If I was that first diver on the Kamloops and I suddenly saw the mummified remains of Old Whitey floating right next to me, both of us far below the surface of Superior, my soul would instantly leave my body. Utterly terrifying.
@alexfogg3812 ай бұрын
Another Excellent presentation good Sir. The story of the SS Kamloops both saddens me and chills me to the bone. Over the years shipwreck images seem to give me the Woolys, haven't figured out why.
@TheMainLead2 ай бұрын
If you dive on a shipwreck that sank with all hands in a cold lake why would act surprised?
@patrickols2 ай бұрын
I would probably need a change of underwear but I suspect these divers are use and expect to see things like that when diving a wreck
@camerontatro94472 ай бұрын
@TheMainLead even with that knowledge in your head. Your not going to be prepared to see a preserved body in a wreck that has been down there for half a century.
@kimfleury2 ай бұрын
@@TheMainLeadit's one thing to have the possibility in mind, right along with the possibility that all hands went overboard. After all, bodies were found on the island. And supposing there were bodies remaining on the wreck, one might expect to see any body from a distance, not right in your face out of nowhere.
@Bob-b7x6v2 ай бұрын
Your endless freshwater Maritime docs are food for my Michiganian brain.
@THEGODROD2 ай бұрын
You and me both.
@teslagirl12 ай бұрын
I was born and raised in the hills and hollers of the Appalachian foothills, in the deep south, FAR from the great lakes. I don't even swim. But I am HOOKED on these ship documentaries...when I can't find one I haven't seen before, it's rough at first. The "oh, dang" moment. Then I take a deep breath and queue up one of the first ones I watched and watch it again. They are even better the second time.
@camerontatro94472 ай бұрын
Same! Something about being local to all the great lake stories that make them extra fascinating vs ocean liner stories or battleships etc.
@marhawkman3032 ай бұрын
@@johncanthearyou To some perhaps... but well... some....
@scottcameron832912 күн бұрын
*Michigander
@Nitrinoxus2 ай бұрын
It's hard to imagine a better spooky story than that of the ship that vanished with all hands, then was found 50 years later with one sailor still at his post.
@MarianneKat2 ай бұрын
This is pretty much all the bodies lost in Lake Superior. It's so cold they don't decay much. All the bodies are on the Edmund Fitzgerald are still there too.
@Crentshen2 ай бұрын
@@MarianneKatnever thought about that. Kinda crazy
@lsswappedcessna2 ай бұрын
Respect to Old Whitey, whoever he may have been in life. Even death did not prevent him from manning his post. A dedicated sailor. For any divers who may have mistreated his body, I hope they know that Mister Rogers would not be proud of them.
@PaulRudd1941Ай бұрын
@@MarianneKat to quote the legendary Gordon Lightfoot; "Superior they said, never gives up her dead."
@maxideas9393Ай бұрын
@lsswappedcessna his name was Charles Perry.
@Nitrinoxus2 ай бұрын
Folks who don't live in the parts of the country that see such weather probably don't realize how _brutal_ and _terrifying_ a true blizzard can be. 'White-out' may sound a charming phrase, but it's one of the most descriptive summaries of the visibility when you're caught in such a storm: beyond the short distance where you can see through the driving snow, there's just _nothing_ but the howling wall of white all around you. I've been caught in two different blizzards living over in Colorado, with several more I watched from indoors. They're _tame_ compared to the November Gales, but even so, there were times when I feared for my safety.
@onebigadvocado63762 ай бұрын
As an Australian, whose idea of snow is slightly slushy rain (I've seen proper snow rain twice in my 38 years), thanks for this context.
@Chord_2 ай бұрын
Lived in Oswego, just on the shore of Lake Ontario, for about three years. Your description is spot on. The only thing I can add is, my first year living there, I'll never forget the sensation of seeing what I can only describe as icebergs buffeting the shoreline during a particularly windy day (NOT a gale, mind). I don't know if I could describe it, per se. It was just a moment of realizing the terrifying power before me. I can't imagine being *on* the lake during a moment like that.
