SS L.R. Doty

L.R. Doty was a Great Lakes steamship launched in May 1893 at West Bay City, Michigan. It was last seen afloat October 25, 1898 north of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, during a violent storm on Lake Michigan, with winds reaching 70 miles per hour (110 km/h). The ship was witnessed foundering at the stern by a passenger of the four-masted schooner Olive Jeanette which was being towed by the Doty until the tow line broke from the force of the storm. Seventeen crew members died.[2]

History
United States
NameL.R. Doty
NamesakeLucius Ramsey Doty
OwnerCuyahoga Transit Company, Ohio
BuilderF.W. Wheeler, Bay City, Michigan
Launched1893
FateSank, October 25, 1898
General characteristics [1]
Length
  • 312 ft (95 m) LOA
  • 291 ft (89 m) LBP
Beam41 ft (12 m)
Depth20 ft (6.1 m)
Propulsion
Crew17

On June 25, 2010, 112 years after her loss, divers found the Doty 300 feet (91 m) below the surface of Lake Michigan with its cargo of corn still intact. The first divers to reach and film the Doty were Tracy Xelowski, John Scoles and John Janzen.[2][3][4]

Coincidentally, seven years later on September 30, 1905, the L.R. Doty's sister ship the Iosco also sank while towing the Olive Jeanette. However, on this occasion both vessels were lost to the waters of Lake Superior.[5]

Olive Jeanette (in 1890)
The Storm in the Milwaukee Sentinel on October 26, 1898

References

42°33′40″N 87°20′12″W / 42.56111°N 87.33667°W / 42.56111; -87.33667