GLShipwreckSociety
GLShipwreckSociety
  • Видео 25
  • Просмотров 2 353 139
Lost in the Site of Salvation: The Shipwreck of the Atlanta
Lost in the Site of Salvation: The Shipwreck of the Atlanta
On May 4th, 1891, the schooner-barge Atlanta broke its tow in a powerful spring storm on Lake Superior. After hours of battling the gales, they had to abandon ship. This premiere of this mini documentary will explain what happened to the crew of 7 that day and how a letter from one of the crewmen describes how close to death he was. Then, we’ll take you 650 feet below the surface of Superior to take a look at the Atlanta, a vessel that hasn’t been seen in over 130 years.
Просмотров: 376

Видео

The Great Storm of 1872
Просмотров 2,9 тыс.Год назад
On November 27th, 1872, a deadly storm overtook 4 vessels on Lake Superior, dozens died. Join the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society as we look back at this tragic event, in this mini documentary.
The Shipwreck Coast Stores
Просмотров 3862 года назад
Thank you for your support of the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Societies mission through our awesome stores!
Get to know some more of our family at Whitefish Point, meet Nancy!
Просмотров 2392 года назад
Part 3 in a series in "Get to know our crew at Whitefish Point!
Freighter Watching at Whitefish Point!
Просмотров 1512 года назад
Whitefish Point is such an awesome place to freighter watch!
A beautiful day on the Whitefish Point beach
Просмотров 1762 года назад
People love rock hunting at Whitefish Point.
Meet some more of our family at Whitefish Point. Get to know Maryann!
Просмотров 1002 года назад
Get to know some of our Historical Interpreters that you'll meet at Whitefish Point! We have a great crew!
Sammy the Seagull
Просмотров 892 года назад
When you visit the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum at Whitefish Point you just might one of our greeters...Sammy the Seagull!
Meet some of our family at Whitefish Point!
Просмотров 4802 года назад
Get to know some of our Historical Interpreters that you'll meet at Whitefish Point! We have a great crew!
Paradise, Michigan 4th of July parade and fireworks, 2022
Просмотров 5122 года назад
Paradise, MI is the gateway to Whitefish Point. The small town is full of wonderful folks. On July 4th 2022 they all came out and celebrated Independence Day, despite the pouring rain! The Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum wants to thank all the volunteers who made the parade and fireworks happen. Here are some of the sights and sounds of a very fun day in Paradise. Come on up and visit...it's such ...
Visit the Weather Bureau building in Soo Locks Park!
Просмотров 7762 года назад
When visiting Sault Ste. Marie and the Soo Locks some people don't realize the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society has a building right there in Locks Park. The entrance is on Portage Ave. Check out this short video to see what we have there!
The launch of the Edmund Fitzgerald, June 8th, 1958.
Просмотров 10 тыс.2 года назад
Not everything goes as planned. Learn some of the "odd" things that happened during the launch of the Fitzgerald on June 8th, 1958, in this short story! www.shipwreckmuseum.com/
R.V. David Boyd sailing by Rotary Park in Sault Ste. Marie, MI.
Просмотров 4962 года назад
The beginning of the 2022 shipwreck hunting season for the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society as our research vessel R.V. David Boyd makes its way to Whitefish Point. @GLShipwreckSociety
The Shipwreck Museum
Просмотров 4,3 тыс.2 года назад
The Shipwreck Museum
Saving Lives: a short story about the U.S. Life Saving Service.
Просмотров 8182 года назад
Saving Lives: a short story about the U.S. Life Saving Service.
WAGB 83 In Whitefish Bay
Просмотров 3692 года назад
WAGB 83 In Whitefish Bay
Shipwreck and Survival: The Eli Wait Letter, Survivor of the Shipwreck Atlanta
Просмотров 3,1 тыс.2 года назад
Shipwreck and Survival: The Eli Wait Letter, Survivor of the Shipwreck Atlanta
The Shipwreck "Atlanta"
Просмотров 96 тыс.2 года назад
The Shipwreck "Atlanta"
The Whitefish Point Lighthouse
Просмотров 17 тыс.7 лет назад
The Whitefish Point Lighthouse
Through the eyes of Capt. Cooper: The night the Edmund Fitzgerald went down
Просмотров 1,2 млн12 лет назад
Through the eyes of Capt. Cooper: The night the Edmund Fitzgerald went down
The SS South American
Просмотров 2,5 тыс.13 лет назад
The SS South American
Ice Burg 2011
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.13 лет назад
Ice Burg 2011
The Lost Fitzgerald Search Tapes
Просмотров 1 млн13 лет назад
The Lost Fitzgerald Search Tapes
Lightning storm
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.13 лет назад
Lightning storm

Комментарии

  • @nancyadcock4899
    @nancyadcock4899 17 дней назад

    I hope that someday they will be allowed to make more dives to the wreck, this is the only way to find the actual reason she sank. After all these years there only theories. And I do think it’s possible that when the families were paid their compensation they probably had to promise that no more investigation would be allowed. Someone out there doesn’t want the truth to be known. RIP to the 29 who perished that night.