@Nitrinoxus2 ай бұрын
@Chord_ There's a saying that my granddad, lifelong baseball fan that he was, liked to bring out when bad weather rolled in: *"Nature bats last."* It really doesn't matter how much you think you're prepared for the worst that nature can throw at you -- when it steps up to the plate, you'd better _believe_ it's swinging for the fences, and woe to you if the bases are loaded. After your first brush with a natural disaster, you never forget to have an emergency kit ready. It's a profound experience that changes the way you see the world around you, I've found.
@mistformsquirrel2 ай бұрын
I live in Central IL - several hours south of the Great Lakes themselves and honestly a much less impacted area comparatively. Given some of the wild ass weather I've seen in my own lifetime and location? I can only imagine what the fury of Lake Superior in full blizzard must have been like... Nature will not hesitate to remind you how small you are when the mood strikes her.
@history_by_lamplight2 ай бұрын
I live in Ohio. Driving in a blizzard is a nightmare. Winter storms around Lake Erie are ENTIRELY different than in Southern Ohio; they're so much worse. The cold is colder somehow, even at the same temperature - and it gets SO MUCH colder around the lakes than it ever does south of Canton. A Great Lakes blizzard is absolutely terrifying, and I can't imagine trying to *sail* through one. 😞
@michaelsinger46382 ай бұрын
Alice’s note is so heartbreaking. What an awful horrifying way to go.
@marhawkman3032 ай бұрын
Worse still is knowing her well-meaning crew mates did their best to save her... and failed.
@littlespinycactus2 ай бұрын
Big Old Boats is right up there with the best. It's not just the stories--fascinating as they are--it's the way you tell 'em.
@guyk7682 ай бұрын
This was a very interesting video of the SS Kamloops. I always enjoy the detail and storytelling you do in your videos. But, most importantly, you treat the victims of these unfortunate events with respect and dignity. That I respect.
@roderickcampbell21052 ай бұрын
Agreed entirely.
@richardcowling73812 ай бұрын
Same story as so many lost on the lakes... the company pressuring the captain to make one last run to maximise the profits, often against the captains better judgement.
@TheSilmarillian20 күн бұрын
Yep seems to be a pattern just 1 last run..................
@AnGeLOfHaViK2 ай бұрын
I can listen to anything in the background; however it takes a very considerately made video with great character for me to break bread over and yours are perfect. Thank you.
@TheRuralUrbanist2 ай бұрын
These lakes are as terrifying as the sea!!! Love your channel, the sound design is on a whole other level!!!
@AcaliahWolfsong2 ай бұрын
I feel like the great lakes should be considered an inland fresh water sea.
@stevenkarnisky4112 ай бұрын
@@AcaliahWolfsong They are!
@PereMarquette12232 ай бұрын
@@AcaliahWolfsongthey only call them lakes cause there’s no salt in them
@ss-22032 ай бұрын
Very chilling tale. I appreciate you taking the time to acknowledge the individual people on these ships as they were no dofferent than us today. I do hope you make future stories about the Great Lakes. Another good survival story was the SS michigan which was trapped in ice on Lake Michigan in 1885 and a lone crew member, George Sheldon made the 15 mile trek for supplies for 7 weeks before the ship sank. All the crew survived but the icy conditions took George's Life 5 years later due to illness.
@roguetheotter2 ай бұрын
how is it that you can make me absolutely fall in love with a ship and subsequently break my little heart with her horrifying death? ive never heard of the Kamloops before today, and now i want to know everything about her. i adore this channel because you're an amazing storyteller, that opening gave me such chills. thank you so much for this video.
@RyanKlapperich2 ай бұрын
Little Easter Egg: At 6:35 you can see a hanging gondola crossing the water behind the boat. That's the precursor to Duluth's Aerial Lift Bridge, which sits on the same site. The Aerial Bridge gondola spanned the Duluth Shipping Canal and had a capacity of 60 tons to carry people (up to 350 people), carts, streetcars, or automobiles to cross the channel. A trip across took about one minute and the gondola would cross the channel as quickly as every five minutes during busy times of the day. The gondola structure was completed in 1905 and was replaced by the current lift bridge in 1930.
@claudiadarling94412 ай бұрын
It actually wasn't replaced. They retrofitted the original structure to work as a lift bridge.
@Kroggnagch2 ай бұрын
Wow. They stuck to the old saying "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" for 2½ decades. That's actually pretty awesome and tells us just how well the Hanging Gondola worked for its intended purposes.
