EDMUND FITZGERALD, GALES OF NOV. with CAPT. DARRELL WALTON

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
  • Join me, the History Mystery Man, for another interesting sit-down with Captain Darrell Walton, whose Uncle Ralph Walton went down on the mighty ship during a nasty November storm on Lake Superior in 1975. All 29 men went to their watery graves just 15 miles from the safe harbor of Whitefish Bay. Captain Darrell discusses the final hours before the ship went down. Did it break in two on the surface first or did it nosedive to the bottom...or something else? We may never know, but Captain Darrell offers a solid explanation as to what he believes happened. Captain Darrell digs into the official reports from the United State Coast Guard for his own conclusive report of what really happened. Thanks for your support...enjoy! #HistoryMysteryMan #EdmundFitzgerald #LakeSuperior #GalesOfNovember #GreatLakes #GreatLakesShipWrecks

Комментарии • 783

  • @davidcampbell1899
    @davidcampbell1899 Год назад +107

    Gordon Lightfoot passed away May 1st in Toronto Canada. I hope someone rings the Bell one time for him, for keeping the memory of the 29 crew members alive!

    • @jackmac2874
      @jackmac2874 Год назад +30

      They did…30 bell tolls, 29+1 for Gordon Lightfoot.

    • @CozmoNurse
      @CozmoNurse Год назад +8

      Here here!

    • @johntucker4296
      @johntucker4296 Год назад +8

      Omg. That was my 72nd birthday. I always loved this ballad but didn't realize when it happened. This native Minnesotan was on the other side of the world in 1975. It was 20+ years later when I realized that the disaster happened while I was gone. RIP to all 30.

    • @lornperkins4270
      @lornperkins4270 11 месяцев назад +3

      Gordon was certainly a musical master..I remember listening to him throughout the 80's I'm gonna miss him..R.I.P
      MR LIGHTFOOT..rest easy

    • @jasonhumphry5836
      @jasonhumphry5836 11 месяцев назад +1

      Amen

  • @gregferguson2398
    @gregferguson2398 11 месяцев назад +3

    Love listening to your stories about the big Fitzgerald

  • @michealgrace3020
    @michealgrace3020 Год назад +44

    Lets Not Forget The Ford And Capt Erickson Pulled Anchor And Went Looking As Well

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +6

      Good points; thanks for sharing them here Micheal. HMM

    • @davidmoorea1961
      @davidmoorea1961 Год назад +10

      The Bravest of Captain & Crew to head into a Severe Storm that they KNEW was perilous & quite possibly deadly..!!! These men (& their families/loved ones) lived a rough and laborious life. Kudos to unheralded AMERICANS!
      PS: My sincerest thanks to you, History Mystery Man, ..these two videos are the type & quality which keep you riveted throughout.🛟⚓️🇺🇸🇺🇸

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      @@davidmoorea1961 Thanks David...so appreciated! HMM

    • @Houndini
      @Houndini Год назад +6

      Them Captains & Crew's deserve all our respect. I seen throughout my life many times people put there own lives at risk to save & help others.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +4

      @@Houndini Thanks for remembering the Mighty Fitz and her crew, and all the Captains and crew. HMM

  • @anthonyplanas3606
    @anthonyplanas3606 Год назад +106

    Everyone please don't forget captain Don Erickson of the William Clay Ford also went out to look for the Fitz also.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +17

      Good point Anthony...thanks for the reminders. With more than 8,000 boats on the bottom of the Great Lakes, there are so many to remember...HMM

    • @mikec886
      @mikec886 Год назад +9

      It's a piece of history that we never forget. The power of nature is not to be played with.

    • @kdyooper28
      @kdyooper28 Год назад +6

      Never knew that. Thank you. (Lived in The UP when it happened)

    • @justinjohnson6251
      @justinjohnson6251 Год назад +3

      Thank you for adding that

  • @Bald_Cat2007
    @Bald_Cat2007 Год назад +5

    The Coast Guard blamed it on crew negligence, which I don't believe for a minute. What I believe happened is this, the Fitzgerald bottomed out on caribou shoals, then he loses the vents, which causes the Fitzgerald to be taking water from both topside and below the waterline of the Fitz. Then, the Fitzgerald slows down to let the Anderson catch up to her. Then the Anderson is hit by those three rogue waves and then about 30 or 45 minutes later (I could be incorrect with timing) as the Fitzgerald is going into another wave, the first rogue wave slams into her stern pushing her forward end underwater, the second rogue wave pushes the bow into the lake bed (which explains the huge gash on the bow) and then the third wave pushed the aft section up, which put strain on the midsection and caused it to snap in half. After that, Arthur M Anderson and William Clay were headed out to the rescue and as they say, the rest is history.
    Another fact is that Fitzgerald was able to carry 25,000 tons of iron ore. On that final voyage, she was loaded with 26,200

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      Thanks for sharing your thoughts here, John. Makes sense to me. HMM

  • @DonWhisker
    @DonWhisker Год назад +74

    Already 47 years today. Rest in peace all 29 crew members.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +8

      Thanks for remembering the Mighty Fitz and her crew...HMM

    • @epistte
      @epistte Год назад +7

      @@HistoryMysteryMan I saw the Fitzgerald the year before it sank while on a tourist cruise in the port of Cleveland. The Fitzgerald was unloaded at the Huletts.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +4

      @@epistte Interesting. Was it coming or going? Or up the Cuyahoga?

  • @agent1966
    @agent1966 Год назад +39

    ...and Captain Darrell really should put all of his thoughts together and write a book.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +12

      I'll buy that book! Thanks again, Lee...HMM

    • @bowslap
      @bowslap Год назад +8

      I’m good for an advance copy, if Capt. Walton happens to read this.

    • @jeffharrison5910
      @jeffharrison5910 Год назад +9

      I'd buy that book as well

    • @LadyOaksNZ
      @LadyOaksNZ 11 месяцев назад +1

      I would buy the book too !!

    • @baseballgenius3093
      @baseballgenius3093 10 месяцев назад

      idk if everything he says is right but he is ok in his ideas.

  • @hive71recordinz89
    @hive71recordinz89 Год назад +54

    It’s frightening when you think how fast that massive ship went down, not even a chance to cry out a distress call, so so close to home , heartbreaking RIP all 29 souls, you’ll never be forgotten.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +4

      It certainly is. Thanks for remembering the Mighty Fitz and her crew...HMM

    • @kriseikenbery112
      @kriseikenbery112 Год назад +4

      A friend of mine was up in Michigan and saw the Arthur M. Anderson going out in the channel and she waved and the Captain gave her the master salute. She was thrilled!😊

  • @jodycarrithers6160
    @jodycarrithers6160 Год назад +17

    The captain of the Anderson was a true hero that day...even if he didn't think he was being heroic!

