. Lawrence River, and we're only about four or five miles from the U.S. shore with a large island in between, so we're pretty protected. But right past that, the lake opens right up, so we still get some wild waves sometimes. I remember swimming at the beach one day, and a wave came up that was well over my head, and just looked up at it as it slammed me down. I can't comprehend what the weather on the larger lakes, especially Superior, would be like. It never occured to me growing up that not being able to see the opposite shore was anything unusual...the lake was just the lake.

  • @4Mr.Crowley2
    @4Mr.Crowley2 3 місяці тому +3

    What has always terrified me is hearing the howling winds as the captain of the Arthur Anderson speaks to Captain McSorley - terrifying. I’m still convinced of the rogue wave theory since the AA captain reported them and they been proven fairly recently as a real terrible possibility…it would have turned her over and sunk her in minutes as it seems to have done…

  • @rich7787
    @rich7787 6 місяців тому +12

    Hot diggity dog! You made a video, read comments from fans about how it could have been better, and took that video down so you could make a better one? You’re one of the best on here!

  • @ToyotaGuy1971
    @ToyotaGuy1971 5 місяців тому +2

    Broke up across waves. There's no way in hell those hatches weren't secure in Nov. if there was any sign of bad weather. The ship wasn't built to take waves like that, it was too long and too heavy loaded.

  • @foo219
    @foo219 4 місяці тому +3

    Nearly always corporate greed with these. Bare minimum maintenance, bare minimum crew, bare minimum safety margins. After all, lives are cheap, and there's never any consequences for the people responsible.

  • @susanmacdonald4288
    @susanmacdonald4288 3 місяці тому +2

    Whatever happened, it was so fast that no SOS was sent, and by the time Captain Cooper realized that something was wrong, it was simply too late...the Fitz and its crew were already gone.

  • @russpost2557
    @russpost2557 5 місяців тому +8

    My cousin was on Fitz, and my other cousin was on the ship behind it . Never saw it go down .

    • @susanmacdonald4288
      @susanmacdonald4288 3 місяці тому

      I'm so sorry...what a terrible impact on your family. May I ask which crew member he was? And did your other cousin continue to sail?

    • @russpost2557
      @russpost2557 15 днів тому +1

      Head orsman james Pratt. My other cousin paul locks sailed for 4 more years .

  • @JagdgeschwaderX
    @JagdgeschwaderX 6 місяців тому +25

    Having worked in the oil industry for almost 25 years (only 4 years offshore) my experience is disasters tend to be caused by a multiplying effect. Generally systems are designed to cope with several issues but every now and then you will get more that can be planned for without crazy expenditure and many people watching these videos will know companies cut corners often because of government regulation. It's always the little guys that get screwed.

  • @outfield1988
    @outfield1988 5 місяців тому +4

    Overloaded and damage to the keel. Then the waves broke her spine.

  • @mikebetts103
    @mikebetts103 5 місяців тому +1

    One other factor that was not mentioned was it was overloaded. After loading was complete the Fitzgerald had a list to correct that they had added more

  • @kevinduveneck1504
    @kevinduveneck1504 5 місяців тому +4

    From what I have heard is that there were gaps between the bottom plates and the steel beams in the bottom of the Fitz. They had done a temporary fix by putting steel plates in the gaps. Years later there were sheets of steel sitting in the tall grasses at Frasier Shipyard marked "Edmund Fitzgerald" The theory being the Fitz was going to be undergoing major work at the end of the season

    • @tomsisk6811
      @tomsisk6811 4 місяці тому +1

      Hull stiffeners is what your referring to... I wonder what ever became of them ?

