Miztec (schooner barge)

Miztec - 3 masted.jpg
The schooner Miztec before she was converted to a barge
History
 United States
Name: Miztec
Owner: Marine Transit Co. (original owner)
Operator: O.W. Blodgett Lumber Company
Port of registry: Port Huron, MI
Builder: H. Ihnken & P. Lester
Completed: 1890
Identification: Official No. US92166
Fate: Foundered on May 13, 1921 off Vermilion Point on Lake Superior when in tow of the propeller Zillah.
General characteristics
Class and type: Schooner later converted to barge
Tonnage:

777.10 Gross Register Tonnage

738.50 Net Register Tonnage
Length: 194 ft (59 m)
Beam: 34.5 ft (10.5 m)
Depth: 14 ft (4.3 m)
Installed power: Sail, later towed
Crew: 7
Notes: All hands lost on the traditional day of bad luck, Friday the 13th

The Miztec was built as a 3-masted schooner in 1890. She was later converted to a schooner barge and served as a consort for lumber hookers on the Great Lakes. She escaped destruction in a severe 1919 storm that sank her longtime companion, the SS Myron, only to sink on the traditional day of bad luck, Friday the 13th, 1921, with the loss of all hands. She came to rest on Lake Superior's bottom off Whitefish Point near the Myron.

The Miztec’s wreck was illegally salvaged in the 1980s. Artifacts from the Miztec became the property of the State of Michigan after they were seized in a 1992 Michigan Department of Natural Resources and Environment (DNRE) raid on the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum. The State allows the museum to hold a triple sheave block and hook and a double sheave block and hook from the Miztec as a loan. Her wreck is now protected by the Whitefish Point Underwater Preserve as part of an underwater museum.

Career

The 194 foot wooden Miztec was built as a 3-masted schooner in 1890 in Marine City, Michigan. She was enrolled at Port Huron, Michigan on 8 April 1890. On 3 May 1890 she ran ashore near Minorville, Wisconsin.[1]

The Miztec spent the final years of her career as an O.W. Blodgett Lumber Company barge consort towed by lumber hookers.[2][3][4] She was stranded by her tow, the SS Myron, off Vermilion Point in a severe November gale in 1919. She narrowly escaped total destruction and suffered heavy damage but survived the storm while the Myron did not.[5] She was rebuilt in 1919.[1]

Final voyage

The Blodgett fleet of the Zillah, Miztec, and Peshtigo locked through the Soo headed for a spring gale and the Miztec’s doom on Friday 13 May 1921.[6][7] The wooden steamer Zillah was towing the schooner barges Miztec and Peshtigo. The Zillah and Miztec carried bulk salt bound for Duluth, Minnesota and the empty Peshtigo was scheduled for drop off at Munising, Michigan.[6][7]

Ten miles west of Whitefish Point, the fleet met the full brunt of the storm's heavy snow and near hurricane force winds.[8][9] The 31-year-old wooden Zillah started taking on water when her seams twisted open in the raging seas. Her 785-horsepower steam engine could barely maintain her bow to the seas.[10] The master of the Zillah decided to turn around and take shelter in Whitefish Bay. The Zillah’s tow line broke during the strain of the turn, stranding the Miztec and Peshtigo in the storm, and then the tow line between the two barges broke.

In an effort to reach the lee of Whitefish Point, the Peshtigo set short sails that the wind soon shredded. The Peshtigo dragged both anchors as the wind and waves forced her toward shore, and the pounding surf of the dangerous shallows. When the crew of the Vermilion Point Life-saving Station saw the Peshtigo’s struggle, they launched two surfboats that were destroyed by the crashing sea. The Peshigo’s anchors finally caught hold about ¼ mile from shore and she and her crew survived the storm.