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +6

      Absolutely! Even those ocean salties wouldn't turn back and go help. Later on, the William Clay Ford went out to search too. Captain Bernie Cooper rocks! HMM

  • @davidcoudriet8439
    @davidcoudriet8439 Год назад +7

    God Bless ya Capt. Darrell

  • @peter2023
    @peter2023 Год назад +11

    The mighty Fitz ,,,I came from the UK to Canada in ,73 ,I remember this tragedy,,they say a massive wave ,,picked up the Fitz ,when she came down she hit bottom and broke her back ,,,,,I am 73 now ,I been on these lakes when a storm rolls in ,,,,the great Gordon Lightfoot passed away yesterday ,, Canada's beloved folk singer ,RIP Gord ,go meet the Fitz boys xxx

    • @gayprepperz6862
      @gayprepperz6862 4 месяца назад

      Lightfoot and the Fitz are inextricably bound together for all time and eternity like Walter Lord and the Titanic (A Night to Remember). I don't know why, but that is a comfort to me. Lightfoot immortalized the Fitz and made sure that she would be remembered above all of the tragic histories upon those treacherous lakes.

  • @kevinthorrington2131
    @kevinthorrington2131 Год назад +33

    I was born and raised on the south shore of Lake Superior. My grandfather was a commercial fisherman not far from where the Fitzgerald sank. I remember my father saying the night the Fitzgerald sank, he never saw the barometer drop so fast and that low. He said it was the worst storm he had ever seen on Superior.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +5

      Interesting...thanks for sharing your story here, Kevin. That had to have been a great childhood...being raised in that area. Sounds magical to me. Thanks for watching...HMM

    • @kevinthorrington2131
      @kevinthorrington2131 Год назад +9

      @@HistoryMysteryMan I am a 4th generation from the little village of Grand Marais. I no longer live in upper peninsula. My paternal grandfather was a captain in the coast guard at Grand Marais. My maternal grandfather was a commercial fisherman. My family has a long history on Lake Superior.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +4

      @@kevinthorrington2131 What a great family history. Thanks again, Kevin...HMM

  • @jimbos1567
    @jimbos1567 Год назад +4

    I was on a Destroyer in the Vietnam Era, and we encountered a storm in the Pacific just east of Hawaii that was so bad we didn't think we were going to ever make it. The ship was old (1943) and had a lot of rusty week frame members. She twisted, bucked, and vibrated so hard every time we hit a wave, we didn't think we would recover. The maximum roll she was designed for was 56 degrees, and we were routinely taking 53 degree rolls constantly. this went on for close to three days. In the middle of the storm we lost steering control, and the Machinest Mates had to crawl into the after steering compartment and steer the ship by hand getting radio orders from the bridge. It was terrifying, and I'll never forget how scared we all were. I can't watch these interviews without getting a lump in my throat and tears in my eyes for those terrified men on that ship.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      That sounds beyond scary. But...it also adds to your character that you carry with you...better off for having the experience, as frightening as it was. Thanks for sharing your story here...and thanks for watching. HMM

    • @jimbos1567
      @jimbos1567 Год назад +2

      @@HistoryMysteryMan Thank you for what you do and the nice way you do it. I had tears in my eyes just watching those video's. I guess because of my Naval experience, and having lived in Michigan, I have always felt for those poor guys on the Fitz and terror of those last minutes. You brought it home to us in some fine videos.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      @@jimbos1567 Thanks kindly...so appreciated. Thanks for remembering the Mighty Fitz and her crew...HMM

  • @robertayers9424
    @robertayers9424 Год назад +104

    Captain Darrell is a wealth of knowledge that can't be dismissed. His theories are solid. The conversations , between you two, are remarkable! Thanks for including us!
    May the memories of the crew and ship carry on!

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +4

      Now I like this one for sure, Robert. Thanks for putting it that way...again and again. HMM

  • @josephdowling3745
    @josephdowling3745 Год назад +72

    I was onboard a destroyer headed back to Norfolk in late Mar., early April of 1982 when we encountered an early spring storm system a couple of hundred miles east of the Bahamas. We had prepared for heavy weather. Chow consisted of sandwiches and chips with bug juice to drink. The galley was secured, everything tied down. It got so rough all the crew not on duty were ordered to berthing compartments where you had to strap in with something like a seat belt to keep from being pitched on the deck. Everyone was carrying a barf bag on their belt. Going out on deck was prohibited and hatches were dogged. I had one of the surface scopes in CIC which was useless given the sea state. The waves were everywhere but the biggest were coming from the SSW and at one point were rolling us to starboard at 55°. At this point a crack was discovered amidships and all crew were ordered up to the mess deck and issued flotation devices. We were assembled in the breeze ways, sitting on the deck by Divisions. As I stated earlier, we had rolled over to 55 degrees a couple of times. When the bow went down in the troughs the stern would rise up out of the water and with the screws (props) out of the water it felt like ship was going to come apart the vibrations were so rough. In addition when the bow was up and the stern down you couldn't climb the ladders (stairs ways) as it felt like your foot was welded to the deck. When the bow was down you could climb them in two steps. Also when the storm was at its worst we took a wall of green water over the bow that blew out two bridge windows and left another loose with a crack. No one wanted to eat because of the pitch ( up and down) along with the roll (side to side) made one nauseous. Crackers and a half cup of bug juice (Kool Aid) was the meal du jour for 3 days (the length of time we were in the weather). I remember thinking about the Eddy Fitz and the song, particularly the line about how the waves turn the minutes to hours. We got word that one guy was lost off a carrier and two off a cruiser ahead of us between the Bahamas and U.S. mainland. It was an interesting and telling time aboard ship, but not one I would wish to repeat.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +10

      Whoa! This is, in part, why I do these videos...to hear the great stories that come back to me. I remember being in terrible seas in the Great Lakes Tug I worked on. First time it happened, I got so seasick. It took me a good two years before I started getting over the sea sickness. I lasted about 10 years out there before I decided I wanted to change course. Kool Aid is still one of my favorite drinks, to this day. Never knew the Bahamas got that rough. Thanks again, Joseph...HMM

    • @davidcoudriet8439
      @davidcoudriet8439 Год назад +10

      @Joseph Dowling, my Father told of the same story during WW II; of during Battle stations, some were confined to quarters, and screws shaking the whole ship like crazy when they came out of the water...

    • @seththomas9105
      @seththomas9105 Год назад +12

      I was a kid growing up in Iowa when the Fitz went down, I actually remember my dad talking to some buddies about how terrible it would be to be out on water in a storm like that. At the same time I had a older cousin in the U.S.N. He told the family of some storms and rough water he had been in and that sealed the deal for me. No sailor was I going to be.
      God Bless all sailors world wide who have gone out and never come back.

