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  2. Category:Great Lakes freighters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Category:Great_Lakes_freighters

    Pages in category "Great Lakes freighters" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 208 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.

  3. List of Great Lakes museum and historic ships - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Great_Lakes_museum...

    The Great Lakes are home to a large number of naval craft serving as museums (including five submarines, two destroyers and a cruiser). The Great Lakes are not known for submarine activity, but the undersea service fires the imagination of many. Three former army tugs are museums, having come to the lakes in commercial roles.

  4. SS Carl D. Bradley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Carl_D._Bradley

    By seven feet (2.1 m), she was longer than the second largest ship on the Great Lakes and her engine had almost twice the power of engines installed in most lake freighters. [3] At 639 feet (195 m), she was the longest freighter (and the largest self-unloader) on the lakes for 22 years.

  5. Great Lakes freighter, launched in Manitowoc in 1953 ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/great-lakes-freighter-launched...

    At a price tag of $6.7 million, JOHN J. BOLAND was designed to haul up to 21,500 tons of coal, stone and iron ore across the Great Lakes. The 250-foot-long unloading boom could transport 3,500 ...

  6. SS Daniel J. Morrell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Daniel_J._Morrell

    SS Daniel J. Morrell was a 603-foot (184 m) Great Lakes freighter that broke up in a strong storm on Lake Huron on 29 November 1966, taking with her 28 of her 29 crewmen. The freighter was used to carry bulk cargoes such as iron ore but was running with only ballast when the 60-year-old ship sank.

  7. List of shipwrecks in the Great Lakes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_shipwrecks_in_the...

    Lost on Lake Huron during the Great Lakes Storm of 1913. Its wreck was discovered in July 2015. [13] Ironton: 26 September 1894 A schooner that sank in a collision with the wooden freighter Ohio. Isaac M. Scott United States: 9 November 1913 A lake freighter that sank in the Great Lakes Storm of 1913

  8. SS Edward L. Ryerson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Edward_L._Ryerson

    SS Edward L. Ryerson is a steel-hulled American Great Lakes freighter that entered service in 1960. Built between April 1959 and January 1960 for the Inland Steel Company, she was the third of the thirteen so-called 730-class of lake freighters, each of which shared the unofficial title of "Queen of the Lakes", as a result of their record-breaking length.

  9. MV Roger Blough - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MV_Roger_Blough

    She was stuck in the ice in Lake Erie near Conneaut, Ohio for eight days in February 1979 [7] and then was laid up from 1981 to 1987 due to the economy and the capacity of the newer 1,000 feet (300 m) lake freighters. [8] [3]