Wisconsin Marine Historical Society

Our Blog

Wisconsin Marine Historical Society is a self-supported nonprofit organization committed to collecting, preserving, archiving, and sharing materials that illuminate the rich heritage of the Great Lakes maritime industry. Check out our blog to dive deep into the fascinating narratives and events that have shaped the Great Lakes maritime legacy.  Search our blog index to find your favorite stories.

  • Ann Arbor

    VALENTINE’S DAY 1923 INFLICTS HAVOC ON THE HOODOO SHIP

    February 15, 2022
    By Suzette Lopez On February 14, 1923, the carferry ANN ARBOR NO. 4 struck the south breakwater of the Frankfort harbor just past the lighthouse during a horrific ice storm and sank.  While the coast guard was rushing to the rescue from shore, the carferry shifted while foundering and rolled…

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  • Oldest Canoe Lake Mendota

    WISCONSIN’S OLDEST SHIPWRECK

    January 23, 2022
    By James Heinz Like real world archeologists, fictional archeologist Indiana Jones will cross the widest deserts, climb the highest mountains, hack his way through trackless jungles, sail the widest oceans, and fight his greatest nemesis, snakes, to find priceless historical artifacts.  But Wisconsin’s own Indiana Jones, Tamara Thomsen, did not…

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  • Potawatomi State Park

    $2 billion over five years: Climate change price for buttressing Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River government property

    January 14, 2022
    By Dan Patrinos Over the next five years, coastal communities along the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River are expected to spend nearly $2 billion combating damages from climate change, according to a survey of United States and Canadian government officials. The binational survey of 241 cities, villages and other…

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  • Edmund Fitzgerald

    Edmund Fitzgerald, a man who left his hallmark on the Great Lakes

    January 9, 2022
    By Dan Patrinos His grandfather and granduncles were ship captains on the Great Lakes. A two-football fields-long freighter, then known as the “Queen of the Lakes,” was named after him, and its sinking made his name an unbidden household word. He played a key role in planning the celebration opening…

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  • Mackinaw

    Icebreaker’s captain commands a unique, powerful ship

    December 21, 2021
    By James Heinz The captain of the USCGC MACKINAW is a remarkable woman on a remarkable ship. Captain Kristen Serumgard commands a ship that, she says, has the fourth largest electric power plant in the state of Michigan, her home base. It’s unique among military vessels. I caught up with…

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  • Mackinaw Christmas Tree

    The Christmas Tree Ship lives on in memory — and deed

    December 18, 2021
    By James Heinz Although the ROUSE SIMMONS with its load of Christmas trees sank nearly 110 years ago, its memory has not been forgotten, nor has its mission to deliver firs to make the holiday merry. On the morning of December 4, I witnessed the modern day version of the…

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  • Milwaukee underwater

    The car ferry MILWAUKEE is a Must Dive Destination

    November 14, 2021
    By Cal Kothrade Since the wreck of the rail car ferry MILWAUKEE was found, it has been a mainstay of the Milwaukee diving community, a must dive destination for advanced and technical divers alike. Milwaukee area diver and shipwreck hunter Kent Bellrichard found the massive wreck quite by accident back…

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  • HOW I RELIVED MY YOUTH ON THE BOTTOM OF LAKE MICHIGAN

    November 14, 2021
    By James Heinz I still remember that night.  Apollo 11 was on the moon.  I was 12 years old. On July 21, 1969, at 8:56 p.m., I was sitting in the living room with my parents in Milwaukee and watching a grainy black and white image, and heard those immortal…

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  • Mark W. Barker

    Launch of the M/V MARK W. BARKER

    November 1, 2021
    By Tom Wenstadt The bulk carrier, M/V MARK W. BARKER, was launched Thursday, October 28, at the Fincantieri Bay Shipbuilding yard in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin. It is the first U. S. flagged Great Lakes bulk carrier built since 1981. The vessel is 639 feet long, 78 feet wide, 45 feet…

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  • No. 18 at Milwaukee Breakwater

    Rum Runners of Death’s Door

    October 30, 2021
    By Jim Schwartz “Rum Runners Captured by Plum Island Coast Guard” was a headline in the May 22, 1930 issue of the Door County News. The May 16th Door County Advocate offered a much more dramatic and sensational headline “RUM RUNNER AND BIG CARGO SEIZED, Taken by Coast Guard at Plum…

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  • Prairie Harvest

    FOR WANT OF A SCREW THE SHIP WAS LOST

    October 23, 2021
    By James Heinz There is an ancient proverb that we have all heard.  One version of it goes like this: For want of a nail the shoe was lost. For want of a shoe the horse was lost. For want of a horse the rider was lost. For want of…

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  • St. Albans

    Sometimes you win more than others but you’ll never win if you don’t dive

    October 16, 2021
    By Cal Kothrade These photos are the fruits of two separate dives on the ST. ALBANS over the span of a couple years.  The wreck sits about seven miles east of Milwaukee in approximately 165’ of water.  On both occasions, I was blessed with excellent visibility, somewhere in the neighborhood…

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