Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Harbor History - 1874: The Wreck of the Lotta Bernard


1874: The Wreck of the Lotta Bernard


Lake Superior in 1874, the wooden sidewheelerLotta Bernard foundered in a storm and was stranded at Encampment Island—off the North Shore near Castle Danger, between Two Harbors and Gooseberry Falls—where she broke up. She had been en route from Thunder Bay (Port Arthur) to Duluth. when they encountered a storm that soon turned to a blizzard. Lifeboats were launched, but one capsized, and two crew members were lost. Another later died of exposure. Captain Michael Norris and eleven other crew members and passengers and crew survived. Ten of them found food and shelter in a camp of local Ojibwe. Besides the three human lives, a horse, 200 sacks of flour, and 60 kegs of fish were lost. TheLotta Bernard was just six years old. The 125-foot long, 190-ton vessel was built in Sandusky, Ohio, and used by J. D. Howard and Edmund Ingalls of Duluth to ship lumber and small freight around communities along the western Lake Superior shores. (Her official home port was Superior.) The Detroit Free Presssaid she “was altogether unfit for the traffic she was employed in. Her route was a rugged and dangerous one, and no means being available for the few that traveled that way without the right of government necessary in such cases, she was permitted to receive passage permission on every opportunity.” She had experienced trouble before: In the fall of 1872 the Lotta Bernard ran aground near Octonagon, Michigan, and was stranded there until the following April. On October 30, 1874, the day after she ran aground on Encampment Island, she sank to the bottom of Lake Superior. Her wreck has not been located.
Story is compliments of Zenith City Press

Duluth Harbor Boat Traffic for Monday 11/5/2012


Federal St. Laurent
Lakes Contender/tug Ken Boothe, Sr. arrived at 02:43
Federal St. Laurent (BWI) arrived at 06:28
James R. Barker arrived Duluth at 10:10
Lakes Contender/tug Ken Boothe, Sr. departed at 16:15
Copenhagen departed at 18:00
Great Lakes Trader departed at 18:50
American Century arrived at 20:30
James R. Barker departed at 21:10

Monday, November 5, 2012

Duluth Harbor Boat Traffic for Sunday 11/4/2012


Federal St. Laurent

Great Lakes Trader/Joyce L. Van Enkevort arrived at 08:40
Spruceglen departed at 10:00
Tecumseh arrived at 13:35

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Duluth Harbor Boat Traffic for Saturday 11/3/2012


Spruceglen Arrival

Alder (US) arrived Duluth at 10:25
Spruceglen arrived at 20:40

Friday, November 2, 2012

Duluth Harbor Boat Traffic for Thursday 11/1/2012


Saguenay departure
Saguenay arrived at 06:00
Cason J. Callaway departed at 09:25
Pochard departed at 19:00
Saguenay departed at 23:55

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Duluth Harbor Boat Traffic for Wednesday 10/31/2012

American Integrity Departure 
American Courage departed at 04:55
American Integrity arrived at 05:40
Mesabi Miner arrived at 08:25
Cason J. Callaway arrived at 14:55
American Integrity departed at 21:15
Mesabi Miner departed at 23:30

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Duluth Harbor Boat Traffic for Tuesday 10/30/2012


Presque Isle departed at 02:26
Indiana Harbor departed at 07:15
Paul R. Tregurtha departed at 17:50
American Courage arrived at 20:15

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Lighthouses, Waves, and a Full Moon

The sound of breaking waves, twilight in the sky, and a harvest moon made for a particularly beautiful evening on the shores of Lake Superior tonight.

 The moon rose from the horizon at its appointed time just as the final light of day faded into the big lake.


Duluth Harbor Boat Traffic for Monday 10/29/2012


Aerial Lift Bridge
Full Moon Rise Monday Evening
Presque Isle arrived at 03:55
Great Republic departed at 07:37
Indiana Harbor arrived at 17:30
Federal Power departed at 19:15
Mandarin departed at 20:20
Pochard arrived at 21:10
Paul R. Tregurtha arrived at 21:30

Monday, October 29, 2012

The HMS Bounty visited Duluth in 2010 as part of the Tall Ships Festival. These images are presented as a small tribute to the ship and the two crew members that were lost in Hurricane Sandy.
Music by Mary Beth Carlson
Click HERE to take a Deck tour of the ships during the festival
Click HERE for HMS Bounty Gallery
AnneO has left a new comment on your post "HMS Bounty lost off N.C. coast": 
Eternal Father, Strong to save
Whose arm hath bound the restless wave
Who bid'st the mighty Ocean deep
Its own appointed limits keep
O hear us when we cry to Thee
For those in peril on the sea!
---"The Navy Hymn" (lyrics 1860 by Rev. William Whiting; set to music in 1861 by Rev. John B. Dykes)