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Manistee ![]() The wreck of the steamer Manistee was one of West Michigan’s forgotten treasures. Thousands of people pass by her on their boats each summer. Almost all of them have no idea she is there, lying silently, in the dark depths of Spring Lake. The wreck lies just a few feet offshore but has not been surveyed for decades.
MSRA teamed up with Nautilus Marine Group to survey the wreck in May
2008. Using Nautilus' acoustic sonar equipment, MSRA and Nautilus
gathered digital data and created a mosaic image of the wreck (below).
But first, the story... The Manistee, originally named the Lora, then the Alice Stafford, was built by J. H. Randall in Benton Harbor in 1882, with Chicago her home port. Her gross tonnage was 848, and she had a length of 202’ with a beam of 32’, and depth of 21.9’. Her engine produced 500 horsepower. The Fire… (from local newspapers) Between the hours of three and four Sunday morning, the 28th of June, 1914, while the Manistee lay alongside the dock at Johnston Boiler Works in Spring Lake, Michigan, ship's Clerk William Elkins was awakened by the sound of crackling flames.
In another
few minutes he had enlisted others to assist in alerting the crew to their
peril. The whole forward end of the ship was ablaze and flames belched
forth from every side. None of the crew aboard escaped with more
than their sleeping apparel.
Capt. C. Johnston and his crew watched the old craft sail away from the Ferrysburg docks with all their personal belongings and thousands of
dollars in valuables. None escaped without considerable loss.
Out across the lake the boat sailed in a scene of awful
grandeur. Barely missing the yacht, Dolma, of Grand Rapids, the flaming
ship drifted straight to the opposite shore near the Savidge landing and
moored amidships on a sand bar. There the flames reached their highest
point and completed their ravages of destruction. After a few hours the
weighted ends of the ship at first slowly then finally went down in
a mighty splash and a cloud of steam, leaving but a single bit of iron
rising above the lake as evidence.
The ship had a steel inner frame, which now litters the wreck area. The
corroded edges could easily slice the wetsuits of that era. I lost my
enthusiasm for the wreck after getting pinned under one of those steel
beams. In the total black of Spring Lake and silt bottom, I swam right
into a steel trap. I never dove it after that day. “ The May 2008 MSRA/Nautilus Marine Group survey produced the following mosaic image:
The wreck is located in Spring Lake, at Savidge Landing as shone on this map:
We placed the mosaic image over a satellite image of the area and produced this image:
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