    • @thereissomecoolstuff
      @thereissomecoolstuff Год назад +8

      Remarkable story...there were quite a few navy ships that were built in the 1980's and 1990''s that had significant cracks. The Navy Times did a story on them...how bad did the crack end up. Also where was it located? Thanks for the story and service.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +4

      @@thereissomecoolstuff You're welcome! Thanks for watching...HMM

  • @robertredmon6387
    @robertredmon6387 Год назад +53

    As a guy born and raised in the Midwest I have a tremendous amount of respect for the men and women that work on the great lakes and also a tremendous amount of respect for the men that die on the great lakes

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Thanks for sharing your thoughts here, Robert. Well said...HMM

  • @JamesReif
    @JamesReif 17 дней назад +2

    Big thanks to the History Mystery Man for his interest in the Fitz and many other Great Lake shipwrecks. As its been said many times, I could listen to these two all day. Captain Darrell is wealth of knowledge and many of us truly appreciate his highly credible knowledge and experience. Growing up in Michigan, I've met many old timers just like Capt. Darrell. For many of us who grew up and lived near or on the Great Lakes, these stories are our history and we are still learning so much, thanks to accounts and creators like the HMM.. May the fallen sailors and captains never be forgotten.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  16 дней назад +1

      Very well said James...remembering as you did our sailors and captains. And thanks for supporting what we do; it's always appreciated. Capt. Darrell is the best! HMM

  • @Someyungrebel
    @Someyungrebel Год назад +13

    16:50 As a hard working 19 year old, I couldn’t agree more. Most people I’ve met from my generation don’t have much of a work ethic, and it really makes me hope I’m not the only one in my generation who sees what a problem this is.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +4

      That said, I'm sure grateful for you and your work ethic. We are fortunate that you "get it"... thanks. HMM

  • @20thCenturyManTrad
    @20thCenturyManTrad Год назад +4

    Captain Walton, thank you for your wisdom, as a 22 year old man, we need this wisdom.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Thanks for that! It's so cool that young folks like yourself are in tune with the story of the Mighty Fitz. Happy New Year! HMM

    • @darrellwalton938
      @darrellwalton938 Год назад +2

      Patience is the companion of wisdom!

  • @toddgilmore8412
    @toddgilmore8412 7 месяцев назад +5

    Great job guys in keeping the history of the Fitz alive. Excellent information on previous structural damage to the Fitz. Over many years some ships will suffer more damage than others through hard use.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  7 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks again, Todd...we appreciate your thoughts and contributions. HMM

  • @craighanks429
    @craighanks429 6 месяцев назад +7

    Recently bought book “The Night the Fitz Went Down”. I had said in a previous message that McSorely said he didn’t care about the shape the Fitz was in. On page 79 of the book, it was reported that crewmen “demudding” the bottom of the ship (shoveling out the mud) came up on deck & reported to McSorely “the keel was loose again” to which the Captain replied “all this SOB has to do is stay together one more year, after that, I don’t care what happens to it”. That is a helluva attitude for a ship’s Captain to have & only reinforces the idea that in McSorely’s last year on the Fitz all he thought or cared about was retiring with as much pension as he could earn & getting home to his wife who’d been having recent medical problems.
    Which is why I believe he gambled to push thru that horrible storm instead of anchoring behind Michipicoten island & waiting it out till morning. He sure wasn’t thinking of the lives of the crew. But Captain Paquette said, “I think he just really thought that ship would get him thru”. But that doesn’t square with opinions of other crewmen who said they thought he was afraid of the Fitz & the way it handled.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  6 месяцев назад +1

      Wow...that's super interesting. I wonder how that quote from McSorley got to Paquette? Thanks for sharing this here...HMM

    • @tammiadams4001
      @tammiadams4001 4 месяца назад +3

      I feel McSorely was suffering from complacency. This would affect his decision processing as well as his attitude. The Friz was overloaded running 3 ft lower in the water for the conditions the ship came up against. McSorely should have anchored behind Michipicoten Island waiting out the storm.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  4 месяца назад +2

      @@tammiadams4001 Good points Tammi. If only the good, brave Captain could go back and do it all over again. Thanks for your feedback. HMM

  • @als1023
    @als1023 7 месяцев назад +5

    I was born and raised in Michipicoten Bay, north of the wreck. This story is legendary, I remember well the day my dad phoned in Toronto to tell me aboout the ship being missing and the storm that night.
    This is a very good video and some incredible insights , that ring true as a bell.
    Thank you for posting, and all the great comments on this thread.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  7 месяцев назад +3

      Thanks...we really appreciate you and your contributions here. Stop by anytime...HMM

  • @melodyclark4347
    @melodyclark4347 Год назад +15

    Thanks for this documentary. Very well done. I was 21 when she went down. Now 68 and the story still makes me cry. God bless you.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      Thanks for remembering the Mighty Fitz and her crew. HMM

  • @moaski
    @moaski Год назад +14

    This is by far the best and most thorough explanation of the "perfect storm" of events that led to the Fitz's demise.

  • @lisaharrod8386
    @lisaharrod8386 Год назад +11

    You are blessed to have a relationship with this man.
    He's the real deal, and it's rare to find such a knowledgeable , experienced "Salt".
    Wish I could meet him, and buy him a beer...just to hear his stories, and opinions about sailing the Great Lakes.
    Thank you for sharing him with us!

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +5

      You're welcome; thanks for watching. More with Captain Darrell coming soon...stand by! HMM

    • @lisaharrod8386
      @lisaharrod8386 Год назад +4

      @@HistoryMysteryMan I'll be watching!

  • @sikohki_7
    @sikohki_7 Год назад +11

    What a great interview with an individual who knows what he's talking about.👍

  • @shipessex
    @shipessex Год назад +16

    I was a shipfitter/loftsman at Fraser Shipyard. The summer before the ship went down we went to Thunder Bay and took "as built" dimensions off the Fitz because she was the next boat we were going to "lengthen" like we had done to the Calloway and the Green. The captain invited the 3 of us for lunch in his dining room. I was amazed how beautiful that boat was and hadn't known that she was set up for passengers. Sad day when we heard she went down. God bless the families.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +6

      Great story! Thanks for sharing it here! So you had lunch with Captain McSorley? HMM

    • @darrellwalton938
      @darrellwalton938 Год назад +6

      She was a "Beautiful Ship"!

    • @shipessex
      @shipessex Год назад +6

      I didn't remember his name at the time but when we head what happened I sure knew it!

    • @erbewayne6868
      @erbewayne6868 Год назад +3

      In another video there is conversation about plateing being at the Fraiser yard with the name of the Fitz chalked on it. Was that the case?

    • @shipessex
      @shipessex Год назад +6

      @@erbewayne6868 Lots of plates were prefabricated in preparation for the lenghtening that was planned. We usually built the 120' midbody ahead of time.

  • @JohnnyLaps
    @JohnnyLaps Год назад +8

    My favorite portion of this is when the Captain finds his sheets on the past repairs and damage reports.Great.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      Yah...that's good stuff! Thanks for watching, John...HMM

    • @JohnnyLaps
      @JohnnyLaps Год назад +4

      @@HistoryMysteryMan always,turned my friends on to this as well,we are all into Maritime,water,fishing ECT.Have you considered doing a bit on Tsunamis or even great lake storms.Capt.Darrell would have alot to share I'm guessing.thanks!

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      @@JohnnyLaps Some great ideas. Capt. Darrell and I are already talking about what we're doing next year...thanks! HMM

    • @JohnnyLaps
      @JohnnyLaps Год назад +4

      @@HistoryMysteryMan I will be here 👍

  • @anthonynarozniak9725
    @anthonynarozniak9725 Год назад +24

    This man's explanation for the sinking of the Fitzgerald is the most plausible one I've ever heard, this man should be on the NTSB

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      I'll buy that! Thanks for taking the time to watch, Anthony. HMM

  • @williammitchell4417
    @williammitchell4417 Год назад +9

    Scary after all these years, we still learn about the Fitz.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      I guess we'll never really know what happened for sure. That's why we keep coming back for more...thanks William! HMM

  • @nicolerobertson7424
    @nicolerobertson7424 Месяц назад +3

    I could listen to this Captain tell stories for the rest of my life.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Месяц назад +1

      You and me both! Thanks for your interest, Nicole! HMM

  • @smokey213964
    @smokey213964 Год назад +9

    The Captain of the William Clay Ford went out and searched also.