  • @MrBill34786
    @MrBill34786 5 місяців тому +6

    I used to work as a deckhand onboard the 806ft Hon. James L. Oberstar from August to October 2018. She was originally built in Toledo, Ohio, in 1959 as the Shenango II. Despite some obvious superstructure differences. She was pretty much a classic straight decker like the "Fitz. However, I believe the JLO was built the traditional keel up way, and she also has solid bulkheads that divided the cargo holds, unlike the mesh screens the Fitz had. Which not only helped to obviously keep water from completely flooding the holds but also kept the ship from flexing side to side. An issue that the Fitzgerald from what I heard had. I personally don't believe the Fitzgerald had any serious design flaws. Hell all of the 1970s to early 1980s built freighters, which include the thirteen "Footers" or 1000ft vessels were built in sections, and all are currently in service. Also, in regards to the infamous hatch clamp debate. There were several times we would leave port with every other clamp undone, and I remember a time when we left Marquette Michigan one October morning with a full load of iron ore which was roughly 33,000 tons and downbound for the Soo locks. When we were caught in a white sqaull out in the middle of Lake Superior in the general area the Fitzgerald went down. Let me tell you. We didn't experience 25-30ft waves like they did, but 12ft waves with occasional 15-16ft swells sure as hell tossed us around, and we were only permitted to go aft via the port and starboard storm tunnels. which was an experience in of itself. Other than the two or three water tight doors that separated the tunnel. I can still remember watching that damn door 200 feet ahead of me flex up and down, and the sound of the hull bending and twisting had me both awe struck and terrified. It was an experience that I will never forget. My personal take on the tragedy was that she simply bottomed out. McSorely thought he could make it, but the three sisters eventually caught up to an already wounded "Fitz" and drove her straight to the bottom. You did an absolutely amazing deep dive on the Fitzgerald, and I actually got done watching your video on the Andrea Gale. With that being said. You got yourself a lifelong subscriber to your channel. Keep up the good work, and hopefully, you can cover other Great Lakes maritime disasters in the future, such as the Carl D. Bradley or the Great Storm of 1913. Cheers! 😊

    • @tomsisk6811
      @tomsisk6811 4 місяці тому

      Excellent observations 👍

    • @herbertmichaels2841
      @herbertmichaels2841 Місяць тому

      How did u like the job as deckhand? Did u keep it longer than the 2 months u mentioned? What was the pay like my MMC should be here soon

    • @MrBill34786
      @MrBill34786 Місяць тому

      @herbertmichaels2841 Unfortunately, no. It was a buddy buddy culture out there. I worked like hell out there, but at the end of the day. If they don't like you. You're gone. I was what you call a boat nerd, and boat nerds are not well liked on board. The money was awesome, and you will build up your bank account real quick. If you sail on the lakes, the food was amazing. Did you also get your twic card? Your gonna need one of those too. It was a fun life experience that I got to do. Now I follow my new passion in life. Storm chasing. 😅🤣

    • @herbertmichaels2841
      @herbertmichaels2841 Місяць тому

      @@MrBill34786 yes i have twic already .coastguard says file is done just waiting to process it .what was the money like per week? Are there creeps out there seem like i saw some wierd ones on boat pages

    • @herbertmichaels2841
      @herbertmichaels2841 Місяць тому

      @@MrBill34786 you oughta try somewhere else your a sailor now bud. F that crew if tgey were punks

  • @ThexEpicxMechanic
    @ThexEpicxMechanic 5 місяців тому +4

    I strongly believe that a rogue wave got her, since the bridge visor is smashed down, she literally vanished in an instant, and there was another ship like her that stayed afloat for a while after breaking up.

  • @kevinmingus3221
    @kevinmingus3221 5 місяців тому +4

    Probably the most in depth video I've seen in a long time

  • @almirria6753
    @almirria6753 6 місяців тому +21

    You really should talk to Captain Darrell Walton about the Big Fitz" he is also an expert on great lakes shipping

  • @Mandcfrey
    @Mandcfrey 4 місяці тому +1

    One more correction: the Fitz was not the longest. The Arthur B Homer was one foot longer and the Fritz’s sister ship.

  • @user-sq4jz9up6g
    @user-sq4jz9up6g 5 місяців тому +3

    I was in the Navy overseas when she went down They rang 3 bells in memory.of the 29 sailors

  • @rickhannah6262
    @rickhannah6262 5 місяців тому +3

    A ban on diving the wreck would not necessarily include diving on the wreck by authorities for evidence. The question is why all of the interested parties are in no hurry to determine the cause of the sinking when the evidence is there to be viewed or recovered and analysed. Not rocket science.

