City of Bangor (ship)

This article is about the ship. For cities named Bangor, see Bangor (disambiguation).
History
United States
Name: City of Bangor
Operator:
  • Eddy-Shaw Transportation Co
  • Bay City, Michigan 1896-1906
  • Lake Transit Co
  • Bay City, Michigan 1906-1925
  • Nicholson Transit Co
  • Detroit, Michigan 1925-1926
Builder:
  • Wheeler, F.W. & Co
  • West Bay City, Michigan
Yard number: 00113
Completed: 1896
Fate: Stranded November 30, 1926 Keweenaw Peninsula, Lake Superior. Declared total loss
Status: Hull scrapped on site 1942
Notes: United States Registry #127131
General characteristics
Class and type: freighter
Tonnage:
  • 3690 gross 2976 net (1896)
  • 4202 gross 3058 net (1904)
  • 3994 gross 2847 net (1925)
Length:
  • 372.42 ft (113.51 m) (1896)
  • 445.42 ft (135.76 m)(1904)
Beam: 44.66 ft (13.61 m)
Height: 23.42 ft (7.14 m)
Propulsion: Triple expansion steam
Crew: 30
Notes: Ship rebuilt and lengthened in 1904.

The City of Bangor was a steamer on the Great Lakes during the early 20th century. Originally designed to carry ore, the ship was converted into an automobile carrier in 1925. She was trapped in ice on November 30, 1926 and declared a total loss.

Sinking

The ship was captained by William J. Mackin. With a relatively light load of 248 new Chryslers, compared with the heavier load of ore, she was riding high through rough winds and seas approaching Keweenaw Peninsula, in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, on Lake Superior. A furious storm was raking across the lake, and another vessel, the Thomas Maytham, had already wrecked at Point Isabelle, and was seeking shelter on the south side of the Point when the City of Bangor passed by. Several of the automobiles were carried away by the waves.

Rescue

Finally, the City of Bangor grounded near the shore, right off the tip of Keweenaw Point. The men aboard spent a bitterly cold night in the galley and the deckhouse, and in the morning, after the winds had subsided, they began to pick away at the ice-encrusted lines that secured the lifeboats. By afternoon all the men had made it ashore. In the isolated wilderness with poor clothing and no shelter, they began to march toward the nearest village, Copper Harbor, about 10 miles away.

But somewhere during those 10 miles, likely in the first few, the men became lost in the unfamiliar territory and hunkered down for the night in the snow with only a fire and their inadequate clothing for warmth. Realizing their only landmark was the boat off shore, the next morning they waded back through the waist-deep snow to the wreck, not knowing what to do next. This effort took until late afternoon.

Luck was on their side, for barely had they returned to the wrecksite when a motor-powered United States Coast Guard rescue lifeboat came around the point, at full speed and at full capacity; it was already carrying the shipwrecked crew from the Thomas Maytham back to the station at Eagle Harbor, about 25 miles to the west. The boat's captain, Anthony Glaza, assured the City of Bangor crew he would return as soon as possible, and he would look for a bright fire to signal their location in the darkness. Encouraged, the crew set about making a fire bigger and hotter than before.

True to his word, Glaza returned with the Coast Guard rescue boat, explaining that he had let the Thomas Maytham crew off at Copper Harbor to expedite his return to the frostbitten stranded sailors. Likewise, they too were safely deposited at Copper Harbor, where warm coffee and meals were waiting. Once at the mercy of Harbor innkeepers, many of the crew collapsed on the plank floors, weary with exhaustion, dripping with melting ice. Quickly, the Thomas Maytham crew boarded Glaza's boat and were taken to Eagle Harbor, but not before Glaza again promised to return for the City of Bangor men. This return journey took him two days, and though it found the men well rested and eager to depart, as soon as Glaza's boat docked in Copper Harbor, another furious storm blew through and froze the rescue vessel in. His boat would remain locked in ice throughout the winter, but the City of Bangor crew, as well as all the Coast Guard rescuers, were later taken by sleigh from Copper Harbor.

220 1927 Chrysler automobiles were still on board the ship, encased in ice, or deep within the holds. It took until February to chop all the ice free and open up the backroads. 202 of the vehicles were salvaged from the wreck and sold, but the ship itself was a total loss.[1]

However, over the course of the next months, several Keweenaw residents lay claim to automobiles that washed up on shore, and, amazingly, ran and drove beautifully. One still exists today at the Eagle Harbor Light.

References

  1. Thompson, Mark L. (2004-04-01). Graveyard of the Lakes. Wayne State University Press. p. 69. ISBN 0814332269.

External links

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