  • @jenniferwhite6089
    @jenniferwhite6089 Год назад +3

    interest topic will have to listen to the first one you said too

  • @gayprepperz6862
    @gayprepperz6862 Год назад +20

    RIP the crew of the Edmund Fitzgerald. I keep this date updated on my calendar to so I can honor and memorialize the crew. Another casualty of the Witch of November. Bless them and honor them.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Thanks for remembering the Mighty Fitz and her crew! HMM

  • @howtosober
    @howtosober Год назад +3

    I love the Celtic music at the opening of this video! The images are so haunting. A nosedive by the bow sounds like the only way this could have happened. Another documentary I watched spoke about how taconite ore is dangerously absorbent to water, absorbing 8 to 9 times its weight in water volume. It makes no sense that any Great Lakes mariners or captain that routinely transported taconite ore during that time of year, which was notorious for ship-sinking storms, would risk leaving hatches open upon departure- especially because Capts. McSorley and Cooper already knew they were headed into heavy storms at the time they left. There's a reason "batten down the hatches" is an expression.
    I don't discount the 'running aground' theory entirely, but I'm skeptical, especially since in Cooper's sworn testimony he said that the Fitz had cleared the shoals. Unless the ship's hull was in really bad condition and there was water leakage more rapid than what was initially described, I don't see how that could have been the only cause.
    I don't know how the Three Sisters ended up being discounted so quickly in some theories. It wouldn't take flooding the hatches for a rogue wave, especially a series of them, to sink a ship. It's also the only thing that explains why all 29 sailors were trapped on the ship and they never issued a distress call. Nothing else can take a ship down that quickly.
    The only alternative is that water got into the cargo hold another way, the taconite increased in volume rapidly as it all shifted forward or to one side, and the Fitz didn't stand a chance. If she caught one or more rogue waves from the front, that would have been enough to shift all the iron to the bow by itself. It's notable, however, that divers to the wreck report that two of the hatches were buckled inward, implying a huge downward force onto them at some point, and resultant leakage. Mike TenEyk said in an interview that it wouldn't take rogue-sized waves to cause that buckling or leakage, just the 30-ft waves constantly battering the ship may have been enough.
    It may be my cynicism about corporate oligarchy and the lengths they will go to for profit, but I've privately wondered if the Fitz wasn't deployed in rough conditions, with dangerous cargo, after years of possibly poor maintenance (according to some accounts), with the hope for a big insurance payout on a ship whose bankers and corporate backers knew was likely to sink. It wouldn't be the first time something like this was done. If the ship was indeed getting older and in need of more moneyed repairs, I think it's highly plausible.

    Sadly, I also think it's plausible that McSorley's "We're holding our own" might have been due to knowing they were utterly screwed and didn't want Cooper to take the risk of the Anderson and its crew coming back for them when he knew there was nothing anyone could do to save the Fitz.
    As an aside, it drives me crazy that everyone in that region insists on pronouncing Sault Sainte Marie wrong. It's not hard to say "Saul," and it is a French name, after all.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад

      I believe there is sufficient proof based on what we already know that the Fitz slammed into the lake floor nose/bow first. Whether it tore in two upon impact or came apart on the way down remains an open question. Thanks! HMM

  • @348Tobico
    @348Tobico Год назад +10

    The piercing vitality of the men in the opening montage is a heart stopper. They are as alive to us today as when those "staring eyes" were photographed. Very moving. We aren't looking at men long dead, we are meeting guy's as alive as we are. Captains can never afford to terrify their crew with reckless radio talk. Water never compresses but it always flows. With the big old style open compartments and the bilge system the water flowed with the rolling of the waves. I can see millions of gallons pulling her down then sloshing like in a pool or bathtub. Forward....aft.....forward....aft. Sloshing waves driven by high winds get bigger/higher in shallow waters. Water weighs appx 8.45 pounds per gallon. Imagine the weight sloshing thru the ore compartments dividing screens and bilge. How many additional tons of water were they carrying? Taconite ore is as dangerous as grain in large quantities. Farmers die every year stepping onto or into grain in storage bins akin to the ore in the compartments. It shifts like quick sand. It moves like a viscous liquid. Per the coast guards of both countries, they were infected with a laize faire attitude because they had not lost a big ship in the past few years. Why REALLY train for what just can't happen in these "modern" days of weather forecasting and better ship building. The keel is the absolute spine of a ship or boat no matter the size. Remove the strength by over stressing and patching is a sure plan for catastrophic failure. Once broken under the weight of a working load every part attached to the keel weakens and begins to fail. Failed keel is like a house of cards collapsing piece by piece. Any weakened weld could open without the strength of the keel and other structure. I cannot imagine the personal and professional risk Capt. Cooper faced by turning back to the Fitzgerald? His crew, his ship and his job and his life as well. Because the American Coast Guard had protected itself from having to act by having written safety regulations that kept smaller boats in harbor because of DANGEROUS WEATHER. I am astounded the Huey rescue helicopters went out, but those guys were then and are now crazy! They live for the saving of people in storms like this killer storm. The ripple of fate condemned more lives than "just" the dead. The shallowest waters effected by high winds and barometric low pressure make bigger, shorter waves in the Great Lakes than in most areas of the oceans. We know so much more about wind/weather/hydrology etc. Than they knew in the 1970's. Men still go down to the seas in ships and are lost but for the most part the truth that surrounds a loss is more apparent than the jumble of a--cover that you presented from the Coast Guard et. al. I do believe careers were altered on a down trajectory within the CG, but we civilians would never be allowed to know that because the causes of those transfer/demotions/stopped promotions have the potential to open the CG to law suits.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      Super interesting thoughts...thanks for sharing them here. Taconite is dangerous cargo, as you pointed out with your analogy to grain. And...the weakened keel and the weakening components attached to it. You sort of brought it all together; thanks for sharing it all here. HMM

  • @RAV1953
    @RAV1953 Год назад +17

    Yes...may they never be forgotten....RIP to all the Fitz crew members.

  • @rileybridgham1963
    @rileybridgham1963 Год назад +24

    Love the video, I celebrate the Edmund Fitzgerald every November 10th each year.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      I'll be celebrating right along with you, Riley. Thanks for watching...HMM

  • @martinkobert361
    @martinkobert361 Год назад +19

    Thank you History mystery man for all you done keeping the Edmund Fitzgerald story alive, much respect to you.

  • @kevineich5029
    @kevineich5029 Год назад +5

    I hope you are going to have more videos with Captain Darrell Walton.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Yes sir...coming in October. Thanks for your interest...HMM

  • @jeff6146
    @jeff6146 Год назад +6

    Now that's Class , Respect and Dedication

  • @douglasmeek9774
    @douglasmeek9774 Год назад +9

    Bless all the men and families for their loss!

  • @michaelbyrne8860
    @michaelbyrne8860 Год назад +7

    Great interview very informative, born in Bridgeport 39th and Halstead, Lake Michigan in the summer could turn you blue while swimming in it! Let alone November in the deepest of the Great Lakes would be unimaginable to be a washed in it! lost of the Fitzgerald is a sad tragedy but the Superior is the final resting place for many a sailors. November 10th 1975 for Edmund Fitzgerald marks one ending and November 10th 1775 marks the beginning for the USMC both a Naval/Marine remembrance! As Lightfoot sings "Does any one know where the love of God goes When the waves turn the minutes to hours?" That song still chocks me up when I hear that passage!