@milieu675Ай бұрын
That small steel lighthouse is still there👌🏻
@randomrazr2 ай бұрын
your story telling skills are top notch. you may not have the fancy animations like some other channels, but your narrating and choice of clips used to compensate makes up for it!
@marhawkman3032 ай бұрын
fancy animations are often distractions anyways. Why draw a picture of Lake Superior when it's inferior to a photograph? Now, I say this as someone who loves how Plainly Difficult does them. BUT he does them because he's doing diagrams of things that no footage exists of... and.. he shows what real footage he can.
@randomrazr2 ай бұрын
@@marhawkman303 well i mean like ocean liner designs, he uses alot of animations
@marhawkman3032 ай бұрын
@@randomrazr also something you need diagrams for.
@kimfleury2 ай бұрын
I'll say it again: as many Great Lakes Lore books as I've read during my life, you've managed to present information that I hadn't known before. Well done. Thank you for this respectful presentation.
@unclecodyd_babyy47412 ай бұрын
You and ocean liner design should work together, you guys have amazing channels and a duo video would be so good.
@ayindestevens61522 ай бұрын
Seriously it’s a collaboration that’s way overdue!
@hollieBlu3032 ай бұрын
Oh my god, yes PLEASE!!!!🙏 ...That video would be a banger! We need our friend Mike Brady to collab here!!!
@kevinmcdowell90742 ай бұрын
Hear! Hear!
@Spike-sk7ql2 ай бұрын
Yes. The one he did with Brick Immortar was real good.
@sethmullins83462 ай бұрын
Part Time Explorer is great too.
@clarsach292 ай бұрын
This is one of the saddest and most poignant wreck stories from the Great Lakes....trying to imagine Alice's feelings as she wrote that last letter. RIP
@Dakiraun2 ай бұрын
A very chilling open; and my heart goes out to the doomed survivors, for they had to know how slim their chances were.
@susanvandenberg42732 ай бұрын
Kamloops was a victim of managers obsession with the numbers, putting their boats and crews at risk. This went for years, captains are pressured to keep going later in the year while the bigger boats were tied up for the winter.
@kevinmcdowell90742 ай бұрын
Its still happens today across many different industries. Until we reach a point, in the far future, where we are free from the burdens of chasing capital, we will continue to exist in such a miserable state.
@onebigadvocado63762 ай бұрын
@@susanvandenberg4273 Yep. Capitalism claims another victim.
@markhoffman37022 ай бұрын
Ever count the victims of communism?
@onebigadvocado63762 ай бұрын
@@markhoffman3702 😴 oh look a pointless whataboutism. Pressure from management got those sailors killed that's just a fact. That's not even close to the amount of blatant examples on this channel alone.
@markhoffman37022 ай бұрын
@@onebigadvocado6376 oh so RIGHTEOUS and enlightened….
@johnm.lashmit885521 күн бұрын
WOW, your stories are so Awesome! I'm from Northern Michigan, my Dad sailed on the great lakes in the 60s. He was on Cason J Callaway, the same company as the Arthur M. Anderson, so have always been fascinated with big freighters. Thanks for all your great videos.
@VoorTrekker88Ай бұрын
Alice Bettridge's story is heartbreaking... I would have thought there weren't too many young women working on cargo ships on the Great Lakes in the 1920s. The old girl must have been made of some tough stuff to be able to make her way in a harsh environment. But the fact that she actually survived the Kamloops' foundering, and made it to dry land on Isle Royale, only to be, at last, done in by the bitter cold just tears at my heart. I hope she is at peace now. RIP to Alice Bettridge and all of the crew of Kamloops.
@flkoolguy2 ай бұрын
I wish your videos came more often; however, I understand the greatness that is your product takes time. Thank you.
@tiberiusgracchus42222 ай бұрын
This video has a pace to it that is reminiscent of floating in water and the tone of the narrators voice enhances the effect. It fits the subject matter so perfectly. Well done! Quality work as always.
@b.w.222 ай бұрын
Good lord - Just when you think you’ve heard the bulk of the terrifying Great Lakes shipping disasters, here comes another that’s more tragic and eerie than the last. To think these people escaped the vessel, only to perish on land. Respect to them that braved the waters.
@marhawkman3032 ай бұрын
One story... of thousands.
