Unknown wreck washes ashore in Goderich

by John Grieg, Signal-Star Staff


 

A piece of a wrecked ship that washed ashore Monday night will be put back on the bottom of Lake Huron provided the weather cooperates .  The 20 meter-long chunk of wood beams and spikes is most likely from the deck of a ship.  Dave Wilson president the local chapter of Save Ontario Shipwrecks, said the organization is planning to drag the wreck back out about 150 meters from the shore and leave it between two other shipwrecks that divers maintain. There is an interpretative trail from the shore to the first wreck and over to the second one.  This third wreck will add to the trail.

But Wilson is concerned there won't be a break in the weather before the ice forms.  He said once the wreck is exposed to the air and if the wood is frozen it will degrade quickly.  The divers need a calm day before they can pull the wreck out to safety.  "If we don't do this, someone pull it up and smash and bury it" said Wilson.  Ken Hunter, commissioner of works for Goderich, said "We've had them on the beach before, but never as big as this."  He said it will probably have to be moved  because the town is concerned about safety on the beach.  Spikes are projecting from the wreck.

Wilson said he estimates the ship is from the late 1800s. It is a new ship that the divers have never come across.  He doesn't know which vessel the piece could be from.  "There are over 50 wrecks off Goderich that we know about," said Wilson.  Wilson said there are other mystery boats out in the lake near Goderich that they have heard "old wives' tales" about.  The piece lying on the beach probably inched its way along the floor of the lake and eventually hit the beach.  Many vessels were taken out and scuttled.  Now pieces of those vessels are coming ashore.

The past couple of years have been great for diving said Wilson because zebra mussels have cleaned some of the algae from the water in the area.  The wreck will have to be put out into the lake under at least 3 meters of water, or Wilson said it would just work its way back onto the shore.


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