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Yeah...that song grabs hold and doesn't let go...beautiful ballad. Thanks for sharing your thoughts here, and taking the time to watch...so appreciated. HMM

  • @martinkobert361
    @martinkobert361 Год назад +5

    Darrel Walton you lived a assume adventurous life my hat is off to you & your father, thank you for sharing your knowledge.

    • @darrellwalton938
      @darrellwalton938 Год назад +2

      Thanks for watching. Life is to be experienced and enjoyed no matter what the consequences.

  • @DonRRicks
    @DonRRicks Год назад +8

    If memory serves me correctly, and I’m knocking on the door to 68 so that’s not definite, I watched an earlier video that said that the families of the 29 men received $600 per man. As the captain said, something is not right with the official reports. $17,400 was the cumulative value of these men. My heart aches for the families to know this

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Seems to me I remember that $600 per man number too...great memory! Thanks for your interest in the Mighty Fitz and her crew. Thanks again, Don R...HMM (I'm a Don R too)

    • @DonRRicks
      @DonRRicks Год назад +2

      @@HistoryMysteryMan my “official” name given to me at birth is Donnie Ray. Last name also begins with an “R”. Like Bruce Hudson, I was a Mopar man in my younger years. My 1971 Demon 340 was my first, but I gave that to my new bride in 74 and bought a 68 Roadrunner 383, 4 speed. There’s something about muscle cars and late teens-early 20s guys.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      @@DonRRicks No doubt. Those muscle cars are part of our culture. Thanks for your support Donnie Ray. HMM

  • @20thCenturyManTrad
    @20thCenturyManTrad Год назад +4

    The Fitzgerald is a big thing in my hometown of Sault Sainte Marie, Captain Walton, God bless you!

  • @rogerozdarski2935
    @rogerozdarski2935 Год назад +38

    I could listen to you two talk all day and night HMM!
    This story is so tragic and fascinating.
    Thank you for you and Captain for keeping the memories of these brave men .

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      Thanks again, Roger. Always so glad to hear from you! HMM

  • @FreshwaterNautical
    @FreshwaterNautical Год назад +3

    When he mentioned the youth not wanting to work… 100% correct. However, some of us do! I’m 21 y/o, and I actually sail on the Great Lakes myself with the Interlake Steamship company!

    • @darrellwalton938
      @darrellwalton938 Год назад +2

      So glad to hear your working. We need a lot more just like you. A "Tip of the Sailor's Cap" to you.
      Keep up the good work!

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      Awesome...we need more of you out there. Thanks for chiming in. HMM

  • @montanamountainmen6104
    @montanamountainmen6104 Год назад +7

    I think the Fitz " Nose dived" off Caribou Island. The sinking was so fast and harsh the men had 0 chance to get out.

  • @michealgrace3020
    @michealgrace3020 Год назад +10

    How About The Steel Plates That Are At Frazier Ship Yards With Edmund Fitzgerald On Them?? How About The Homer??

  • @Peter.w
    @Peter.w Год назад +39

    This is a fascinating set of videos I could sit and listen to him for ages talk about the fitz and his experiences. So many mysteries remains... thanks for continuing to keep the memory alive!!

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +4

      Thanks Peter...so appreciated. Stop by anytime...HMM

    • @jimtaddeo1118
      @jimtaddeo1118 Год назад +3

      Just wanted to say thank you for this awesome video , loved it ! Does Capt. Darrell have a merch. store , i'd love to buy one of those hat's he gave you . Thaks Again !!

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      @@jimtaddeo1118 Thanks Jim. I don't believe a merch store exists but worth pursuing. HMM

  • @beberle9641
    @beberle9641 Год назад +15

    If this happened today all the families would have sued the pants off the Coast Guard's unpreparedness and this time of year that is crazy. Thanks Don and Darrell for more great history and mystery.

    • @spaceflight1019
      @spaceflight1019 Год назад +5

      Not true. As we learned after the loss of the El Faro, the ultimate responsibility for the ship lies with its master, or the Captain.

    • @beberle9641
      @beberle9641 Год назад +1

      @@spaceflight1019 It's understood thanks for letting me know. Thanks it's good to learn something new every day.

    • @spaceflight1019
      @spaceflight1019 Год назад +1

      @@beberle9641 The El Faro was unique in that it had a bridge audio recorder. It took the Navy's submersible to find it in 15,000 feet of water. They transcribed it, and it's available online. I highly suggest reading it, but with one caveat: once you begin you won't want to stop.

  • @TheU-hv8qj
    @TheU-hv8qj Год назад +3

    What a great interview! Thanks.

  • @kimfleury
    @kimfleury Год назад +6

    I don't know why it didn't occur to me that both of the Waltons you interviewed are related. It did occur to me that the similarities of the backgrounds are remarkable -- both had fathers who were chief engineers, etc. But the two Walton brothers are so different from one another that you can know all that about them and still be somewhat shocked to find out that they're brothers 🤣 They're both good men, though, and I truly appreciate their dedication to keeping the memory of the Fitz alive. May the souls of all aboard rest in peace.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Yeah....it's interesting...a typical story of brothers...complete opposites yet each brings so much knowledge, expertise and character to the table. Thanks again, Kim...HMM

    • @darrellwalton938
      @darrellwalton938 Год назад +1

      Maybe some day you will be able to hear some footage of the "Walton Brothers Band". Tom does a great rendition of "Jimmy Buffets, Margaritaville", with myself, Brother Kim, and Brother George!

  • @bleachiniac
    @bleachiniac Год назад +5

    Never in my wildest dream a lake could be so fatal. I knew the Great Lakes but never knew how deadly they could be and honestly I thought they're like other normal lake. Definitely something new to me.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Having spent 10 years (tug and barge) on the Great Lakes, I can attest to their brutal nature. Thanks for watching! HMM

    • @bleachiniac
      @bleachiniac Год назад +3

      @@HistoryMysteryMan Thanks for your sharing as well. It's an eye opener for me. The Great Lakes more like a freshwater 'sea' if I might say. Got waves, storms. It's brutal like you said and deadly.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      @@bleachiniac Yeah...the ocean ain't got nuttin' on the Great Lakes...thanks again. HMM

  • @vince_vatican777
    @vince_vatican777 Год назад +12

    I remember being in 5th grade in Huron, Ohio and our teacher had a discussion with the class in regards to the Fitzgerald sinking. Then my Father giving me the local news paper to read about the Fitzgerald. To this day I always remember this ship and loss of life. God Bless the crew.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Thanks for watching. The story of the Mighty Fitz never lets go. HMM

  • @richardmook3693
    @richardmook3693 Год назад +5

    Thank you for a great video. My friend Bruce Hudson always comes to mind as I learn more of the story.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Refresh my memory...you knew Bruce? Thanks again...HMM

  • @readelundy7620
    @readelundy7620 Год назад +4

    I was on the Eisenhower in rough seas for 3 days! Scary as hell!!! I can’t imagine being on a little boat in rough weather. In the weather they were in you would be lucky to survive 20 minutes in the water! RIP!

