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November
23, 1926
The HERMAN H. HETTLER was built in 1890
in West Bay City by James Davidson and Company
for Campbell and Cook of Michigan City, Indiana.
In design she was very much a traditional steam
barge or, as this style of vessel was called
on the Great Lakes, a lumber hooker. Originally
named the WALTER VAIL, she was very strongly
built, with heavy framing, steel arches in
the sides, diagonal steel strapping and an
especially robust bow for punching through
ice. A 485 horsepower fore-and-aft compound
steam engine provided the power. She measured
200 feet in length, 35 feet in beam, 13.3 feet
in depth and 726.33 gross tons. The VAIL was
valued at $80,000 and had a capacity of a million
board feet of lumber. During her lifetime she
had various owners. In the spring of 1913.
she was sold to the Herman H. Hettler Lumber
Company of Chicago, thus acquiring her final
name.
On November 23, 1926, the 36 year old
wooden steamer HERMAN H. HETTLER was seeking
shelter in Munising Harbor from a fall gale
when a reported compass variation caused her
to veer off course and slam into the rock reef
off Trout Point, at the north end of the east
channel. The HETTLER, under Captain John M.
Johnson, was en route from Ludington, Michigan
to Duluth with a cargo of 1,100 tons of bulk
table salt. The accident happened about 8:30
p.m. while visibility was restricted by heavy
snow squalls.

The force of the grounding was so severe
that it ran the steamer on the rocks up to
her third hatch and forced her bow three feet
out of the water! The seas were slamming into
the HETTLER regularly, causing the steamer
to "work" on the rocks, and slowly but steadily
opening her seams. Blowing his whistle to attract
attention, the captain kept his 16 man crew
aboard and worked the pumps. The following
day, when it was obvious the steamer wasn't
going anywhere, they launched their lifeboats,
which were towed into Munising by the fishing
tug PREBLE.
From town the captain notified the vessel's
owners and wired for assistance from the Great
Lakes Towing Company.
After returning to the HETTLER on the
25th, the captain reported her nearly a total
loss. She had pounded badly and opened many
of her seams. The cargo hold was awash and
the salt was rapidly dissolving! The next storm
was expected to break the wreck completely.
Wrecking tugs were sent for, but they were
needed elsewhere to assist newer, more valuable
vessels, so the aged steamer was left to fend
for herself. This spelled the end for the HERMAN
H. HETTLER.
The much-feared storm came on Friday
the 26th. The northwester blew for 36 hours
and finished off any chance for saving the
HETTLER. During the storm, the stern of the
steamer broke away and sank and her upper works
were completely swept away. When the results
of the storm were assessed, she was officially
abandoned and turned over to the underwriters.

Several years after the wreck, the hull
and an old schooner near the Coast Guard station
were dynamited by the Coast Guard as hazards
to navigation. Today the wreck is scattered
over a half mile of lake bottom. On the inner
edge of the reef where the HETTLER struck,
her boiler can be found in about 25 feet of
water, along with part of her hull and a field
of debris such as mechanical parts, tanks,
piping, and even a bath tub. A few hundred
yards to the southwest, two sections of the
steamer's sides and the after part of her bottom
lie in 10 to 20 feet of water. Deck equipment
including her capstan and steam winch lie scattered
and broken between the hull pieces.
The bow section of her bottom and one
of her sides are 200 yards apart several hundred
yards south of the rest of the wreckage in
20 to 30 feet of water. The HETTLER's rudder
and steering quadrant were salvaged years ago
and are on display at the Pictured Rocks National
Lakeshore headquarters at Sand Point.
In 1961 a local dive club recovered
one of the HETTLER's anchors. After spending
more than 30 years as a lawn ornament in Negaunee,
Michigan it was returned to the wreck site
through the efforts of one of its original
salvagers, local divers, and Captain Peter
Lindquist of the Alger Underwater Preserve
Committee and owner of Shipwreck Tours.
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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