Containing almost a fifth of the world's fresh water,
the Great Lakes System of Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, and Ontario
in North America are vast inland expanses, and subject to the same hazards
for shipping more commonly found on the high seas. Since the seventeenth
century, when the first wooden vessels of colonists and adventurers
set a course across them, the Lakes have claimed many ships, as well
as the lives of those unfortunates aboard them. Shipwrecks of the Great
Lakes narrates the tales of over a hundred of them. From the dramatic
stories of the many ships that have foundered with all hands in the
great storms that can sweep across the Lakes, to the tales of vessels
like the Gunilda, lost because her wealthy master refused to pay a few
dollars for a pilot, this book is packed with the fascinating narratives
of Great Lakes disasters. Including photographs of the boats it is also
a document of change and progress, showing how the ships have been developed
over the centuries as well as the industrial cities and towns that have
grown from the wealth brought by the shipping lanes of the Lakes. From the Griffon, which went down without a trace
in 1679, to the more recent disaster of the Edmund Fitzgerald, which
was ripped apart and sank with ail twenty-nine lives onboard lost, Shipwrecks
of the Great Lakes includes tales of courage and tragedy, stupidity
and heroism. |