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Black November: The Carl D. Bradley Tragedy
Michigan State University Press, 2006 Paper: 978-0-87013-783-9 | eISBN: 978-1-60917-057-8 Library of Congress Classification G530.C2958K36 2006 Dewey Decimal Classification 917.7404
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Michigan’s "storms of November" are famous in song, lore, and legend and have taken a tragic toll, breaking the hulls of many ships and sending them to cold, dark, and silent graves on the bottoms of the Great Lakes. On November 18, 1958, when the limestone carrier Carl D. Bradley broke up during a raging storm on Lake Michigan, it became the largest ship in Great Lakes' history to vanish beneath storm-tossed waves. Along with the Bradley, thirty-three crew members perished. Most of the casualties hailed from the little harbor town of Rogers City, Michigan, a community that was stung with grief when, in an instant, twenty-three women became widows and fifty- three children were left fatherless. Nevertheless, this is also a story of survival, as it recounts the tale of two of the ship’s crew, whose fifteen-hour ordeal on a life raft, in gale-force winds and 25 foot waves, is a remarkable story of endurance and tenacity. See other books on: Kantar, Andrew | Michigan, Lake | Shipwreck survival | Shipwrecks | Survival after airplane accidents, shipwrecks, etc See other titles from Michigan State University Press |
Nearby on shelf for Geography (General) / Adventures, shipwrecks, buried treasure, etc.:
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