When the tow line between the Miztec and the Peshtigo broke, Captain Campbell of the Peshtigo saw the Miztec’s lights disappear with his brother on board. His brother was the Miztec’s first mate.[7][11] While the Miztec survived the 1919 storm that took her partner, the SS Myron, her run of good fortune ended when she sank with the loss of all 7 crewmembers on the traditional day of bad luck, Friday the 13th.[6][7] Captain Neal, who was rescued near-death clinging to the pilothouse of the Myron in 1919, was serving as the Zillah's first mate when the Miztec sank in 1921. When the freighter Renown came upon the flotsam of the Miztec’s sinking site, its crew sighted a body atop the deck house, but unlike Captain Neal's rescue, the body slipped into the seas as they approached.[12]

The Renown reported their finding to the United States Coast Guard. The Coast Guard went to the wreck scene and buoyed the Miztec’s spar that was protruding from shallow water with plans to dynamite her as a navigational hazard as she lay near the shipping lane, but they were unable to relocate her when they returned. It was believed that as her salt cargo dissolved, she moved along the lake bottom to deeper water. The Miztec came to rest not far from the wreck site her longtime companion lumber hooker, the SS Myron.[7][11]

No bodies were recovered from the Miztec’s sinking site, but six days after she sank, Native Americans on Maple Island, Ontario discovered the body of Mrs. Florence Pederson, the cook and the wife of the captain of the Miztec.[7]

The Miztec was an estimated $10,000 loss to O.W. Blodgett Lumber Company.[7]

Wreck

The Miztec’s wreck was discovered in 1983 by the Oddessey Foundation in 45 to 50 feet (14 to 15 m) of water at 46°48.073′N 85°04.500′W / 46.801217°N 85.075000°W / 46.801217; -85.075000.[3][13] The Michigan Department of Natural Resources and Environment (DNRE) raided the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum at Whitefish Point in 1992 for artifacts illegally removed from the Great Lakes bottomlands. The DNRE seized around 150 artifacts from the museum, including a triple sheave block and hook and a double sheave block and hook from the Miztec.[14] Following a settlement agreement between the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society and the State of Michigan, the State's artifacts from the Miztec are on loan to the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society for display in the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum.

The Miztec’s wreck is now protected by the Whitefish Point Underwater Preserve for future generations of scuba divers. The Miztec’s remains are broken and scattered on the lake bottom but her anchor and chain and other gear are still present.[3] Although the Miztec’s wreck is one of the shallower wrecks, sports divers are cautioned to be certain of their abilities and equipment for dives because the preserve does not include protective bay or coves from the cold and volatile weather.[15] Divers who visit the wreck sites are expected to observe preservation laws and "take nothing but pictures and leave nothing but bubbles."[16]

Notes

References

  • Boyer, Dwight (1996). Great Stories of the Great Lakes: Thrilling Tales of Tragedy, Humor, and Heroism. Cleveland, Ohio, USA: Freshwater Press, Inc. ISBN 0-912514-49-3.
  • Harrington, Steve (1996) [1990]. Diver's Guide to Michigan. St. Ignace, Michigan , USA: Maritime Press & Great Lakes Diving Council, Inc. ISBN 0-9624629-8-5.
  • "Michigan Shipwrecks". Michigan Department of Resources and Environment. Retrieved 2008-04-21.
  • "Whitefish Point Underwater Preserves". Michigan Underwater Preserves. Retrieved 2010-08-07.
  • Oleszewski, Wes (1997). Mysteries and Histories: Shipwrecks of the Great Lakes. Marquette, Michigan, USA: Avery Color Sudios. ISBN 0-932212-92-1.
  • Stonehouse, Frederick (1973). Lake Superior's Shipwreck Coast: Maritime Accidents from Whitefish Point to Grand Marais, Michigan. Gwinn, Michigan, USA: Avery Color Studios. ISBN 0-932212-43-3.
  • Storey, Jack (1992-12-04). "Shipwreck Artifact Dispute Simmers". The Evening News. Sault Ste. Marie, MI. p. A1. Retrieved 2010-08-07.CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • "Vessel Database". Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Alpena County George N. Fletcher Public Library. 2007. Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2010-08-07.
  • Wolff, Julius (1990) [1979]. The Shipwrecks of Lake Superior. Duluth, Minnesota, USA: Lake Superior Marine Museum Association. ISBN 0-932212-18-8.

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