@corvanna44382 ай бұрын
The lakes are full of stories of bravery, foolish decisions, sorrow, and triumphs.
@CrusaderSports2502 ай бұрын
@@corvanna4438I am from Britain and it's very difficult to appreciate the size of the lakes, I saw lake Michigan on my only visit to the States, it's the sea, whatever way you look sky meets water, but it's just a lake you have to keep telling yourself, any storm out there would be just as vicious as any out on salt water, back home trying to convey the size is all but impossible, it's a very big place.
@corvanna44382 ай бұрын
@CrusaderSports250 the Lakes are huge. They are definitely awesome in size and power
@tonystone10162 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@BigOldBoats2 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@kaboulscabal4816Ай бұрын
Since I've had Gordon on my mind for the last 2 days ... THIS ironically comes to mind ... *the searchers all say, she'd have made Whitefish Bay ...* as a harbinger of safety
@Tizniter2 ай бұрын
You have a terrific feel for production. Your music choices are powerfully used and your story and pacing are tight. Always well done. Oh, and your voice? Perfect!
@ethanreynolds49422 ай бұрын
Every time I come back to this channel it's always such a delight to hear your voice. I forget how great it is at times.
@skoople28642 ай бұрын
fun fact: the word kamloops comes from the secwépemc word "tk'emlúps" meaning "where the rivers meet"
@griffinbrown2870Ай бұрын
I’m glad you decided not to show Old Whitey, since he is an actual person beneath all that gore. It’s nice to see that level of respect once in a while ❤️ 🌹
@Kaidhicksii2 ай бұрын
From what it sounds like to me, Kamloops struck rocks on or near Isle Royale. I had no idea that her wreck was ever found, and so long ago at that. Ms. Bettridge's message shook me to my core. I can only hope that her family and those of her fellow sailors were able to find solace. May she and the rest of the Kamloops crew forever rest in peace.
@normanmackenzie8130Ай бұрын
That was a very moving documentary on the "Kamloops" The discovery of the ship itself in 1977, and the stewardess "nettie" and her letter..... i found very moving and, i must admit, a lump in my throat, as you told of knowing your own death was imminent. Tragic indeed. May all who died that night/morning Rest In Peace.
@549RR2 ай бұрын
Wonderful work as usual BOB - but as someone from the North Shore of Superior, I have to correct you that Agawa is pronounced with emphasis on the first syllable & all syllables distinct 'AG-ah-wah'
@mcsammer652 ай бұрын
I've been waiting for someone to cover this story; I'm glad it was you!
@stephanyg.87172 ай бұрын
I’m sometimes terrified when we drive over big waves in our Pontoon. I can’t even imagine the terrifying feeling that those poor souls were feeling. My heart breaks for them and their families. Thank you again for this incredible video that you deliver on point every time.
@tugboattedd2 ай бұрын
Great and accurate storytelling, from a former Great Lakes sailor.
@soldierski16692 ай бұрын
I'm from Erie PA, the snow storms are unreal.
@fraserparsons3813Ай бұрын
Lake Superior is a remarkable testament to the far frontier of human endeavour. That people live/lived under such conditions is almost beyond belief.
@susanpasarow26802 ай бұрын
What a wonderful telling of such a sad story. I love your videos, so we'll made and with empathy towards those who lost their lives 💙🩵💙
@ALCO-C855-fan2 ай бұрын
Your videos are some of the best. Keep it up.^^❤
@reps40din71Ай бұрын
Can you do a video on the Matoa? My great grandfather was on the ship during the great storm. The ship ran aground and the hull was pierced by a boulder which actually saved the ship and the crew. Held it in place while the storm raged on.
@reps40din71Ай бұрын
Point Aux Barques lighthouse has a museum dedicated to the storm and my family has donated artifacts and knowledge to the museum.
@justinhancok76432 ай бұрын
Your deep dives of ships I’ve not heard of are the best. I listen to and from work anytime there is a new video. Keep up the great work 😊
@aprylrittenhouse45622 ай бұрын
This really brings it hone the fact that these were just regular folks with moms and dad's and wives and children. The wedding ring emphasis's that clearly. Their hopes and dreams,what they were gonna do over the winter all ended. I've been to places such as these where a heaviness can certainly be felt. Not trying to get ghostlybut it is paltable
@henniekruger66022 ай бұрын
Just love the narating and back ground music...the way your docs are split into chapters...