  • @jimwiskus8862
    @jimwiskus8862 6 місяців тому +4

    I am by no means an expert, more of an extreme fascination because of Gordon Lightfoot’s haunting song. I remember when it sank, along with Harry Reasoner’s reporting. If I had to wager a guess, I’d say it was a combination of things. Literally and figuratively it was the perfect storm. The keel issue wasn’t something I was totally unaware of. The railing being down is an indication of flexing of the ship. The fact that it appears it stayed down to indicates the ship was fatally broken. The Three Sisters as it’s described finished off the great ship and pushed them under. No bodies, only pieces of wrenched away life boats and jackets. It’s anybody’s guess as to what happened. We do know that whatever happened to the ship, it was swift and overwhelming. It just disappeared from the Anderson’s radar. Everything started out so normally and within 24 hours dissolved into a great mystery. I dare say unless someone is allowed to go down and thoroughly investigate the rack, the hatches that they can at least see the ends of the bow and the sterns keel it’s, it’s really hard to say. Not to minimize either of these events, but will have to put it up there with JFK‘s assassination, and the sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald. No one seems to really have all the answers. Great video I can’t thank you enough.

  • @asa1973100
    @asa1973100 4 місяці тому +1

    The state room on that ship was spectacular and the guests cabins too so plush and luxurious

  • @mikeclarke952
    @mikeclarke952 6 місяців тому +14

    Biggest clue is there was no mayday call. From one wave to the next she was gone. I think she split in half on the surface and plunged to the bottom in a second. Keel welds and possible overloading.

    • @regould221
      @regould221 5 місяців тому

      Splinting in half on the surface doesn't fit the evidence. The two halves are to close together on the bottom to have split on the surface. The would have sunk at different speeds and ended up pointed in different directions and father apart.

  • @bradschwamberger1217
    @bradschwamberger1217 6 місяців тому +2

    I am surprised you did not mention another theory. The 3 sisters come across the ship, water on the deck lowers her even deeper. The back of the second or third wave pushes her down, driving her into the bottom breaking her in half. I think the Capt knew they were in trouble. I saw some place that on one of the dives it was observed that the door to the wheel house was locked open. It has been suggested that it was like that, to allow for a possible escape of the ship. What ever caused the sinking at the end I believe was sudden.

  • @kathryngleason9197
    @kathryngleason9197 5 місяців тому +6

    Isnt it possible that all of those things played a role in the sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald? If these theories are based on factual evidence it is quite plausible that could be the case . I believe all of the scenrios are correct and just compounded the situation and the storm took them down . Just what i think 😢

    • @admwadenx
      @admwadenx 3 місяці тому +2

      It's quite possible, even probable. My background is in aviation and I can say, with the utmost confidence, 95% of all "major" aircraft accidents were preceeded by a myriad of seemingly non-significant factors that together led to one or more impactful events.

  • @dadurweird
    @dadurweird 5 місяців тому +1

    Around 1968, we visited Soo Ste Marie and the Edmund Fitzgerald passed through the Soo Locks. They said the Fitzgerald was passing through with the heaviest cargo of any lake ship. I do not recall how much cargo was on board, but that said this was the largest load.

  • @delilahboa
    @delilahboa 6 місяців тому +11

    As always brilliantly told…..I’ve mentioned before but love the visual side of your stories as much as your narration, the animation etc is brilliant, all helps me understand what’s going on….thanks so much! ❤

  • @scrawn9721
    @scrawn9721 6 місяців тому +6

    All the theories combined seem a logical explanation, the many factors compounded ontop of eachother until the ships structural integrity catastrophically failed.

  • @tinkertailor7385
    @tinkertailor7385 6 місяців тому +12

    Yep. A single cause didn't sink the ship. It would have been multiple problems culminating in a catastrophic event. Driving her fast to out run the storm and get ahead of the other ship, probably began the cascade of events. She didn't hit any shoal, just hitting waves at 5 or 6 knots faster than the other ship was all it took as the wind began shifting 180 degrees and the seas state became larger and more confused.
    The first indication of trouble was when they observed damage to deck fittings from wave action and were taking on water to the extent that they had both pumps running. That simple bit of information was the death knell.... Later they begin to lose radar and electronics. They developed a list which indicates that the pumps are not keeping up with water ingress, or that the bilge piping/bilgecocks/strainers were malfunctioning and some areas could not be pumped. The fact she began taking water on in such heavy seas doomed her. Any ship that begins taking on water in heavy seas is now in a countdown to destruction. It doesn't get better. It only gets worse until catastrophe.

    • @meles3740
      @meles3740 3 місяці тому

      The most interesting and persuasive theory on here and you don't even mention the design issues, overloading, and delayed maintenance that may have already had the ship taking on water before McSorley decided to kick the Fitz into high gear. All of these issue would have made it even more susceptible. McSorley knew his ship well (a deathtrap in these conditions), but I think your statement on the seas becoming larger and more confused is the most plausible theory. I'm pretty sure waves get much bigger when they come near shore and the shallow shoal area might have cause the waves to be unusually large. With the state of the ship verified as poor it might be worth someone modelling what the wave might have been like over the shoal.

