James Davidson
After a relatively short career as a freighter -- in which it carried what was then the largest load ever on the Great Lakes -- the James Davidson ran aground on October 4, 1883 in what is now Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Last summer, a team of volunteers from Alpena Community College and Grand Valley State University used an ROV to investigate the wreck of the Davidson. Check out what they found! Special thanks to Tim Parsell for sharing this video with us.
Do you have video or photos that you've taken in a national marine sanctuary? Learn how you can submit it for a chance to see it on our social media here. (Video: Tim Parsell/ACC/GVSU; Music: Kevin MacLeod [incompetech.com]) #EarthIsBlue
Transcript
In the summer of 2015 a volunteer collaboration
between Alpina Community College and Grand
Valley State University met in Alpina, Michigan
to collect videographic data of shipwrecks
in the Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary
on board the research vessel Nancy K. The
following footage is from the bilge section
of the course freight carrier James Davidson.
The James Davidson was a record setting vessel
during its short life on the Great Lakes.
Built in 1874 for owner James Davidson in
Bay City, Michigan, this two deck, wooden
bulk freighter measured in with a length of
230 feet 6 inches, a 37 foot beam width, and
depth of 19 feet 6 inches. Propelled by a
combination of three masts and a single cylinder
low pressure steam engine operating a single
screw, the James Davidson weighed in at 1,456
gross tons.
On June 23rd, 1874 the James Davidson
was enrolled at Port Huron, and thus began
a career for the vessel lasting only seven
years. On September 18th, 1874 the James Davidson
cleared Chicago with 60,700 bushels of grain.
A month later on October 12, 1874 the James
Davidson was loaded with 110,000 bushels of
oats and buffalo and bound for Chicago. The
captain claimed 101,315 bushels, the largest
cargo ever carried on the Great Lakes to that
point.
In 1877 the vessel was refastened and
bishop arches were added for additional strength
and capacity. Four years later the James Davidson
was sold to St. Clair Navigation Co. in East
China, Michigan. In September of 1881 the
James Davidson left Duluth, Minnesota with
49,000 bushels of wheat, the largest load
ever taken out of the port by a single vessel
at that time. On October 4th, the Davidson
was bound for Duluth from Buffalo with the
barge Middlesex in tow when it ran aground
on the southern end of Thunder Bay Island,
severely damaging the vessel.
A month later
documents were surrendered, and the Davidson
was abandoned. Currently, the wreck of the
Davidson rests in 35 feet of water in Lake
Huron, just south of Thunder Bay Island in
the Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary.
The remnants of the vessel have since broken
into two pieces: a portion of the hull and
the bilge section.