@twoheart78132 ай бұрын
I hiked across Isle Royale several times in the 80's & even took a 14" boat around the southern half. Its a beautiful place to visit but lake Superior can be very treacherous at times. This is the first I have heard of this tragic event.
@lonnieparsons50582 ай бұрын
I have enjoyed diving on many of the wrecks around Isle Royal. The water is bone-numbing cold even in a dry suit. The wrecks are usually around 100 feet down making for short bottom time. Each one is a museum of that point in time. My personal favorites are America and the Monarch. On the Monarch, I swam up and over the port side rail and saw something white moving out of the corner of my eye. Ghost ship with a real ghost flashed in my mind. The ghost turned out to be a large lake trout hanging around the wreck. The America is a near-vertical wreck. The bow is in 3 feet of water and the stern is around 90 feet. She hit some rocks and the crew tried unsuccessfully to beach her. I do some wreck diving here in the Caribbean. You need to be more aware of who is living on the wrecks as not all critters are as benevolent as the trout.
@alexz11582 ай бұрын
Love this channel
@WalkOnABush2 ай бұрын
Same fr amazing background videos for work/games, I’m love it
@luketdrifter21002 ай бұрын
This was one of the best videos you’re put out. Absolutely complete research package. I’ve been following the Kamlops since I read my first shipwreck book in the probably 85. He didn’t find the engine room in the bow tho. Was the stern. Great video
@pieyedapple2 ай бұрын
So moving and respectfully done--many thank-you's for your treatment of this history...
@tabbitee2 ай бұрын
First Ask A Mortician and now Big Old Boats - now I want all my favourite KZbin channels to cover this event
@Aaron-id2gz2 ай бұрын
My parents were divers on the great lakes from the late 70s through the late 90s. I remember my father talking about the engineer stuck in the engine room. He described him as "the Michelin man". Apparently, he's still wearing the overalls he died in. They have kept him mostly contained. Still gives me the creeps.
@BCB-90002 ай бұрын
The compassion in his voice is honorable :)
@SirWilly772 ай бұрын
"What's a man gotta do to get a day off around here?" ~ Old Whitey, still at work for nearly a century
@mrgrizzlyrides2 ай бұрын
A superb video and story. What on earth went through that poor girls mind when she wrote that letter is anyone's guess; my god! May the SS Kamloops crew rest in peace.
@marhawkman3032 ай бұрын
I'm guessing she was expecting to freeze to death before morning.
@mrgrizzlyrides2 ай бұрын
@@marhawkman303 Yes, I agree.
@iamrichrocker2 ай бұрын
your narration with the picturesand movies from the past was riveting..this was by far, the best video yet...haunting ..
@Rebecca-d7b2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much I really enjoy your stories.
@thedaisiesgrow2 ай бұрын
Thank you!!!!! I’m OBSESSED with the Kamloops and it’s one of the few shipwrecks that needs more coverage. These stories are all tragic, but the Kamloops is so vivid with all that video.
@nigelmorroll33432 ай бұрын
It's always a shame when profits are put ahead of the ship and it's crew. But at least the crew can now rest knowing their final resting place.
@hinz12 ай бұрын
One of the most creepy ship wrecks out there, turned sideways on a hillside, everything perfectly preserved and with mummies floating by....
@Willie_J_SMITH.620.Ай бұрын
I appreciate what you do brother
@richardsmith76762 ай бұрын
1000 horse power to move a 250 foot long steel freighter, laden with cargo. A great example of how seriously under powered these lake freighters were (are). It isn't that uncommon to find 1000 hp or more in the form of outboard motors hanging off the back of a modern day 36 ft sportfisher today.
@heyfitzpablum2 ай бұрын
WW2 Liberty Ships only had 2500 HP triple expansion steam engines and they were 441 feet long with 4 times the Tonnage of the SS Kamloops. These ships are intended to cruise, not race. Those old steam piston engines had a lot of torque and could turn big props. The big problem with Kamloops was she may have been covered with thick ice on top which made her unstable. Assuming her captain heard the horn signal from the ship ahead of him and attempted an emergency turn, she may have overturned during the maneuver-or at least assumed a severe deck angle which allowed a lot of water into the holds. Since a lifeboat was launched, the latter possibility seems more likely. That water up in Lake Superior is unbelievable cold even in the summer, in December it is deadly cold. A few minutes in that water and you're at massive risk of your heart stopping from low temperature induced shock, maybe that's why 'Old Whitey' whoever he is decided to take his chances by staying with the ship? RIP to the crew of SS Kamloops.