  • @thereissomecoolstuff
    @thereissomecoolstuff 6 місяців тому +23

    The wreck needs to be dived on again. The new technology will certainly answer sinking theory 1-5. There is also a body on the lake bottom that was never recovered.

    • @mikeprimm4077
      @mikeprimm4077 6 місяців тому +11

      The family dont want it recovered. when Fred Shannon dived on the wreck back in the '90s or 2000s, whenever the last expedition to the wreck was, and filmed the body, he showed it to the US Coast guard the Canadian Coast guard and Oglebay Norton. They chose not to retrieve it at the request of the families who wanted it left down there. To my knowledge the families didn't even request to view the footage. It is a person laying on the seafloor with debris on top of them, wearing a cork style life jacket. He is located somewhere just off the starboard bow pinned under debris on the lake floor

    • @thereissomecoolstuff
      @thereissomecoolstuff 6 місяців тому +6

      @@mikeprimm4077 I have seen the photos. They can leave their loved ones there. If there is a way to definitively determine what happened that led to the sinking should be explored.

    • @br-v388
      @br-v388 6 місяців тому +5

      How will they investigate the shoal theory with two hundred feet of midsection completely obliterated?

    • @thereissomecoolstuff
      @thereissomecoolstuff 6 місяців тому +2

      @@br-v388 high speed computer simulation and AI.

    • @JefferyAshmore
      @JefferyAshmore 6 місяців тому +4

      ​@mikeprimm4077 I believe there were other bodies in state room and in forward steering pilot house.. I think they should bring them up and identify but families don't want that.

  • @joepaul1776
    @joepaul1776 5 місяців тому +1

    I live in Superior, the Arthur Anderson is getting ready to leave winter lay up for another season. It is cool to walk down on the ship yards and see the history first hand.

  • @vapete1237
    @vapete1237 6 місяців тому +9

    The fact that the vessel was found in two pieces suggests that faulted construction (welds) and extreme weather were to blame .. though this is only an opinion.

    • @festungkurland9804
      @festungkurland9804 6 місяців тому +7

      Yup, lots more documentation and evidence of fatigue type hull failures now especially in colder temperatures.

  • @Michipicoten
    @Michipicoten 5 місяців тому +3

    The Arthur M. Anderson wasn’t a self unloader in 1975. It was 767’ at that time though, but not a self unloader until 1981.

  • @catsupremacyy
    @catsupremacyy 6 місяців тому +7

    The quality of your information and storytelling is unmatched! Super informative and entertaining to watch thank you!! Also huge respect for redoing the video, we'll watch this one too no worries HAHA 🖤

  • @garylefevers
    @garylefevers 6 місяців тому +8

    Thank you for doing such an excellent job on this video. The research you did for this video actually produced some information as well as photographs and home movies I had never seen before. Not many people admit when they could have done better. You did. Rock on!

  • @difdaf436
    @difdaf436 6 місяців тому +7

    I’ve watched quite a few videos about this sinking.. I was really happy to see you put up another video about it but.. always more to learn and your story telling abilities always have me dialed in till the end..

  • @kartyl1wielki
    @kartyl1wielki 2 місяці тому +1

    I have watched several videos on this subject and I think that Yours is one of the most detailed one. It was a pleasure to watch!

  • @johnsoper5675
    @johnsoper5675 6 місяців тому +14

    It could very well be a combination of a few of the theories. I've been in a big storm on Superior on an oil tanker. The 3 sisters were massive waves.

  • @66block84
    @66block84 6 місяців тому +1

    I worked at Fraser Shipyards at the time the Fitzgerald sank. We had a guy on our crew that had sailed the year before on the Fitz and knew the 29 men who died. No work was done the day we found out, Nov. 11. We tried to console our coworker and had many theories as to what happened. Will never know for sure.

  • @REVYMERCENARY
    @REVYMERCENARY 5 місяців тому +3

    Did you watch the documentary of the captain of the Arthur m Anderson's opinion on what happened? His makes perfect sense. Also they did find a body but deleted or edited the original video out of respect for the families.

