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The Bermuda , a 150
foot wooden schooner foundered and sank in
the spring of 1870 in Murray Bay on Grand Island.
Her top deck is just 12 feet below the water's
surface where she has remained for 128 years.
The wreck is intact, remarkable condition for
a shallow wreck.

The cold water of Lake Superior rushed
into the small forecastle with sledge hammer-like
force. It slammed the sleeping crewmen against
the hull planks, shocking them into confused
consciousness. Their desperate struggles were
to no avail. When they climbed into the rat
hole of a forecastle they called home, all
was right with the world, but it was here that
three of the crew of the BERMUDA met their
end.
After all these years, the schooner
wreck in Murray Bay remains an enigma. It has
variously been identified as the W.W. ARNOLD,
GRANADA, DREADNAUGHT and BERMUDA. The best
guess though, is that it is the BERMUDA.
The two-masted BERMUDA was a typical
canal schooner, one designed to trade through
the confining dimensions of the old Welland
Canal between Lakes Ontario and Erie. Launched
at Oswego, New York in April 1860, she was
136 feet in length, 26 feet in beam and 11
feet, 9 inches in depth. Her early years were
spent in the grain trade between Lakes Michigan
and Ontario. When the demand for iron ore increased,
she shifted to carrying ore down from Marquette,
MI.
On September 21, 1870 she left the lower
lakes for Marquette with a cargo of general
supplies, arriving without incident. After
loading 488 tons of ore she departed on October
14, but was overtaken by a gale off Grand Marais.
The pounding of the waves caused her to start
leaking and her captain brought her to shelter
in Munising Bay where she reportedly filled
and sank. When she left the docks in Marquette,
it was said that she already had two feet of
water in her hold. This would certainly cast
doubt on the wisdom of her departure.
The story goes that Captain Michael
Finney beached her near the Anna River, near
the present paper mill, making her fast to
several trees both fore and aft. Apparently
the schooner continued to fill, putting more
and more pressure on the mooring lines. At
about 8 p.m. the force was so great, it literally
ripped the trees off the bank and the BERMUDA
suddenly dropped to the bottom. All of her
hands were carried down with her. Only the
bursting of the cabin deck allowed some of
the crew to escape from a watery grave. Three
unlucky ones drowned.
Captain Finney and his remaining crew
made their way to Marquette and reported their
calamity. About a week later they returned
to strip the schooner of anything useful and
she was abandoned to the insurance underwriters.
For practical purposes the BERMUDA just disappeared
from the maritime scene.

Thirteen years later, in October 1883,
Captain Higgins of the wrecking tug KATE WILLIAMS
successfully raised the BERMUDA and towed her
into Murray Bay. Once in the bay however, the
lifting chains apparently slipped and the schooner
settled on the bottom again. The WILLIAMS did
manage to remove more than 120 tons of ore,
but whether at the Anna River or in Murray
Bay isn't known. The following year the wrecking
schooner JOHNSON attempted to raise the BERMUDA,
but without success. In June of 1960 local
scuba divers extensively salvaged much of the
remaining ore cargo for souvenirs for a regional
rock and mineral show.
The Murray Bay wreck provides a near
unique opportunity to study an intact mid-19th
century canal schooner. The vessel lies in
25 feet of water in the shelter of the bay,
protected from the ravages of Lake Superior's
storm waves and the grinding destruction of
winter's ice. Consequently, she remains in
remarkably good condition; her only major wounds
are those inflicted by her salvagers.
All of the vessel's spars and rigging
are gone, but the locations of her two masts
are still apparent. The foremast hole can be
seen about 30 feet from the bow.
The BERMUDA had three hatches giving
access to the cargo hold, as well as two companionways
and the large cabin trunk near the stern. The
deck between the forward and aft hatches is
badly broken, probably from the 1883 and 1884
salvage operations. The port rail for some
55 feet at the stern has been torn loose, most
likely by modern dive boats before the establishment
of the Alger Underwater Preserve and the current
system of mooring buoys. What looks like a
heavy wooden bulkhead running down the center
of the hull and visible through the midships
cargo hatch and broken decking is actually
the centerboard trunk with the centerboard
still raised up in it.
The large rectangular opening near the
stern marks the location of the BERMUDA's trunk
cabin, which contained the galley and quarters
for some of her crew.
Over the years, diver traffic on the
wreck has resulted in the destruction of some
bulkheads, as well as the loss of an iron stove
and other artifacts which could tell about
the sailors' lives. With the establishment
of the Underwater Preserve and the education
of divers about the cultural importance of
shipwrecks, the deterioration of the wreck
has slowed dramatically.
This report is from the book Dangerous
Coast: Pictured Rocks Shipwrecks by Fred Stonehouse
and Daniel Fountain, Avery Color Studios, Marquette
Michigan, 1997. This book, and other shipwreck
books by Fred Stonehouse, are for sale at the Shipwreck
Tours Bookstore.
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