The Michigan Maritime Museum Weblog

News from the Michigan Maritime Museum .

Sunday, January 18, 2009

[Fwd: Calling All Volunteers]

Calling all Volunteers!

Time is flying! It's only 14 weeks until the cover comes off and
rerigging begins. We've made good progress with repairing and preserving
rigging so far this fall and winter, but we still need help scraping and
oiling blocks and hearts and reseizing blocks into their strops..
Starting in February we will begin painting spars, rigging the topsail
yard, and overhauling the anchor windlass barrel.

So come to any of the work sessions Wednesdays and Thursdays 6:00 pm -
8:00pm and Saturdays 9:00 am - 1:00 pm. There is plenty to do.

In addition, we have several stand alone projects which could be worked
by individual volunteers at times other than the regularly scheduled
work sessions. These projects are:

1) Make 2-3 dozen new hanks for the foresails

2) Make new rammer heads (turn on a lathe) for the new safety and
flexible rammers for the gun

3) Make the new safety rammer

4) Make the new flexible rammer

5) Make new double blocks for the gun tackle

If you would like to undertake any of these projects, contact the Bosun,
Eric Standen.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

“Icebound; The Ordeal of the SS Michigan”

January 2, 2008

The Michigan Maritime Museum

Hosts

On Sunday afternoon, January 18, at 2:00 p.m., the Michigan Maritime Museum in South Haven will host Valerie Van Heest, author, diver and shipwreck hunter, speaking to its members and the general public about the ordeal of the SS Michigan and its crew, after the vessel foundered in the ice off the West Michigan shore.

The presentation, held in the Padnos Boat Shed, will feature multi media images and continues the popular off season lecture series featuring authors and specialists addressing interesting topics of Great Lakes maritime history.

Ms. Van Heest is a member of the Women Divers Hall of Fame and co-founded Chicago’s Underwater Archeological Society, the Southwest Michigan Underwater Preserve and Michigan Shipwreck Research Associates. Ms. Van Heest has worked with nationally known author Clive Cussler, searching for the wreck of Northwest Flight 2501. She strives to advance the cultural preservation of shipwrecks and is familiar with the state of the art technology now employed as standard techniques by technical divers searching for shipwrecks.

Her lecture and book will feature the SS Michigan, which in 1885 departed Grand Haven only to later find herself trapped in Lake Michigan ice. The crew abandoned the vessel prior to her sinking and their efforts to survive is a tale similar to the trials later faced by Earnest Shackleton and the crew of Endurance. Ms. Van Heest and her team later discovered the wreck of the steamer, making for a riveting tale leading to the book winning the 2008 Michigan State History Award.

Ms. Van Heest will remain after the program to sell and autograph books and talk with the audience.

The general public is welcome and while the presentation is free, donations are gratefully accepted.