Thomas Wilson (shipwreck)

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Career
Name: Thomas Wilson
Builder: American Steel Barge Co.
Yard number: Hull No. 119
Laid down: November 7, 1891
Launched: April 30, 1892
In service: 1892 - 1902
Fate: Sunk in a collision
Status: Wreck
General characteristics
Class & type: Whaleback freighter
Tonnage: 1713 gross, 1318 net
Length: 308 ft
Beam: 38 ft
Draft: 24 ft
Propulsion:

Two Scotch boilers, 160 psi,

One triple-expansion steam engine powering one propeller
Thomas Wilson (Whaleback Freighter) Shipwreck
Three capstans on the stern end of the deck.
Nearest city Duluth, Minnesota
Coordinates 46°47′0″N 92°4′10″W / 46.78333°N 92.06944°W / 46.78333; -92.06944Coordinates: 46°47′0″N 92°4′10″W / 46.78333°N 92.06944°W / 46.78333; -92.06944
Architect Alexander McDougall.
Architectural style Whaleback
Governing body State
MPS Minnesota's Lake Superior Shipwrecks MPS
NRHP Reference # 92000844 [1]
Added to NRHP 23 July 1992

The Thomas Wilson was a whaleback freighter built in 1892 and used to haul bulk freight on the Great Lakes. The ship sank just outside the harbor of Duluth, Minnesota, on Lake Superior, on 7 June 1902, after a collision with the George Hadley. The Thomas Wilson is one of the best remaining examples of a whaleback steamer, and it is also significant for the changes made in operating procedures at the Duluth harbor. The remains of the ship were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.[2]

The Ship

The whaleback was designed by Captain Alexander McDougall to carry cargoes of iron ore or grain economically around the Great Lakes. A pair of coal-fired Scotch boiler engines provided steam for the three-cylinder, triple expansion steam engine which drove a single screw propeller. The hull was built of heavy steel plates double-riveted to steel angle frames. The bow and stern were of a conoidal shape, with the center part of the hull being roughly cigar-shaped. The ship was 308 feet (94 m) long, with a 38-foot (12 m) beam and a 24-foot (7 m) deep hold. The hatches on the deck had no coamings, vertical sections that would have prevented water from coming into the hatches. Instead, the hatches were designed to be flush with the surface of the deck, and were simply bolted to the deck. The Wilson was the last whaleback built without hatch coamings.[3]

The Sinking

On 7 June 1902, the Thomas Wilson left the Duluth harbor carrying a load of Mesabi iron ore. The hatches were not yet closed, because the weather was clear and calm. Meanwhile, the George Hadley, a 2073-ton wooden steamer, was inbound for the Duluth harbor. The Annie L. Smith tugboat directed the George Hadley to divert to the Superior harbor, since all of the Duluth coal docks were full. The captain of the George Hadley ordered an immediate turn to port without noticing the direction of the Thomas Wilson or blowing the required whistle signals. The captain of the Thomas Wilson, concerned about the movements of the Hadley but suspicious of running aground if he turned to port, ordered an immediate turn to starboard. The Hadley struck the Wilson just forward of the aft hatch and recoiled from the collision. The Wilson rolled over to port, then righted itself and began to sink by the bow. Within three minutes, the entire ship had sunk, drowning nine of the twenty-man crew. The ship and its cargo were valued at $207,000.[4]

As a result of the collision, new rules were instituted in the Duluth harbor:

  1. Ships cannot leave the harbor with open hatches.
  2. Ships may not pull out from another ship following a collision.
  3. Pilots may not carry out any order given by the captain when another vessel is sighted without first calling the captain's attention to the other vessel.
  4. All ships must be equipped with signal systems to all parts of the vessel to warn of danger.[4]

The Wreck Today

The ship rests in 70 feet of water less than a mile outside the entrance of the Duluth harbor at the Aerial Lift Bridge. The stern of the ship is substantially complete, though a large section of the hull of the midship has been broken apart due to other ships dragging anchors through the wreck. The interior of the ship has survived largely intact, with relatively few artifacts having been removed by divers.[5]

References

External links

Media related to Thomas Wilson (shipwreck) at Wikimedia Commons

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