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      Scary indeed. Thanks for remembering the Mighty Fitz and her crew...and thanks for watching. HMM

  • @peteacher52
    @peteacher52 Год назад +4

    I somehow feel more emotion on behalf of those killed that night on the Fitz, even than for the victims of Titanic. To me, large bodies of fresh water hold more dread than the same volume of seawater ... the buoyancy differential for one thing. From the lower deck of SS Earnslaw on Wakatipu, looking over the side, you just know that to fall in would be a one-way ticket to the 400' bottom.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      To the men of the Mighty Fitz...RIP, and thanks for your service. Thanks for watching...HMM

  • @jefferyashmore6477
    @jefferyashmore6477 Год назад +4

    I still believe that they should bring up bodies and identify as I have read they know of 5. And given a proper burial. This was a tragic loss of life. My sympathies to families.

  • @bryanknapp6897
    @bryanknapp6897 Год назад +5

    I remember my folks telling me about that storm, as they lived in Ontario Canada and could see these massive ships so close to the Canadian shore line that they were really worried as that was not a normal shipping practise at thAt time.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      No doubt. If the ships were hugging the north side of Lake Superior (not the normal shipping lane) it was typically about trying to protect themselves from severe winds from the north. Thanks for watching...HMM

  • @JohnnyLaps
    @JohnnyLaps Год назад +7

    I just came back and rewatched this.amazing dialect between two guys who know what the hell they are talking about.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      Thanks John...for all your support. #Grateful HMM

    • @JohnnyLaps
      @JohnnyLaps 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@HistoryMysteryManDon,why would the clamps ever NOT be clamped down, regardless of weather knowing things change on the lakes at the drop of a hat?

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  8 месяцев назад

      Good question. Not sure if the following scenario is still true, but back in the Fitz's day, some captains, with an extended calm weather forecast, would tell the deckhands to just clamp the corners...one hatch cover ways about 6.5 tons. If the weather is going to drop, forecasters are better about predicting a big blow these days. Thanks...HMM@@JohnnyLaps

  • @MuffyOutside
    @MuffyOutside Год назад +19

    Yesterday I was in superior and Duluth. The weather was terrible up there yesterday. 40-50 mph winds, 12ft waves out of the bay. Couldn’t help but think of the EF while going over the big bridge and looking off into the lake. Great video here, an important piece of the history in the nort woods

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      Thanks Muffy...thanks for sharing your thoughts here. HMM

  • @Mike-tu7uw
    @Mike-tu7uw Год назад +5

    I’ve always thought this. If he did bottom out he wouldn’t go blabbing it all over the radio

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      I agree. Like Darrell said...Captains keep it close to their chests. Thanks for watching, Mike. HMM

  • @jamiegreen4758
    @jamiegreen4758 Год назад +3

    Awesome video ty. And rip brother’s ❤

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Thank you! And thanks for remembering the Mighty Fitz and her crew. HMM

    • @jamiegreen4758
      @jamiegreen4758 Год назад +3

      @@HistoryMysteryMan will never forget 👍

  • @grouperkng1
    @grouperkng1 Год назад +2

    I have been running charter boats for 23 years, various sizes. I have had fires and taking on water situations while offshore. Having the crew locked in knowing where everything is and knowing their job kept our guest safe and us too.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      Where do you run your charter boats? Thanks for watching...HMM

    • @grouperkng1
      @grouperkng1 Год назад +2

      @@HistoryMysteryMan Clearwater beach Fl

  • @rgatesoit
    @rgatesoit Год назад +9

    I would love to sit and listen to all his sailing stories. In my early 20s I had everything filled out to submit to the Coast Guard and made contacts at a couple shipping companies, and I just sat on it. Huge regret that I didn't go work on the boats.
    Then there's the Fitz. The family has a cabin in Paradise (on the Bay) so we grew up watching the boats, going to Whitefish Point and the Soo. It's hard not to think of her and those men.
    My late Step Dad sailed for years on the Calloway and a few others. I have nothing but admiration for all these sailors.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Thanks for sharing your thoughts here...and thanks for remembering the Mighty Fitz and her crew. What a great childhood you must have had in that cabin in Paradise! HMM

  • @suehinze1566
    @suehinze1566 Год назад +10

    I was only 10 yrs old when the Fitz went down. I really hadn't learned of that tragic day until I was much older. I enjoy listening to both of you and the stories of the past.
    You're both very good at storytelling and make it feel like it didn't happen that long ago. My daughter lives in Algoma, and we go to the park near Bay Ship builders. It always reminds me of Edmund Fitzgerald and how she never made it back to get repaired.
    Every year on or near November 10th, I come here to watch your videos. Kinda my salute to the 29 men that died that day. God bless them all. Thank you for keeping her memory alive.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      Thanks for coming back, Sue! I so appreciate your support. And thanks for remembering the Mighty Fitz and her crew. HMM

  • @kevinhoffman1562
    @kevinhoffman1562 Год назад +4

    Thank you for your videos... I've always been fascinated by the Edmund Fitzgerald since reading a Great Lakes Shipwrecks book (bought from a historical museum in Petoskey, MI) and your videos inspired me to do some more research and I found out I'm related to one of the men who perished.
    I was watching your video from last year where you were standing in front of Watchman William J. Spengler's former house in Toledo. You mentioned not much was known about him, so after finding a couple of articles in the Toledo Blade (thanks google newspaper archives) from the week of the wreck I saw he was from the Archbold, Oh area. I remember my father telling me that my grandma (who grew up in Detroit and Bryan/Defiance/Archbold) talked about being related to the Spengler's (I thought in reference to the Spangler's candy company in Bryan.) Long story short after some digging found out that William Jacob Spengler Jr. and my Grandmother were 2nd cousins as her paternal grandmother was his grandfathers older sister. I'm unsure if they met as he was 8 years older so likely had already joined the Navy when she moved to Bryan from Detroit. Anyhow, he had a 15 year Navy career and was wounded aboard the USS Maryland during the attack on Pearl Harbor. Small world.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      Wow...super interesting info; thanks for sharing it here. Would you by chance have any photos of William Spengler?

