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Abandoned

9
  • Bay City (1867)
  • General Grant US 19633
  • Hamilton C 103337(Magnet)
  • Melissa Desagnes
  • Milt Gill US 17350
  • Record 0696
  • Record 1615
  • T.G. Lester US 59196
  • Transiter

Ashore

2
  • D.L. Filer C 35311
  • Liberator (1846)

Burnt at Dock

15
  • Cora (1892)
  • Don M. Dickinson (1858)
  • Dover (Frank E. Kirby, Silver Spray) US 120796
  • General Grant US 19633
  • Germania US 85435
  • Huron City US 11579
  • Lothair C 71170
  • NO. 12 (Dredge Barge)
  • Phoenix (I. U. Masters) US 12795
  • Plymouth Rock (1852)
  • Sappho (1883)
  • Sunshine
  • T.F. Parks (Ploughboy) (1851)
  • Thames (Lady Colbourne)
  • Transit (1872)

Capsized

2
  • H. Dahlke US 205145
  • Liberator (1846)

Collision

9
  • Ellen Williams US 7308
  • F.V. Specht C 80579
  • Free Mason (1857)
  • Goderich (Minnesetunk)
  • Joseph C. Suit (1884)
  • Pine Lake US 150695
  • Porter
  • Tashmoo US 145843
  • Topeka US 145610

Destroyed at (Dock, Breakwater, Harbour)

1
  • George H. Van Vleck US 150042 (Portage)

Dismantled/Dynamited/Scrapped in Place

8
  • George B. Owen US 86264
  • Germania US 85435
  • Mary Birckhead US 17618
  • Newell Hubbard US 18473
  • Pine Lake US 150695
  • Saginaw C 69524
  • Topeka US 145610
  • Transiter C 158633

Explosion (Boiler, Gas, Dynamite)

3
  • A.S. Field (1853)
  • Brooklyn US 2151
  • General Vance (1838)

Fire

7
  • Daisy Lee (1864)
  • George W. Roby US 86031
  • Rainbow US 11064
  • Ruby (1871)
  • Sunshine
  • Transiter
  • Union (1855)

Pounded to Pieces

1
  • Mary Birckhead US 17618

Recovered

2
  • H. Dahlke US 205145
  • John A. Miller US 47013

Scuttled

2
  • Fellowcraft (Robert Mills) US 110774
  • George W. Roby US 86031

Stranded/Grounded

2
  • Merry Calvin(Mary Calvin)
  • Milt Gill US 17350

Sunk for a Breakwater or Dock

1
  • Lachinedoc (Queenston; Boblodock) C 149430

Sunk/Foundered

6
  • B. M. Baker US 31217
  • Ellen Williams US 7308
  • John Richards (1830)
  • Monguagon US 90658
  • No. 7 US 719361958
  • T.G. Lester US 59196

Wreck (Verified)

3
  • Lachinedoc (Queenston; Boblodock) C 149430
  • Record 0696
  • Record 1615

Wrecked

3
  • B.M. Baker US 31217
  • Filer US 35311
  • WALSCHIFF (Launched 1952)
  • Home
  • Docs
  • Major U.S. & Canadian Inland Lakes
  • Detroit River
  • Collision
  • Pine Lake US 150695

Identification & Site Information

  • Name(s): Pine Lake
  • Official Number: 150695
  • Year Built: 1895
  • Builder: Pine Lake Lumber Company, Charlevoix, MI
  • Master Carpenter: Edward Roney
  • Built on Bottom of: Ida M. Torrent (US110469)
  • Vessel Type: Steambarge
  • Hull Material: Wood
  • Number of Decks: 1
  • Final Date Lost: 21 October 1912
  • Final Location: Off Belle Isle, Detroit River
  • Final Cargo: Sand (converted to sand sucker)
  • Casualties: One

Vessel Type

A wooden-hulled Great Lakes steambarge, originally designed for heavy lumber transport. Converted later in its career to a sand sucker. The vessel’s construction utilized the repurposed Hull bottom of the Ida M. Torrent.

Description

Built with a length of 137.3 feet (41.9 m), a beam of 28.1 feet (8.6 m), and a depth of 10.9 feet (3.3 m). Tonnage was recorded at 388 gross and 274 net tons. She could carry 400,000 board feet of lumber. Powered by a 250 horsepower steeple compound engine (16 + 30 x 24″) turning a single screw propeller. Steam was provided by a 9’ x 121” Firebox Boiler rated at 115 psi.

History

  • 1895: Built and enrolled at Grand Haven, MI by the Pine Lake Lumber Company using salvaged Hull material from the Ida M. Torrent.
  • 1908: Sold to John Hickler, Buffalo, NY.
  • 1909–1910: Owned by John M. McKerchey, Detroit, MI; converted into a sand sucker at the William Oades Shipyard, Detroit.
  • 1912: Owned by E.P. Merritt, Detroit.

Final Disposition

On 21 October 1912, Pine Lake collided with the Steamer Fleetwood in the Detroit River off Belle Isle, sinking in the navigational channel. The incident resulted in one fatality. Due to her obstructive position, the hulk was dynamited and destroyed shortly after the accident. Her official documents were surrendered in Detroit on 10 November 1912, listed as “vessel lost”.

Located By & Date Found

There is no record of a modern rediscovery or archaeological survey of the Pine Lake wreckage site. The remains were reportedly demolished after the collision.

NOTMARs & Advisories

None currently active. Site was officially cleared post-sinking.

Resources & Links

  • Great Lakes Vessels Database – BGSU
  • Maritime History of the Great Lakes
  • C. Patrick Labadie Collection
  • Board of Lake Underwriters Marine Directory
  • Steamboat Era in the Muskokas by Richard Tatley
  • U.S. Merchant Vessel Enrollments
  • Great Lakes Shipwreck File (David Swayze)

Conclusion

The Pine Lake is notable for her origin—constructed atop a salvaged Hull—and her transition from lumber hauler to sand sucker, reflecting changing maritime industrial needs. Her catastrophic loss in the Detroit River and subsequent demolition mark her as a unique example of vessel obsolescence and maritime hazard mitigation in the early 20th century Great Lakes navigation history.

Keywords, Categories, Glossary Terms

  • Tags: Steambarge, lumber trade, sand sucker, wooden vessel, collision loss, Detroit River
  • Glossary:
    • Steambarge: A powered Barge designed for bulk cargo transport.
    • Sand Sucker: A vessel converted for excavating or transporting dredged materials.
    • Hulk: A ship’s Hull without machinery or superstructure, often derelict or stripped.
    • Board feet: A lumber volume measure, 1 foot long x 1 foot wide x 1 inch thick.

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