MARQUETTE, Mich. â Spend enough time along the shores of Lake Superior and it wonât be long before thereâs some reminder of what happened âwhen the gales of November came early.â
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald, the largest and most famous of the estimated 6,500 ships that have gone down in the Great Lakes. But the Fitzgerald is remembered while the others are forgotten, thanks in large part to Gordon Lightfootâs haunting 1976 folk ballad that became a surprise hit.
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The Fitzgerald, a 730-foot long freighter named after a Milwaukee insurance company executive, went down in Lake Superior on Nov. 10, 1975. All 29 men on board died.
âA crew and good captain well-seasonedâ
The Fitz, as it's still affectionately called, was the largest ship on the Great Lakes when it launched in 1958 and kept that title until 1971.
On its final voyage, the Fitzgerald departed Superior, Wisconsin, on Nov. 9, 1975, carrying 26,000 tons of iron ore along a familiar route to Zug Island in Detroit.
Oliver âBuckâ Champeau, 41, was making his first trip on âThe Mighty Fitz."
The U.S. Marine veteran and experienced seaman was drawn by the higher pay that time of year due to increased risk, recalled daughter Debbie Gomez-Felder, who was 17 at the time.
âIt was an honor to be on the Fitzgerald,â Gomez-Felder said, speaking in her home outside of Milwaukee adorned with images of her dad and paintings of the famous ship.
Most of the crew members were born and lived in states that border the Great Lakes â Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio and Minnesota.
The captain, 63-year-old Ernest M. McSorley, intended to retire after the 1975 season. He was known for his ability to navigate storms on the Great Lakes, but the one that hit on Nov. 10 was unlike any he had encountered.
âWhen the waves turn the minutes to hoursâ
McSorley chose a northerly route across Lake Superior to be protected by highlands along the Canadian shore. Gale warnings were issued the night of Nov. 9. Those worsened to storm warnings in the early morning of Nov. 10.
The crew of the nearby Arthur Anderson, which was trailing the Fitz, reported waves as high as 25 feet. The first mate radioed McSorley, who reported that the Fitz had been damaged by the storm.
âWe are holding our own," McSorley said. That was the last message received from anyone aboard.
Gomez-Felder said she was called out of class the following day and told to go home immediately. Her mom told her that the Fitzgerald was missing.
âI was banging on the church doors at St. Michaelâs Church, our home church where I grew up, wanting answers from one of the priests as to how could this happen,â Gomez-Felder said. âI didnât understand it.â
âAnd all that remains is the faces and the namesâ
There are many theories as to what caused the Fitzgerald to sink so rapidly without a distress call, but the exact reason remains unknown.
Even without an answer, the wreck spurred many âincredibleâ safety improvements, said Frederick Stonehouse, whose 1977 book âThe Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgeraldâ was the first of dozens written about the tragedy.
Whereas a similar-sized ship would be lost on the lakes every six or seven years before the Fitzgerald, none has gone down since then, he said.
âEvery sailor on the Great Lakes thatâs sailing today owes a great deal of debt of gratitude to the Fitzgerald,â said Stonehouse, who taught Great Lakes maritime history at Northern Michigan University, located on the shores of Lake Superior.
The Fitzgerald still sits at the bottom of Lake Superior, submerged in 535 feet of water, about 17 miles (27.36 kilometers) north-northwest of Whitefish Point, Michigan. No bodies have been recovered.
The wreck is protected as a grave site under Canadian law, a status that family members including Gomez-Felder lobbied for. Unauthorized dives or artifact retrieval are barred.
Gomez-Felder said she wants the wreck -- and the bodies entombed within -- to remain undisturbed.
'The legend lives on'
Events around the Great Lakes each year remember the men killed and reunite their family members, and organizers say the 50th anniversary has driven public interest to a new peak.
The Great Lakes Historical Museum in Whitefish Point plans a public event on Nov. 10. A separate ceremony only for the crewâs families will be livestreamed. The Edmund Fitzgeraldâs bell, retrieved in 1995 at the request of crew family members, is housed there as a permanent memorial.
Bruce Lynn, executive director of the Great Lake Shipwreck Historical Society, said the museum is on track to see its busiest year ever on the 50th anniversary.
âWhen we remember the Fitzgerald, I like to think that at the same time weâre remembering all those other shipwrecks,â he said.
The wreck is also remembered in Detroit at the Marinersâ Church, where Rector Richard Ingalls rang its bell 29 times in honor of the crew after receiving word in the predawn hours of Nov. 11, 1975, that the Fitzgerald had sunk.
The tolling bell helped spread the word of what had happened and was memorialized by Lightfoot when he sang âthe church bell chimed til it rang twenty-nine times."
In 2023, after Lightfoot died, they rang the bell a 30th time. The bell will also be rung 30 times this year on the anniversary, with the final toll representing all sailors lost on the Great Lakes.
âFellas, itâs been good to know yaâ
On this 50th anniversary, Gomez-Felder said she wants people to remember the Fitzgerald crewâs loved ones.
âIt took me a little while to recognize heâs not coming back,â Gomez-Felder said of her father. âHeâs not going to be here for my wedding, he is not going to see me graduate, he isnât going to walk me down the aisle. He has gone.â
She has been comforted by traveling to Whitefish Point each year to be with other families and, for the past 30 years, ringing the Fitzgeraldâs bell in memory of her father and the others who died.
âThat was the closest thing to my dad,â she said. âThatâs the soul of the ship.â
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Associated Press reporter Isabella Volmert contributed to this report from Lansing, Michigan.