Antelope (shipwreck) explained

Antelope was a Great Lakes steamship that later was converted into a schooner barge) and sank in Lake Superior near the Apostle Islands in 1897.[1]

Service history

J. L. Wolverton built Antelope in Newport, Michigan, in 1861 for L. S. Bowtell of Bay City, Michigan.[2] One of the early steamships on the Great Lakes,[2] she carried passengers between Buffalo, New York and Chicago, Illinois.[2] She burned at Buffalo in 1867, but was rebuilt and returned to service.[3] In the 1880s she was converted into a three-masted schooner barge to haul freight.[2] [3] [4] Despite the removal of her steam engine and boiler — which made more room for cargo[2] — she continued to carry a funnel for the rest of her career.[2]

On October 7, 1897, Antelope was loaded with 1,000 tons of coal and under tow by the steamship .[2] Both ships were on a voyage from Sandusky, Ohio, to deliver coal to the Pennsylvania and Ashland Coal Company dock in Ashland, Wisconsin.[2] While approaching Michigan Island in the Apostle Islands, Antelope′s seams opened.[2] She began to take on water more quickly than her pumps could pump it out, and she sank in a reported of water without loss of life.[2] Hiram W. Sibley rescued her crew.[2] Soon after Antelope sank, the schooner Gawn sighted wreckage, including Antelope′s cabin, floating off Michigan Island.[2]

Wreck

Antelope′s wreck was discovered on September 2, 2016.[3] On February 16, 2018, the wreck was placed on the Wisconsin State Register of Historic Places.[5] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on June 22, 2018.[6]

As of September 2016, the wreck sat upright on the lake bottom in over of water.[3] Two of the three masts remained standing and still had their full rigging, including deadeyes.[3] The forward cabin was intact, and two large wood stocked anchors were still on board.[3] The rudder and ship's wheel lay on the bottom next to the wreck.[3] The stern deckhouse and mizzen mast were missing.[3]

See also

External links

46.685°N -90.8252°W

Notes and References

  1. News: Bayfield County Journal. 13 March 2018. APG Media.
  2. https://www.wisconsinshipwrecks.org/Vessel/Details/30?region=Index Wisconsin Shipwrecks ANTELOPE (1861) Accessed 10 July 2021
  3. https://www.twincities.com/2016/09/14/remarkably-intact-1897-shipwreck-discovered-in-lake-superior/ Krueger, Andrew, "‘Spectacularly intact’ 1897 shipwreck discovered in Lake Superior," Forum News Service, September 15, 2016 Accessed 9 July 2021
  4. Web site: Antelope (1861) . Wisconsin Shipwrecks . Wisconsin Sea Grant, Wisconsin Historical Society . 2019-01-12.
  5. News: Bayfield County Journal. 13 March 2018. APG Media.
  6. Web site: Weekly List - National Register of Historic Places Official Website--Part of the National Park Service . www.nps.gov . National Park Service . July 4, 2018 . en.