  • @andrewnorris1514
    @andrewnorris1514 Год назад +7

    Darrell I had 4 brothers growing up. Your folks did a great job . Brother Tom is just as interesting to listen to as your self thanks for sharing 👍

  • @TommyTheCat42
    @TommyTheCat42 Год назад +12

    Thank you for shedding some much needed light on this haunting mystery…

  • @difreighterwatcher8603
    @difreighterwatcher8603 Год назад +3

    Thank you for sharing this interview. This man is a Fountain of Knowledge and has the life experience to back it up. I would love to see him dispute the many videos Ric Mixter has done on the Fitzgerald where he still to this day blames the Crew for not fastening the Hatch covers properly. Parrots the Authorities conclusions and dismisses any possibility that other factors were the cause of the Sinking.
    I've been a Freighter fanatic for decades and have read anything about the Fitzgerald I could find. I couldn't believe the hatch cover explanation and was never satisfied with the "Official Story".
    This gentleman was the first person to lay out ALL the information and I agree with his conclusions.
    Thank you again for sharing, and I enjoy your channel, looking forward to new content.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      Super interesting perspective; thanks for sharing it here. We'll never know exactly what happened, and the loose hatch cover theory is on the table...everything's on the table, but I lean toward Capt. Darrell's explanation, which is also supported by Capt. Cooper on the Anderson, who was in same sea. I tend to go with people who were there, and have been there. Thanks for watching...HMM

    • @difreighterwatcher8603
      @difreighterwatcher8603 Год назад +2

      @@HistoryMysteryMan your right we will never know exactly what happened, and nothing should be ruled out. I always believed the media narrative about the sinking, but since the internet I have found so many stories from people with different perspectives. I agree with what Bernie Cooper said is the closest thing to fact, he was there, and his experienced Opinions should carry the most weight. Thanks again for sharing the interview and replying to my comments.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      @@difreighterwatcher8603 You're welcome! I mean, Capt. Cooper was there...in the same sea. His opinion matters most to me. HMM

  • @j.d.preppingerie6522
    @j.d.preppingerie6522 Год назад +6

    Damm … so cool,thanks! JD

  • @lagodifuoco313
    @lagodifuoco313 2 месяца назад +3

    I finally checked ✔️ off a trip on my "Bucket list" this past weekend. I took a road trip to Duluth Harbor with my 15yr old son. We got to tour the Irvin, and we saw several ships sail through the channel under the lift bridge. The Ruddy (rust bucket), the Paul R Tregurtha (1,013 feet, largest on the lakes) come in, the Barker (1,004 feet) go out, and a few others. What an incredible experience.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  2 месяца назад +2

      Love it! I'm planning a trip that way too...possibly this fall. Is the Irvin always open for tours? Thanks for sending your bucket list items in...got me energized to do the same. Thanks for your support...HMM

    • @lagodifuoco313
      @lagodifuoco313 2 месяца назад +2

      @HistoryMysteryMan
      Yes, it's open 7 days a wee

  • @lonnyjaw
    @lonnyjaw Год назад +17

    Yeah Brother, the force of water is unbelievable at this time of year. We had a bad one a couple years ago and the force of the waves knocked the beacon light right off the end of the pier and bent the railings in! Unreal!!

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +4

      The Great Lakes can be so brutal. Thanks for watching...HMM

  • @llam8394
    @llam8394 Год назад +9

    Thank you Captian Walton for sharing your experience and knowledge with us. I personally understand how this one event reverberates throughout the strings of life. It certainly has for my own. I have a VERY close family connection whose story has never been publicly told but has affected our family in ways that to this day are still deafening. May those who died that night and their families be carried by Angels.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      What is your "never been publicly told" story, if I may ask? Thanks for watching...HMM

  • @jaycook4399
    @jaycook4399 Год назад +6

    My wife's 1st husband was on the Fitzgerald months before it went down. He was a coal passer, working 4 hours on, and 4 hours off. He mentioned, we all knew there was a weak spot on that ship.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      Interesting. I'm searching for people who once worked on the Fitz who wouldn't mind talking with me. Thanks for sharing your story here. HMM

    • @jaycook4399
      @jaycook4399 Год назад +3

      @@HistoryMysteryMan sorry to say he passed away a few years ago. We do have 1 picture of him & a coworker on the Fitzgerald.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      @@jaycook4399 Love to see that pic...thanks.

    • @jaycook4399
      @jaycook4399 Год назад +3

      @@HistoryMysteryMan tell me how to get it to you, and I will within this week

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад

      @@jaycook4399 Could you message me on Messenger through Facebook?

  • @howardanderson1804
    @howardanderson1804 Год назад +6

    After my grandfather discharged from the navy, he eventually wound up on this ship and not long after he changed occupations it went down.. he lost many good friends 😔

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      Interesting. Sounds like fate. Thanks for watching....HMM

  • @jakespeed63
    @jakespeed63 Год назад +9

    Incredible information
    Pops unloaded iron ore at Cleveland’s Erie Ore Dock. I was just a wee lad and those boats were the biggest thing I’d ever scene. He honestly never worked the Fitzgerald, but still rings close to home.
    The Great Lakes can be wicked. Even on a friend’s 52’ trawler, you’d get tossed around. And she weighed 26 tons
    Thanks for sharing

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      Part of the reason I do these videos is to hear all these cool stories shared here. Thanks for sharing yours, jakespeed63! HMM

  • @meng737
    @meng737 Год назад +6

    Well done. Thank you for your work and the Captain's willingness and great demeanor!

  • @thebomb18wheels
    @thebomb18wheels Год назад +5

    What about the pilot house doors? One of the doors secured by two large clamps were found open. Moreover the clamps were not broken, and there are many pictures supporting this fact. Someone had to have open that door when she was sinking. Maybe the first wave blew in the windows, destroying the electronics and completely totaling the pilot house. At some point before the second or third sister, someone opened that door.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      Interesting perspective Al...thanks for sharing it here. HMM

  • @spiralrose
    @spiralrose Год назад +6

    Thank you for the documentaries on the Edmund Fitzgerald, I watch every single one!
    Please don’t forget though, to make note of the music and the artist that you use in your uploads so I can hunt them down and look them up. I’d love to know who was playing that song in the beginning.

  • @susiepittman601
    @susiepittman601 Год назад +2

    Very special. Thanks for sharing.

  • @beberle9641
    @beberle9641 Год назад +6

    3 longs and 2 shorts for the SS Edmond Fitzgerald on November 10 2022. And ring the bell 29 times for those who went down with her. Thanks for the great videos HMM. Brian

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Back at ya with the 3 longs and 2 shorts. Thanks again, B Eberle...HMM

    • @beberle9641
      @beberle9641 Год назад +3

      Hey that's so cool thanks so much! Have a great day. A salute to all veterans and active duty men and women all over the world.

  • @andrewnorris1514
    @andrewnorris1514 Год назад +8

    That's really great viewing. Thank you for sharing. You 2 make a good team

  • @agent1966
    @agent1966 Год назад +15

    Hey! Thanks for these vids. I've recently been stung by the Fitzgerald "bug". Not really even sure why, perhaps it was remembering the Gordon Ligthfoot song as a youth.
    After watching many videos on the subject, and listening all of the theories, I think Cap Darrell and Cap Cooper are the ones that have the right scenario for her loss. She was "submarined" by the "3-Sisters", this possibly due to the overloading, bottoming out and taking on water and losing that extra buoyancy needed to recover after being hit and having her Stern lifted.
    The damage to the front of ship bares tells me she went into the lakebed hard.
    It is a terrible thought to even think of what those men in the bridge were thinking and feeling as that happened.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      I can't imagine the fear they went through. Thanks for taking an interest in the Mighty Fitz and her crew, Lee...so appreciated. By the way the pilot house is all twisted up, you know it landed hard on Superior's bottom. HMM

  • @winstonsmith2237
    @winstonsmith2237 Год назад +5

    thank you for sharing. I can't imagine how horrible this storm was that day... so close to the safety of the bay but she went down in a second.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      I know...it's so hard to think about how terrified they must have been. Thanks for watching, Winston. HMM

