Added: 3 years ago
From: shipwreckworld
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  • No, this schooner has not been identified by name.and is much older than the Katie Eccles.

  • is this called the KATIE ECCLES

  • Very interesting video

  • Why hasn't this wreck disintegrated like so many shipwrecks in the ocean (I'm thinking of Titanic.)

    Is there a difference between freshwater wrecks and saltwater wrecks?

  • Shipwrecks in the ocean disintegrate due to a Teredo shipworm that bores holes in the wood of ships which causes them to eventually fall apart. The Teredo worm does not exist in fresh water so shipwrecks are preserved if not subjected to wave action or high currents. The Dagger-Board schooner is in a very deep depth over 500 ft. Temperature in those depths in Lake Ontario is around 39 degrees F and almost no current or wave action.

  • Now available is the book Legend of the Lake, the story of HMS Ontario. Go to Shipwreckworld for details on how to order and receive a personalize copy by one of the discoverers of the ship.

  • Is this the HMS Ontario?

  • NO. This is a rare dagger-board schooner , the only one ever found in the Great Lakes. See our website Shipwreckworld for details on HMS Ontario. Jim Kennard

  • No. The daggerboard schooner is in over 500 ft of water and would be very expensive to raise and even more expensive ( millions ) to properly preserve. We obtained approximately 1 hour of video and believe that there is enough information captured from many viewing positions to allow marine archaeologists and others to adequately understand the construction of this unique and rare shipwreck. Jim Kennard

  • is it possible for the ship to be raised?

  • We believe that this ship could have been in the process of being converted to another use such a barge or other type of sailing craft after all useful items were stripped from the vessel. They had not taken the bowsprit off, so maybe the salvage operation was not complete. It could have broke from its mooring in an ice flow or rough weather and then carried out into the lake. We don't think that it was brought that far into the lake and scuttled. Just speculation at this point. Jim Kennard

  • "There were no anchors, winch, block and tackles, or dead-eyes to be found on the shipwreck."

    I'm just curious what you guys deduce from these facts? Was the ship salvaged previously? Are the environmental conditions such that metal would dissolve but wood would not? Just curious, that jumped out to me as interesting. Could it have been intentionally scuttled?

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