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the former Mystery Schooner X
165 Feet Deep
 
Click on images for an enlargement

Ian Morgan
Marine Historian & Artist
Drawings are Courtesy of the
Geological Survey of Canada Atlantic,
McQuest Marine
and

Ian L. Morgan © 1997

Copies of this detailed artist rendition of the wreck site are available at the
Books & Videos Store

This remarkably intact schooner portrays some excellent details of an era gone by.  With her two masts still standing 80 feet from the bottom and cabin roof still attached, one can only expect that this ship went down slowly.  She has a cargo of grain in her hold stocked full along with a thick layer of mud.  The wheel is still mounted in place half buried in mud along with two bilge pumps, one of which is wooden.  The scroll on the bow stem resembles a ram's head flanked on top by the bow sprit.  This wreck is of important value to geologists Steve Blasco and Darren Keyes who are studying silt patterns in around the Long Point area.  The mud line around this wreck shows unusual current action along her hull.  The mud line profile drops dramatically at her stern around the rudder.  I'd like to thank Gary Kozak who found this wreck in 1984 while conducting his intense search for the "Dean Richmond".  We were able to locate this wreck using Gary's loran co-ordinates.  I'd also like to thank Art Amos, Bill McNeil, Patrick Folks and the Ontario Marine Heritage Committee for their exhaustive research into the identity of this shipwreck.  Our findings relayed to them have been a small portion of the efforts necessary to positively ID a vessel of this sort.  Art and his friends have done a remarkable job sifting through the spec's on thousands of vessels to come up with the identity.

Diver Ascending the Forward Mast

Looking Down from Forward Mast

Helm

Ram's Head Scroll

The SeaView crew made up of Ray Stewart, John Veber and Dan Lindsay fed Art Amos what ever information they could find about the wreck.   Details of the bow structure, capstan, rigging, steering gear and dimensions have been gathered along with video and photographs.  Early in the investigative dives while looking for the registration numbers, a diver found a loose board in the forward hatch combing, that when pulled out revealed engraved numbers which was recognized to mean the gross tonnage of the vessel.  The SeaView crew all felt these numbers surely would lead to the identity. But after Art and his colleagues researched vessels that went down in this area and the tonnage information, they said none of them exactly matched the numbers we found.  One called the "Bemis" was very close but not exact. 

Cabin & Wheel

Ascending the Aft Mast

Full View of the Bow

Midship and Cabin

Our dive team continued to gather important information about the vessel to confirm the identity.  Art and his friends Bill and Patrick got down to some very serious book and enrollment searching and came up with a vessel that never really made big headlines when it went missing.  This particular vessel just went missing somewhere on Lake Erie.  After acquiring a very speedy response for a copy of a ship enrollment from Bob Graham (marine archivist with the AGLMH), Art was convinced this shipwreck so well known as the "Mystery Schooner X" must be the "St. James".  The tonnage on the enrollment was an exact match.  All the other information we had gathered also matched.  

Tonnage Numbers Carved into Hatch Combing

Windlass

The archeological report for "The Discovery of the Schooner St. James" has been awarded the "Henry N. Barkhausen Award for Original Research In Great Lakes Maritime History" for 2001 by the "Association for Great Lakes Maritime History".  Art Amos and Dan Lindsay, the authors, are very grateful to the association for being awarded such an honorary award.  This makes all their time and efforts very special.

   
Art Amos
Ontario Marine Heritage Committee Member



The archaeological and archival investigation into fixing the identity of the schooner St. James, and gathering the evidence needed in support of the claim, extended over a four year period.  Much was learned in the process about research procedures and the necessity of a disciplined approach to the research, both in-water and archival. Getting out to a site that was 165' deep and over twenty miles from shore was at times discouraging for the divers, especially with the unpredictable weather patterns that prevail on Lake Erie. Likewise, trying to conduct a historical analysis, without initially having all of the archaeological information necessary for such a task, proved to be a challenge. Add in the fact that the schooner E.S.J. Bemis, like the St. James, was built in Milan, Ohio, in the mid eighteen- fifties. Also, their dimensions and rig were similar. Both their tonnages were written down as 226 by most sources. And in the fall of 1870 they foundered within a month of each other, near Long Point, while both were laden with 14,000 bushels of wheat.

The similarities between the Bemis and the St. James underlies the fact that when researchers are trying to identify any of the hundreds of shipwrecks in the Great Lakes, a cursory examination of the remains is clearly not sufficient for identification. In the past, names have been attached to vessels, either correctly or incorrectly, without following any organized or thoughtful procedure. In some cases well intentioned reports have been written that do little more than illustrate a need for proper reflection and guidance in methodology. Once a name has been given to a shipwreck, even on the flimsiest of evidence, that name usually stays with it. Over time, it seems that very few people even consider disputing it. This kind of treatment does not do service to the rich marine history of the Great Lakes.

With the technological advances in electronic finding aids, and the improvement in scuba diving equipment, an increasing number of shipwrecks are being located and explored, particularly in Lake Erie. The need for a coordinated effort among marine heritage groups to ensure that research on these vessels is carried out in a proper manner has never been greater.

Drawings are Courtesy of the Geological Survey of Canada Atlantic, McQuest Marine and
 I.L. Morgan © 1997

                                

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