  • @YouAintChris
    @YouAintChris Год назад +5

    Fascinating perspective here. Much respect to Capt. Darrell. It’s also interesting to look at some of the similarities between the FAA’s debacle surrounding ValuJet Airlines compared to both the USCG and CCG’s handling and report of the Fitz.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Thanks. I'll have to check into that comparison you spoke of...sounds interesting. Thanks for watching...HMM

  • @williamcawley1113
    @williamcawley1113 Год назад +5

    I really should pay a vist to Duluth Harbor. I've been to the Titanic Drydock In Ireland and I couldn't help but tear up seeing where this famous ship was built and knowing the story.
    My thing is It was built by the Irish who gave to the English who promptly ran it into and Iceberg

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Interesting take on the Titanic. I didn't know she was built in Ireland and sold to the English. I heard today that for $250,000, you can take a sub down and dive on the Titanic. Who's in? Thanks for watching...HMM

    • @williamcawley1113
      @williamcawley1113 Год назад +1

      Well not sold but more of a contract to build her and her sisters the mystery I think that still sourunds this is why didn't Captain Smith do anything when he had the Ice report in his hands

  • @stephanielitton2929
    @stephanielitton2929 Год назад +4

    You say you wish you had a better...or more.. of a maritime collection, but you Sir, have piece of the Holy Grail under that glass! Thank you so much for sharing this with us! Captain Walton is a wealth of information, as are you!

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      Thanks Stephanie...so appreciated! And thanks for watching...HMM

  • @rvt2239
    @rvt2239 Год назад +6

    Thank you for these interviews. I'm from the South but my mom's family is all from various areas around the lakes. The Fitz has always had a great deal of mythos to me and it is incredible to hear all of this.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Thanks...so appreciated! Happy New Year from the History Mystery Man!

  • @lanerailvideo5928
    @lanerailvideo5928 Год назад +6

    My wife, son, & I were one the Carnival Ecstasy during Hurricane Sandy. We were delayed a day in getting back to our final port as we had to wait for her passing. Once she got by we followed her a few hundred miles behind. Even from that distance we still experienced some real good swells. We were towards the bow on the starboard side above the first full window above the red line. The gales were strong gust to near 70 mph, & the swells were large, the largest we ever seen. Water hit our window 3 times. Will not as wild as some folks stories are it wild in its own right. My wife licensed for the Great Lakes to operate the big boats, later learned that our ship sustained damage on that trip, & had to be dry docked for structural repair. The ship was just a few degrees from taken on water too. Despite it being a crazy first big ocean trip for the 3 of us we all enjoyed it, & had many great memories. My wife, & I wanted to have one last ride on her but it wasn't to be, & now the ship in the ship grave yard in Allaga Turkey.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      Awesome stories...thanks for sharing them here! Did you get seasick in the rough seas? I had that problem for my first two years when I worked the Great Lakes tug and barges. Thanks for watching...HMM

  • @terrielilley3456
    @terrielilley3456 Год назад +6

    "don't tell me no more mom". Lol. What a great two-parter! So happy I found this channel. Always been struck by this tragedy, living along the shore Lake Erie in NE Ohio. I understand why must edit some content, yet would've been cool to hear it all.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +3

      Thanks for finding me! I live in your same neck of the woods, most of my life. And I worked on the Great Lakes for 12 years. Capt. Darrell is amazing! HMM

  • @brucerivard4337
    @brucerivard4337 Год назад +2

    Absolutely love this information. Thanks for sharing!!👍

  • @TempoDrift1480
    @TempoDrift1480 Год назад +3

    That's my kinda dude, wearing a Fender shirt with some Ford on the side.

  • @neilnaiman2566
    @neilnaiman2566 Год назад +7

    Very good summary of the cause of the Fitzgerald’s sinking. I sailed with Cleveland Cliffs in the early 70’s and saw the Fitz numerous times while locking through the Soo. I’ve read most of the literature and reports and the Captain’s story makes the most sense. While not experiencing anything like the weather in November 75, I have witnessed first hand the groaning of the steel while the ship twisted at midship. Easy to see while standing aft looking forward. Very noisy and visible movement of the ship while experiencing heavy seas. I will always remember that. November 10 remains a very emotional day for me.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Understood Neil...thanks for sharing your thoughts here. I can't imagine hearing those giant freighters creak and groan...must be especially eerie. Thanks for your service on the Great Lakes! HMM

    • @AvengerII
      @AvengerII Год назад +1

      There was a video of a Russian (?) cargo ship posted years ago that was designed much like the Edmund Fitzgerald -- long and very narrow-waisted.
      You could see this ship bending very noticeably in the middle and bow and stern bobbing up. The ship finally broke in half which was the obvious end. It was like the 2 ships that broke up on the Great Lakes previous to the Fitzgerald, including that had a survivor who lived to the 2000s.
      The crew of that Russian(?) cargo ship were all saved by nearby vessels but the fact that they continue to design, build, and sail ships like this after numerous accidents with similar designs and poor maintenance records is unconscionable.
      The British had a cargo ship called MV Derbyshire that sank south of Japan in 1980. In broad respects, this was similar to the Fitzgerald design except she was MUCH bigger and had her pilot house/bridge at the aft/bow of the ship. A rogue wave was also blamed in her sinking. 44 people died; no one survived. That was 42 crew plus two of their wives! It was a 91,000+ ton ship, far bigger than the Titanic and the largest British ship ever lost at sea.

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад

      @@AvengerII Thanks for chiming in with your interesting info. Yes...both the Daniel J. Morrell (sank in Lake Huron in 1966) and the Carl D. Bradley (sank in Lake Michigan in 1958) had survivors. The Derbyshire would be an interesting video story. Thanks for watching...HMM

  • @billmorris166
    @billmorris166 2 месяца назад +2

    And a good hot July day to u HMM ..i know its not Nov,but i like listening to u and Capt Darrell anytime... Looking forward. to u remembering the "Mighty Fitz" this coming November...So grateful to u buddy,for keeping the memory of these men and the ship alive....My dad was a Seabee in WW2,,and i have his dogtags,so I'm definitely all things Navy,and the big ships that travel our lakes and oceans...B blessed my friend ..miss the cornfields of Ohio...and give Capt Darrell our best from all of your fans!!!!!

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  2 месяца назад +1

      Thanks again, Bill. Capt. D will love you for this one! I'd miss the Ohio heartland too if I was away from it for too long. Appreciate your support...helps keep me encouraged to jump back into the story of the Mighty Fitz! HMM

  • @matthewhiggins8851
    @matthewhiggins8851 Год назад +2

    Love this guy!

  • @ajbaumgart4774
    @ajbaumgart4774 Год назад +7

    Once again sir job well done I find it so amazing Mr walton has given you some piece's of history that's so amazing that is a big trust bond there I just find Mr walton to be a amazing man from what I get told is all sailor's of the lakes on tugs or ships you all are brothers and sisters out there

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +2

      Thanks Aj...so appreciated. I've come to look forward to your input! HMM

  • @verdaschultz2446
    @verdaschultz2446 Год назад +5

    I was 10 years old when Emma Fitzgerald went down I've been hearing the song ever since I always wanted to know what happened and now I'm finding out God bless the 29 men that was on Edmund Fitzgerald that passed away sorry to families for your loss rest in peace

    • @HistoryMysteryMan
      @HistoryMysteryMan  Год назад +1

      Thanks for remembering the Mighty Fitz and her crew. HMM