  • @PipaSusan.
    @PipaSusan. 26 дней назад

    Rip all 30 souls that died becuase of this ship... but... this is kind funny how it just ent up you cant lie. R.I.P

  • @martingargaro4855
    @martingargaro4855 28 дней назад

    Honestly, considering how much mystery and uncertainty there is surrounding the sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald, that poses a lot of problems if Hollywood decided to make a motion picture about the event. What I think would be the most pragmatic and feasible way to tell the story is not on the Edmund Fitzgerald, but instead through the perspective of the Arthur M Anderson and her crew as they traveled through the storm that faithful night. It would still be compelling, yet also maintain the mystery that may never be solved. And perhaps it is best to be left that way.

  • @jasonlaird4007
    @jasonlaird4007 Месяц назад

    I would like to know who was talking near the end when they said they were in the area and found lifejackets. Doesnt sound like Cooper. Was it Coast Guard? Another ship?

  • @TillerG7
    @TillerG7 2 месяца назад

    You can tell Capt Cooper is reliving that night during this interview. I’m sure he relived it a lot.

  • @robertschultz6922
    @robertschultz6922 3 месяца назад

    My biggest question is on the video from the dive in 1994, it shows that the door from the wheel house to the outside deck was latched open. Now on one of the radio conversations captain Mcsoerly could be heard saying don’t let no one out on that deck. Now in that big of a surf with waves coming over the bow up to twelve feet above the bridge, why would the crew have latched that door OPEN??? The last thing they wanted was to have water coming into the wheel house. It just doesn’t make sense

  • @timothynewton4453
    @timothynewton4453 4 месяца назад

    I'm interested to the stress fractures on the side to see in which direction they go, from top left to bottom right, top right to bottom left, which direction? Are they straight? Would that indicate anything?

  • @alexdoesrandomstuff2695
    @alexdoesrandomstuff2695 4 месяца назад

    Why is the boat in the beginning black but it says Edmund Fitzgerald that's not the Edmund Fitzgerald does anyone know why or what boat that really is

  • @jackobite68
    @jackobite68 4 месяца назад

    it wild i just seen the anderson heading out on lake st clair a week past

  • @floydpattersonii4996
    @floydpattersonii4996 6 месяцев назад

    There should be a ship named after Bernie Cooper. This Courageous Man was the closest we would ever get to the night of the Edmund Fitzgerald disaster.

  • @josephevans7641
    @josephevans7641 6 месяцев назад

    Being a retired great lakes sailor of 25 years i can absolutely tell you .to be in a storm particularly on lake superior .will put the fear of God into you. Michigan is bad also .speaking from experience ive been theu my share of bad storms .i loved my career and id do ot again if i could .in my heart of hearts ..when you get gale warnings you either stay put or if you can find shelter if possible. ..in some respects i can only imagine what those guys went thru knowing what was to come .2011 was the worst gale id ever sailed in .and i can tell you were lucky and God was watching. .i will not menyion the ship or the skipper .but to this day i lost all respect for him .he dam nesrbgit us all killed .we took one hell of a beating that day .but that goes with the job ,only sometimes its better to listen to the warnings. .than to rish the lives and the ship .by tye grace of God were all still here .

  • @garypayne-tl1le
    @garypayne-tl1le 6 месяцев назад

    I've been in awe of this story since I first heard about it, but out of all the hundreds and hundreds of other shipwrecks is this one so famous? Is just because of a hit song from a 70s pop song?

  • @towdjumper5
    @towdjumper5 6 месяцев назад

    Great stuff. Great ship, GREAT CREW.

  • @ElizabethF2222
    @ElizabethF2222 7 месяцев назад

    Captain Cooper and the other captains that went back out into the worst storm in history to look for the Edmund Fitzgerald and their crew on that lake are absolute heroes! Everyone should listen to this man who was actually there that night! He's telling us exactly what happened, God rest your soul, Captain Cooper.

