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SALVOR
N 43° 15.615' The Salvor began life as hull #248 -- "The
Turret Chief" --at the Doxford & Sons Shipbuilding Company in
Sunderland, England in 1896. She was one of a new breed of vessel
designed primarily to reduce harbor and canal fees, especially through
the Suez Canal, which were based on flat deck space. The vessel's design
reduced horizontal deck space by sloping the ship's sides inward to
create a narrow deck. She was 253 feet in length and 44 feet wide, drawing 19.7 feet of water. According to the Toronto marine Historical Society: "During the 1890's and early 1900's, more than 150 Turrets were built by Doxford and some of them were quite large. However, the popularity of the class began to wane after the turn of the century as large vessels were required and the advantage of lower canal and harbor dues was lost due to a change in the way these fees were calculated. The Turrets were rather difficult to unload as the narrow deck limited the width of hatches. Like their cousins, the Whalebacks, the turret ships had their day and lost their popularity when progress and the need for larger ships rendered them obsolete."
T. L. Durocher Company of DeTour, Michigan was the last owner from 1927 through her loss in 1930, naming the vessel Salvor and changing her configuration to a steel barge to carry bulk freight in the tow of a tug.
As with many ships, she was requisitioned for war service 1914 and served as a munitions carrier between Britain and Archangel. She returned to the Great Lakes in 1922. She was stranded under peculiar circumstances during a dense fog on Saddlebag Island, False DeTour Channel, Lake Huron, on November 16, 1927 and abandoned. She was salvaged by T. L. Durocher and converted to a barge. Her final voyage was September 26, 1930 when she broke away from the tug Richard Fitzgerald while bound from DeTour to Muskegon with a load of breakwater stone during storm on Lake Michigan. She foundered in 25 feet water, 2 2/3 miles north of Muskegon, Michigan about .4 miles off shore. Five lives were lost in the tragedy (one source says 11). The battered hull of the Salvor lies in 25' of water, just northwest of Muskegon, Michigan channel. Waves and ice, whose effects are multiplied by time, have bent, broken, and buried the hull, leaving the highest point of elevation of the wreck just a few feet off the bottom. The wreck lies north and south, but bow and stern are indiscernible. The hull's massive, bent, metal plates are visible around the perimeter of the wreck. Gears, large bolts, and other tools are sometimes visible, when the shifting sand leaves them uncovered. The wreck is covered with zebra mussels and is home to a large colony of Gobi fish. The Salvor is a shallow, easy dive, with much to see and explore. MSRA is partially funded through a grant from and by private contributions from people like you. Email the Webmaster Copyright 2003-200 8Michigan Shipwreck Research Associates |