In the fall of 1913, a violent force was unleashed across the Great Lakes. More than a century later, it still goes by many names. All are deadly: The White Hurricane. The Big Blow. The Frozen Fury.
With the weather forecasting capabilities of today, the captain of the Edmund Fitzgerald may not have even embarked from port.
One huge November storm sank 18 ships and drowned more than 250 sailors on the lakes 62 years before the Edmund Fitzgerald went down in Lake Superior.
The Edmund Fitzgerald sank in Lake Superior on Nov. 10, 1975, and all 29 sailors were lost, including several from Northeast ...
Fifty years after the freighter disappeared into the depths of Lake Superior, the mystery of its demise—and the mournful ...
Twenty-nine sailors drowned when the Edmund Fitzgerald went down in the Great Lakes' icy waters on Nov. 10, 1975. The ship ...
A nail-biting drama played out just off the tip of Michigan’s northernmost peninsula. It's almost too amazing to believe.
The 50th anniversary of the shipwreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald reminds us of how important the Great Lakes are as a conduit ...
Twenty-nine men died in the Great Lakes' most famous shipwreck. The Edmund Fitzgerald’s legacy endures for many reasons.
3don MSN
How the Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald Became Every Guy's Favorite Historical Maritime Disaster
Is sharing deep feelings about a Great Lakes freighter lost with all hands in Lake Superior the cure for the male loneliness epidemic?
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