  • @BarekHalfhand
    @BarekHalfhand 7 месяцев назад

    I worked up in Marquette Michigan for a couple of months and swam in lake Superior... Even in the middle of summer you dive down a couple of feet and it's ice cold.

  • @bridgetraveler7700
    @bridgetraveler7700 7 месяцев назад

    The Edmund Fitzgerald was a very long vessel and when a big wave hit it, it hit the bottom of Lake Superior and broke in 2. I guessing that structure was compromised when the big wave hit the Edmund Fitzgerald and when it hit bottom the structure couldn't take it any longer from being compromised that's why it broke in 2.

  • @luiz_felipe-x
    @luiz_felipe-x 7 месяцев назад

    Whats the name of the song playing?

  • @madjack1748
    @madjack1748 7 месяцев назад

    2:35 the coast guard brings up the Daniel J. Morrell

  • @twolak1972
    @twolak1972 8 месяцев назад

    The Big Fitz ran the surface of the great lakes 17 years till GREED finally doomed her. She was overloaded constantly and had her load lines changed 3 times to haul bigger loads. Maintaince for her that she needed critically was pushed back and ignored. EERILY the hull plates and keel blocks for the EF sit in the shipyard to this day.

  • @loricharpentier1654
    @loricharpentier1654 9 месяцев назад

    So, so sad... I pray for the brave souls that went down with the ship. You have earned your reward in heaven.

  • @LouisTognetti
    @LouisTognetti 9 месяцев назад

    Impressive!

  • @randymcturnan2520
    @randymcturnan2520 9 месяцев назад

    Lots of people don't realize the density of freshwater is different from seawater. Waves act very differently and are unpredictable.

  • @billb1316
    @billb1316 9 месяцев назад

    Bernie was No 1

  • @cq9882
    @cq9882 9 месяцев назад

    I still cannot believe the Coast Guard asking the Captain of the Arthur M Anderson to go back out and search. 🇦🇺🙏

    • @patlaw398
      @patlaw398 4 месяца назад

      Ask bidenstein y the Coast Guard was defunded…he was a few years into his grift n treason 🇺🇸💚

    • @patlaw398
      @patlaw398 4 месяца назад

      Is that the isis or hamas rag

  • @lynndemartini9379
    @lynndemartini9379 9 месяцев назад

    Almost 50 years and the crew is still remembered - very grateful!!

  • @lynndemartini9379
    @lynndemartini9379 10 месяцев назад

    Almost 50 years and am sooo grateful the Fitzgerald crew is still remembered! This is a GREAT video - THANKS!

  • @ZombieSlayer-dj3wb
    @ZombieSlayer-dj3wb 10 месяцев назад

    The fitz was overloaded by 4000 tonnes and by hatch coverings Mcsorley meant baillst hatches

  • @helioselexandros
    @helioselexandros 10 месяцев назад

    Something absolutely destroyed the pilot house. Those visors are bent 90° down. If waves were coming from astern what else couldve bent them down so violently?

  • @brentrussell780
    @brentrussell780 10 месяцев назад

    The only thing I disagree with Capt. Cooper is, I think McSorley knew he had failed his ship and crew. Thats why he was calm on the radio... No one seems to ever state the obvious.. which is - Ultimately the captain failed his ship and crew that day in an act of hubris not uncommon of over confident old farts that should have been put back in the rack before they got everyone under their command killed. He knew she was run ragged and over loaded facing a super nasty storm. He chose to go for broke.. and she indeed broke. Old fool.

  • @paisley1134
    @paisley1134 10 месяцев назад

    If anyone would know, I believe this captain who was right behind the Fitzgerald in contact and in the very same weather, familiar with these lakes would absolutely be the one.

    • @RabidEwok1284
      @RabidEwok1284 10 месяцев назад

      He was the Captain of The Arthur M Anderson that night, he and his crew were the ones helping Captain McSorley and the Fitzgerald and her crew with their problems as much as they could. He's the one who made the decision to take the Anderson back out to look for The Fitzgerald.

  • @jerome2022
    @jerome2022 10 месяцев назад

    11/10/23

  • @dougfox6167
    @dougfox6167 10 месяцев назад

    I did a report on the Edmund Fitzgerald In elementary school and I still tune in on November 10th each year. Incredible ship, incredible crew, may God be with them.