  • @outcastmoth78kaminski4
    @outcastmoth78kaminski4 6 місяців тому +2

    Oof, the launch... that's like waking up on the wrong side of the bed, stepping on the tail of a black cat that you don't own... bad signs strong enough to make you go... yeah imma burn a sick day...

  • @SVAdAstra
    @SVAdAstra 6 місяців тому +4

    Shore maintenance reported a loose keel. Then the sunken vessel is found in two pieces where it broke in half about amidships. My conclusion: overstress of an uncorrected compromised hull causing catastrophic hogging and sagging in the extreme seastate. If the hull lost its structural stiffness in the final voyage that could also result in cargo hatch failure due to flexing prior to hull failure.

  • @phlanxsmurf
    @phlanxsmurf 6 місяців тому +8

    What a wild ride of a video. Great watch. Thanks!

  • @kenehlears7716
    @kenehlears7716 5 місяців тому +4

    First time watching your channel, won't be the last.grew up in Michigan.spent a lot of time on or near the Big lakes.saw the Fitz pass thru the Soo Locks a couple of times.big, gorgeous ship.just stunned me when they announced the tragedy.thanks for your thorough and honest video.

  • @Alphaskeptic
    @Alphaskeptic 6 місяців тому +1

    I worked on the lake boats in the 1970's. You would dog down every hatch clamp, every second, or every third clamp depending on the weather that was expected.

  • @ruairigoat
    @ruairigoat 6 місяців тому +10

    "brick immortar," has another great video on this... another great channel. This channel is top top quality too.

  • @WilliamEricStone
    @WilliamEricStone 5 місяців тому +2

    I think it is funny how people call this a mystery. That Lake sank her! And when one lives in the shadow of Superior, when we say the Lake, we mean only one. Everyone I know that has spent time on that lake believes she ran aground.

  • @charlie15627
    @charlie15627 6 місяців тому +7

    If they had made, what seemed to be minor, contact with a shoal, the Captain wouldn't necessarily broadcast that error over the radio. He would only do so if he thought that his ship was damaged and in danger. Making that announcement would bring additional inspections, bring heat from his employer and possibly effect his retirement bonuses. If it was to, as you mentioned, coincide with the hit of a large wave. Its possible that would would question if he'd made contact at all, adding to hi reluctance to put it over the air.
    I still agree that it was likely a combination of things that lead to the sinking. Maybe an already weakened keel. Maybe repeated beatings from large waves. Its really hard to say at this point.
    I have no doubt that if the Captain thought he was in danger of sinking, he would have radioed it out. Whatever else it was, it seems obvious that the keel final broke free. that put all the stress on the hull. It would have only taken moments for the strength of the hull plates to be over whelmed. It would have gone from heavy flooding to diving to the bottom, in pieces, in meer seconds.
    I do find it suspicious that the area was declared off limits from diving, while there were still so many questions about the accident.

    • @brentrussell780
      @brentrussell780 6 місяців тому +1

      I too think mcsorley and most of the crew knew they were in trouble and were doing what they could. The Chief surely would have known. Too rough to launch lifeboats, sheer rock and crashing waves to the east. The only option they had was to get into whitefish bay and beach it on the sand bottom there and be heros. Anything else was a certain death.

    • @meles3740
      @meles3740 3 місяці тому

      The only Canadian province that borders the Great Lakes, Ontario protects shipwrecks by prohibiting archaeological fieldwork, removing artifacts, or diving within 500 meters of a “marine archaeological site” without a license. Marine archaeological sites are prescribed individually, such as to protect the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald in Lake Superior and the wrecks of the Hamilton and Scourge in Lake Ontario. I suspect the law was mainly for the 1812 American ships the Hamilton and the Scorge which are a bit more accessible at 90 meters and remarkably preserved. The Edmund Fitzgerald was an obvious addition to ensure its protection. In theory a significant archaelogical effort can be approved to dive on any of these ships if it passes scrutiny.

  • @phillipschaber7836
    @phillipschaber7836 5 місяців тому +2

    Growing up in the Great Lakes region (Nw Ohio) I was very familiar with the story of the Edmund and honestly. Of everything I’ve read, everything I’ve studied and watched, I think it was caught betweeen two troughs, possibly even a roughe wave that caused the front end of the ship to slam in the bottom of the lake (remember, it’s in water shallower than it is long so it’s possible) the area where it went down isn’t that deep compared to the rest of superior, if a rouge wave just 75 feet high came along, when the ship comes down, it’s now nose diving into water that isn’t 350 feet deep, but only 200 feet deep… couple that with bad seals and it was just a matter of time before it went into a storm it shouldn’t have been in.