@DwightStJohn-w1l2 ай бұрын
@@heyfitzpablum exc. point; that old sailor knew in the water and in those days no real survival suits he'd have very few minutes, whereas with the ship he MIGHT get lucky (as in Lord Jim in the gale, where the Cpt. abandons the ship and all the pilgrims start praying to Allah, and survived!!!)
@misterflibble66012 ай бұрын
Top notch Documentary!
@SamBroadway2 ай бұрын
Is a native from Michigan I am intrigued by this channel... Eat captivates me
@gretalaube912 ай бұрын
Wow! -37 degrees F! Having experienced -30, it's impossible for anyone to live for more than a few hours without shelter or serious prepared clothing. A tee shirt and sweater ain't gonna cut it!
@DwightStJohn-w1l2 ай бұрын
all my relations are from this area: minus F. PLUS wind chill. you can't imagine. I've been exposed to minus 55 and colder in these areas of Ontario and Minnesota, but I wasn't soaked to the skin and have to work my way out.
@luckyguy6002 ай бұрын
Once again you outdid yourself with 'true' Canadian tales from the past. Excellent sir
@fatovamingusАй бұрын
Well done. Very well done I didn't know anything about this ship and the way you told it was very human and touching
@JohnnyMichigan3132 ай бұрын
This channel and content creator is in my 3 favorite producers of you tube content. I binged all his channels content. Thank you to Big ole Boats creator and his loyal patreon contributers. Appreciate y'all
@rscull2102 ай бұрын
Weird how there was enough time to get a lifeboat away, but still victims who drowned. I can’t imagine they’d stay behind. Isn’t that usually the case if water surprises them, from flooding or a breach in the hull?
@alexfogg3812 ай бұрын
Another excellent video good sir. Rest in peace to all those lost on the SS Kamloops.
@timdoherty2766Ай бұрын
Thank you for this detailed story. I sailed the Great Lakes on a number of ships, and I have a deep appreciation for the dangers. BTW, a “ghost ship” is one found afloat without her crew.
@jesterr713329 күн бұрын
If the bodies are so well preserved, then why did they not recover them and give those people back to their families and give them a proper burial? Given the state of preservation and the accessibility of the wreck, they should not be left there to be given nicknames by people diving the wreck. They deserve more respect than that.
@jeffdishong48532 ай бұрын
Its so sad and fills me with a righteous anger towards these greedy companies that put a little bit of money over the lives of living, breathing people who as sentient understand tragedy, horror, feel pain an are aware of their eminent death. Theres a lot of other industries like this, but shipping has always been the true greedy, evil tyrants . Shame on these companies. Don’t even let their names pass your lips.
@riseandshinejp2 ай бұрын
A museum stole the ring off his finger. Shame on them.
@fredherbert79202 ай бұрын
Let me guess, the Great Lakes Historical Society or whatever that got busted looting dozens of sunken ships?
@FrankStein-e8u2 ай бұрын
I call archeologists "grave robbers"...
@tomwhent8073Ай бұрын
Which museum? I hadn't heard this before.
@fredherbert7920Ай бұрын
@tomwhent8073 Yeah, there was a museum which had things from Great Lakes wrecks and other wrecks on display. It was found by an investigation that they were taken illegally from the ships. Perhaps I'll try and find one of the wrecks that were plundered, there were a few of them. I believe this occurred in the 80s and 90s if memory serves me right.
@JoshEaster-me2ljАй бұрын
The ring was taken from a body entombed on the SS Superior City by the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum of Whitefish Point.
@clarkbintart5724Ай бұрын
Such a compelling story. I'm also glad to see that, out of respect for the dead, other diver explorers choose not to take photos of the frozen sailor whenever they visit the Kamloops.
@saturn7222 ай бұрын
Chilling! Literally & Figuratively!