  • @nickpavlovich2312
    @nickpavlovich2312 10 месяцев назад

    SO SAD, STILL FEEL THE PERIL OF THIS CREW EVERY YEAR AT THIS TIME. GOD REST THE 29 SOULS. NOV. 2023

  • @kenboris9235
    @kenboris9235 10 месяцев назад

    The guitar is hauntingly beautiful

  • @joeanderson9852
    @joeanderson9852 10 месяцев назад

    👏👏

  • @jeffreyjohn2037
    @jeffreyjohn2037 11 месяцев назад

    Was the hull compromised when it slammed against the opposing dock?

    • @theskicker8856
      @theskicker8856 17 дней назад

      It was not compromised, damaged, I think a little.

    • @lonewolf9390
      @lonewolf9390 12 дней назад

      @@theskicker8856 I'm trying to locate the video again here on RUclips, but there was an older gentleman whose father was a ship captain, and they were both there the day that the Fitzgerald was launched. He says one of the workers at the shipyard came running through the crowd calling for his father, and when he found him he said "Clem, you're not gonna believe this. She snapped the forward hawser and buckled several plates on the port side." The man telling the story says his father turned to him, shaking his head and said "I never want to sail on that ship!"

    • @theskicker8856
      @theskicker8856 12 дней назад

      @@lonewolf9390 really?! Good luck finding it!

  • @edgizinski5528
    @edgizinski5528 11 месяцев назад

    Actually he said they had taken a list. He never said which side.

  • @danielfenton804
    @danielfenton804 11 месяцев назад

    (-_■)The captain may very well have been as calm as he was because he'd probably already made peace with his demons, himself, and even God himself, after finally knowing that he wasn't going to make it to any other home but the house in the sky, and be judged, now I'm not about to just go claiming anything like America's going to bring the Titanic back to the surface, because A: The metallic remains are most likely going to be as fragile as Kleenex after you soak it in water., and B: That ship may as very well be two or three mass graves., Now I'm definitely not about to go ripping apart someone else's grave, let alone one or more mass grave burial sites, if someone else sees fit to do so I'm all for it, mostly because the only thing I'd be able to do about it is trying to organize a protest, and more than likely fail, plus even if we could bring back one or even both of them to the surface, then we should think about what's most likely to happen if we rip up an ancient Native American burial site.😑

  • @miapdx503
    @miapdx503 11 месяцев назад

    God bless the souls of those lost to the waters of the Great Lakes, the oceans and seas...🌹

  • @rogerwilliams3747
    @rogerwilliams3747 Год назад

    Captain Cooper was a courageous man to go back out to search for the Fitzgerald.

  • @shelliewhitaker8935
    @shelliewhitaker8935 Год назад

    I just saw the Arthur M Anderson today going through the locks at Sault Ste. Marie still in service after all these years

  • @holgertash1
    @holgertash1 Год назад

    Something about this accident really stirs my soul. The Titanic has never done this to me or any other marine disaster I know of.

  • @hastingshavanese
    @hastingshavanese Год назад

    People think shipwrecks on the Great Lakes only happened 100 years ago. This list is just since 1950's! It's totally sobering to read... project.geo.msu.edu/geogmich/shipwrecks.htm

  • @linferguson8702
    @linferguson8702 Год назад

    Captain Bernie Cooper is a legend and deserves so much respect and he and his crew deserve so much more respect than I felt they’ve got

  • @williamburroughs2273
    @williamburroughs2273 Год назад

    There's really no way the Fitz broke apart on the surface. Two reasons: as many have pointed out, the proximity of the bow and stern practically necessitates that she hit the bottom and broke in half. 2. If the Fitz broke apart on the surface, they would have had plenty of time to make a distress call on the radio - instead, they didn't even have enough time to say "Mayday". She had lost nearly all of her natural buoyancy and was fighting to stay afloat in that storm, then when the rogue waves hit her the bow went straight down, diving into the bottom like a submarine.

  • @deans178
    @deans178 Год назад

    don't forget that Captain Don Ericson of the Wiliam Clay Ford, an identical freighter, also joined the Anderson & Cooper in leaving shelter of Whitefish Bay and searching.

  • @deschutesmaple4520
    @deschutesmaple4520 Год назад

    At the 1:30 mark he says "those two seas were the worst I've ever been in on lake Superior; but he in fact meant 'those two waves were the worst...' I guess he was nervous doing the interview and spaced out.

  • @flyingtigerline
    @flyingtigerline Год назад

    Very well done video.

  • @emilleyanderson1909
    @emilleyanderson1909 Год назад

    gone but not forgotten

  • @anthonylong9067
    @anthonylong9067 Год назад

    The Great Lakes are unforgiving