  • @Jaxck77
    @Jaxck77 6 місяців тому +10

    It’s the quality of the hull itself that was the primary problem. Several related ships all broke their backs in similar storms, all due to the relatively poor quality of iron used to make their hulls. This is almost certainly what actually sank the EF, but poor deck management and back luck with waves no doubt put them in such a fateful position.

    • @festungkurland9804
      @festungkurland9804 6 місяців тому +4

      Yup, lots more documentation and evidence of fatigue type hull failures now especially in colder temperatures.

    • @br-v388
      @br-v388 6 місяців тому

      Which related vessels would those be? The Fitz' only sister ship, the Arthur B Homer was laid up and scrapped due to economic reasons, not structural problems. The Herbert C. Jackson was built by GLEW with the same steel and construction techniques and sails to this day.

    • @jeanchampion671
      @jeanchampion671 5 місяців тому +1

      I’ve heard that also: poor quality of iron combined with low temperatures

    • @meles3740
      @meles3740 3 місяці тому

      @@br-v388 The Herbert C. Jackson is 40 feet shorter and so was not subject to the same stresses. The Arthur B Homer was lengthened in 1975 and the Fitzgerald had similar plans for early 1976. A hidden "ecoomic" factor one could imagine for such a short return on their investment in the Homer must have been the fear of the possibility of a repeat disaster. I don't know of any other directly related ships.

  • @deecawford
    @deecawford 5 місяців тому +1

    Love the content. Truly appreciate your honesty and redoing a well thought out video. Our beloved Edmund Fitzgerald deserved this, thank you

  • @international360
    @international360 6 місяців тому +3

    former great lakes sailor here...and this a good job on this vidieo...

  • @naughtiusmaximus830
    @naughtiusmaximus830 5 місяців тому +1

    I’n going with hatch cover as a major contributing factor. I’m from Michigan. The weather transition in November can be crazy. The crew probably had no idea what was ahead.

  • @wape1
    @wape1 6 місяців тому +13

    Great episode! It takes a real man to admit and correct his own mistakes. 👍

  • @frankiecrocker
    @frankiecrocker 6 місяців тому +2

    Most accidents are rarely due to one specific thing, it's a convergence of multiple existing factors as pointed out in the theories. Under normal conditions, those factors can coexist and not cause immediate danger. However, under extreme operating environments and bad choices in decision making, those benign factors can leed to catastrophic outcomes.
    Weather forecasting in 1975 was unreliable, way more so then than it is now. I think Captain McSorley had faith in the predictions of the storm going south, leaving him confident the the ship and crew would have been safe in what should have been a routine voyage. Had he doubted the forecast, he would have made previsions like taking on less load or charting a different course. McSorley can't be blamed for his judgment, it was based on flawed information. Ultimately, it was the extreme weather conditions that doomed the Edmond Fitzgerald.

  • @417jumps3
    @417jumps3 6 місяців тому +6

    Dude this was a great vid!!!

  • @gayprepperz6862
    @gayprepperz6862 3 місяці тому +1

    This video is a benchmark in objective research. Kudos for your efforts, and a brilliant presentation. Thought provoking to say the least!

  • @Wolfintery
    @Wolfintery 6 місяців тому +7

    Always appreciate coverage of the Great Lakes, you've definitely upped your game, well done! It's still crazy seeing the Arthur M. Anderson in service, I got some beautiful footage when she passed Mackinaw. Whitefish Point is really pretty and it sucks seeing how close to safety the Fitzgerald was

  • @knowsmebyname
    @knowsmebyname 6 місяців тому +2

    I am going with structural weakness. It was reported on the Fitz and also the sister ship. Other factors likely played a small role but the documented structural issues were the main reason imo.

  • @Jordizzan
    @Jordizzan 5 місяців тому +3

    Been watching for about a year and am always entertained and learning something here. I’ll always be a fan coming to watch. Keep it up.

    • @waterlinestories
      @waterlinestories  5 місяців тому +1

      Thanks. That means a lot to hear from someone who's been around since the start

  • @Irish_For_Life1842
    @Irish_For_Life1842 6 місяців тому +1

    Before he starts my favorite theory is the rogue wave theory. The theory of rogue waves existed for some time before a video from a BP off shore oil rig captured one live and proved their existence. It will be interesting to find out what all the theories he reports as I am open to see which fits the evidence better. My favorite can change.

