SS Western Reserve
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SS Western Reserve

lake freighter that sank in Lake Superior


Manufacturer
American Ship Building Company
Vessel Type
ship

* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

The SS Western Reserve was a pioneering steel-hulled lake freighter constructed in 1890 by the Cleveland Shipbuilding Company. At 301 feet (92 meters) in length and with a beam of 41 feet (12 meters), she was the largest bulk carrier on the Great Lakes at her time and notable for being the first steel plate vessel on these inland waters. Her steel construction significantly enhanced her capacity to carry heavier loads more efficiently than traditional wooden steamships. The vessel earned the nickname "inland greyhound" due to her remarkable speed from port to port. Designed by ship's captain and innovator Peter G. Minch, the Western Reserve represented a major step in the industrialization of Great Lakes shipping. Her design included a relatively long hull with the superstructure positioned at both ends, a configuration that became a point of debate regarding her structural integrity. She was similar in construction to another steel ship, SS W.H. Gilcher. Tragically, on August 30, 1892, while laden with ballast en route to Two Harbors for iron ore, the Western Reserve encountered a storm in Lake Superior approximately 60 miles north of Whitefish Point. She broke in two and sank within ten minutes. All 21 crew members and six passengers evacuated in two lifeboats; however, only one crew member, Harry Stewart, survived after a harrowing swim to shore, attributing his survival to his heavy knit pea jacket. The sinking of the Western Reserve remains a significant maritime event, raising questions about the steel quality and structural design of early steel ships. Some experts suggested "hogging" due to wave action caused the break, while others pointed to the ship's construction and steel brittleness, similar to issues later observed in the Titanic disaster. Her wreck remained undiscovered for 132 years until 2024, when the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society located her off Whitefish Point at a depth of 600 feet. The wreck was found broken nearly in half, corroborating eyewitness accounts. The discovery, announced in 2025, provided valuable insights into early steel ship construction and maritime history on the Great Lakes.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

19 ship citations (1 free) in 14 resources

Western Reserve Subscribe to view
Western Reserve (1890) Subscribe to view
Western Reserve (new steel steamer): breaks in two during a storm on Lake Superior in 1892 and sinks in deep water; her crew and passengers, numbering 31 souls, take to the boats but all perish except the wheelsman Subscribe to view
Western Reserve (Propeller; built Cleveland, OH, 1890; ON 81294) Subscribe to view
Web WorldCat
Published OCLC, Dublin, Ohio
Western Reserve (steel steamer) Subscribe to view
Western Reserve, 1890, porpeller: founders Subscribe to view
Western Reserve, 1890, propeller: described Subscribe to view
Western Reserve, 1890, propeller: disaster Subscribe to view
Western Reserve, 1890, propeller: view of Subscribe to view
Western Reserve, propeller: founders Subscribe to view
Western Reserve, the Subscribe to view