@artmccartan49112 ай бұрын
Your storytelling is beyond reproach I find myself hanging on every word and I'm disappointed when the story is over rest in peace
@maggienancarrow9782Ай бұрын
So well done, thank you for creating this--you have a fan in Duluth!
@cjheighton2 ай бұрын
I live in Kamloops, BC. Had no idea about this ship. Guess im learning about it tonight before a 4am flight.
@markymarxx7022Ай бұрын
Great channel, I am from mich. and I love these stories. Well done sir.
@mikecordova706424 күн бұрын
Respect to the crew
@marvwatkins70292 ай бұрын
Good taste that you didn't show us Old Whitey although more than a few are no doubt morbidly disappointed.
@lsswappedcessna2 ай бұрын
There are plenty of pictures of him online, it wasn't needed and there would have been no real way to integrate a picture of him into the video in a respectful manner. Even then, there's nothing to see, really. He just looks like a well preserved embalmed corpse but stark white and underwater. I'm glad he wasn't shown, too. Viewing such things as a long-dead crewman's preserved body should be left for those genuinely interested in the wreck, the shape it's in, and its history, not used for shock value.
@tamonettX5002 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the story and video. Well done!
@LCARSx322 ай бұрын
Man, I love this channel. Thanks for the work you do!
@colinyandon61372 ай бұрын
Superior it is said never gives up her dead. R.I.P.
@marhawkman3032 ай бұрын
They will... in the End.
@dillybar82372 ай бұрын
Been waiting to see her show up on here! Thank you friend!
@jaysaunders647313 күн бұрын
That note just the thought of how horrible it had to of been my heart bleeds and I hope they all find peace that is no way to die it's so scary that woman must been brave wow
@Ohiotrucker12 ай бұрын
Hope the crew and old whitey find peace in Lake superior's ice water mansion.
@jimmelka81322 ай бұрын
Fleet Admiral Little, SIR! Another fine yarn. The steel in those Great Lakes Mariners of long ago was of a better grade than the brittle hulls of their vessels. A pox on those greedy owners, sitting warm in their fine homes. Slippers, pipe, easy chair, fireplace, dog and loving Wife! All while their sources of wealth are risking their lives, freezing and dying! All because of those forced late season runs. Respect and sympathy to all those who ever lost their lives on The Great Lakes. Melka J.F. BT3 B55 1853
@triciamills309Ай бұрын
Masterfully done video, you are extremely talented!
@adriaanboogaard8571Ай бұрын
Definitely up there on the creepy scale. Interesting video and ship. It's worth replaying next Halloween. Another well-made video.
@FEJK82Ай бұрын
Well... some of us do know that exact feeling. But I get what you're saying. poetically said.
@hughwalker56282 ай бұрын
You always set a very high standard but this is up there with your very best. A testament as to how career and business pressure pushed courage into foolhardiness, with the most tragic consequences. I would hope that doesn't happen now. But maybe it does.
@garymckee632 ай бұрын
Outstanding 👍
@richmahoney463722 күн бұрын
This is a great channel born in Cleveland moved to southern Michigan right off Lake Erie same as in Cleveland but until coming here had never knew about the history of the Lakers the thousand footers we saw them in Cleveland but moving to a small town were the highlights of the day sometimes are the ships passing learned so much more of the history
@GLK-London2 ай бұрын
Another wonderful video. Thank you for all your remarkable research, presentation and work.
@jungtothehuimang2 ай бұрын
I can't imagine being in a position like the crew were, knowing you were going to die and knowing you could do nothing to stop it. It's a terror most of us could never even imagine. You can only hope their final moments were peaceful.
@nickjohnson4102 ай бұрын
One main theme I find in all these tragedies is that someone puts profits over safety. The definition of "casualty" in the maritime world includes any incident where the ship is put at risk, such as fire or hull breach, because anytime a ship is put at risk EVERYONE on board is a potential casualty. Money is worthless if you are not alive to spend it.
@CrusaderSports2502 ай бұрын
Unfortunately those that push the ship to sail are never onboard and so get to spend the insurance money.
@williamdunklin2 ай бұрын
Always first rate presentation. Thank you!
@billbrasky96292 ай бұрын
Awesome! My all-time favorite shipwreck story! Thanks!
@robwernet96092 ай бұрын
The mummified crewman after all that time was something i definitely didnt expect to hear.