  • @KlaunFuhrer-du7fr
    @KlaunFuhrer-du7fr 6 місяців тому +7

    I am used to big maritime disasters but it is mind boggling that this can happen on a LAKE...

    • @JefferyAshmore
      @JefferyAshmore 6 місяців тому +2

      It's a inland ocean.

    • @scottbutkowski5803
      @scottbutkowski5803 5 місяців тому +3

      If you have ever seen lake Superior you would notice that it looks a whole lot like an ocean!

    • @KlaunFuhrer-du7fr
      @KlaunFuhrer-du7fr 5 місяців тому

      @@scottbutkowski5803 No sadly. I visited US as a kid. Chicago, so lake Michigan.

    • @scottbutkowski5803
      @scottbutkowski5803 5 місяців тому +1

      @@KlaunFuhrer-du7fr Greetings from Tucson, Arizona. Most of my early life was been spent on the eastern seaboard, And then in the midwest.( Minnesota.) Now I live in a desert. The first time I stood on the shores of Lake Superior, My mind just could not accept that this was a
      "Lake" I was standing on. I grew up on the Atlantic Ocean, And Lake Superior seemed every bit as big to from the shore! It seemed every bit as large. As far as I'm concerned, It is!

    • @KlaunFuhrer-du7fr
      @KlaunFuhrer-du7fr 5 місяців тому +1

      @@scottbutkowski5803 Imagine Baikal lake even smaller surface area holds more water than all great lakes combined...

  • @hydroaxop73
    @hydroaxop73 5 місяців тому +2

    The boat book by Carl feather is about the hulett unloaders and one of the guys talked to a guy on the Fitzgerald who stated they would never come back and that rivets were loose

  • @teagenthetiefling5296
    @teagenthetiefling5296 6 місяців тому +3

    I feel like it’s probably a combo of everything. Many tragedies are perfect storms of mistakes, negligence, and environmental realities.

    • @fernandomarques5166
      @fernandomarques5166 6 місяців тому

      Disaster are seldom the result of single factor, generally they're the perfect allignment of several factors.
      Swiss Cheese theory and such.

  • @bradparker9664
    @bradparker9664 5 місяців тому +1

    I've developed a serious interest in the Edmund Fitzgerald, being enough of a history geek that I published a book on the Kennedy assassination. I have no idea what the draw is, and I've read on it and watched various documentaries, but I consider myself a novice in this area. Your video is perfect for folks like me that know (as the saying goes) "just enough to be dangerous.". Very tastefully done, and you should be quite proud if this is representative of your content. You have a new subscriber.

  • @louisquatorze9280
    @louisquatorze9280 6 місяців тому +8

    A quality creator. Superior is a beautiful lake, I recommend a visit if you have the means. It's interesting to note that diving to the wreck is no longer allowed. Lax maintenance is my guess but without further information it is impossible to verify, whatever the cause.

    • @picahudsoniaunflocked5426
      @picahudsoniaunflocked5426 6 місяців тому +1

      Desecration of the dead & trophy-hunters are appropriately why you can't dive the EF.

  • @garyddunst3
    @garyddunst3 5 місяців тому +2

    Well, the ship is at the bottom and it's well known also that it's been broken into two distinct pieces. The lake was ruff that day to say the least here. I personally believe that water did make it's way into the ship somehow, possibly and I think probably by way of the top hatches not being secured entirely. Water seeping in adds weight to the ship. The more water in and the lower and lower the boat sails. This changes the integrity of the ship, it's handling caracteristics, and I think that what happened here was primarily the fault of the weather and the seriousness of the lake conditions, but then the changing ship caracteristics overloaded the ships capacity to handle the situation and the boat was in a situation that was, as they say, but it was in "over their heads" and the ship was just doomed at that point. They were in over their heads and in exactly the wrong place at exactly the wrong time. Nothing I feel would have saved this ship when it just broke apart and went down. I remember the day this happened well and the first reports I heard of a ship that was down and a search was on. Some things in life we may never know the exact answers to and this is one of them...

  • @picahudsoniaunflocked5426
    @picahudsoniaunflocked5426 6 місяців тому +3

    Thank you for revisiting this.