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Serena Stuettgen is collections manager at Wisconsin Maritime Museum in Manitowoc. This article originally appeared on Manitowoc Herald Times Reporter: Manitowoc's Eighth Street bridge: Historic ...
1.5 miles (2.4 km) NE of the Manitowoc Breakwater Light, in Lake Michigan Coordinates missing: Manitowoc vicinity: 76.5 foot harbor tug, built in 1881 by Rand and Burger of Manitowoc with a wooden hull and a steam-screw drive. Escorted Goodrich steamers and other vessels around Manitowoc, Milwaukee and Chicago harbors for 49 years. Then ...
The museum was founded in 1969 as the Manitowoc Submarine Memorial Association. [1] The USS Cobia arrived in Manitowoc and was initially restored in 1970, [2] [3] and in 1986 became part of the museum as well as becoming a National Historic Landmark and joining the National Register of Historic Places. [4]
She sank in 1850 about eight miles north of Vermilion, Ohio after her boilers exploded. She is the second oldest shipwreck in Ohio waters (after the recently discovered schooner Lake Serpent), [153] and the oldest known wreck of a steamship in the Great Lakes. [154] 2. Dunkirk Schooner Site.
Brown's School. 4891 M-32 at Marsh Rd. Jordan Township. August 3, 1979. Central Lake High School. Southwest Corner of State and Howard streets. Central Lake. August 12, 1983. Elk Rapids Iron Company Informational Site.
This event spurred preservation efforts. Round Island Light was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in September 1974, [14] and was added to the list of registered Michigan historic sites in 1978. Emergency work to stabilize the light tower structure was conducted in the 1970s, but the light tower remained gutted and inoperative.
99 Arthur Street, Manistee, Michigan. 44°15′34″N 86°18′57″W / 44.259444°N 86.315833°W / 44.259444; -86.315833 (City of Milwaukee) Marine Terminal Railyard, eastern slip, Elberta, Michigan. The City of Milwaukee was located in Elberta, Michigan (in Benzie County) when it was listed on the Register in 1990.
The sanctuary also participated in the creation of a podcast and digital short promoting tourism in the communities along Wisconsin′s mid-Lake Michigan coast [16] and co-sponsored a hands-on learning experience about marine technology and archaeology for 20 Wisconsin teachers from the Manitowoc-Two Rivers area, Milwaukee, and Green Bay. [16]