888-492-3747 18335 N. Whitefish Point Road • Paradise, MI 49768
Great Lakes Shipwreck MuseumEdmund Fitzgerald

Program Areas:

White Shoal Lens
Seventeen foot tall second
order Fresnel lens from
White Shoal serves as
centerpiece for the museum.
Museum Operations - The Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum opened its first exhibits to the public in 1985. Today, the museum is visited by more than 81,000 people each summer. Museum programs are essentially of the humanities, designed to examine man's attempts to harness nature and the hardships encountered while navigating the Great Lakes.

Crew of the David Boyd
Crew of the David Boyd during 1997
Whitefish Bay Expedition with the
National Geographic Society.
Diving and Research - The Shipwreck Society's primary research boat is the 47-foot David Boyd, fully equipped with electronic navigation gear, a sidescan sonar, and the Society's Phantom S4 ROV. Dive efforts are centered on locating and documenting historically significant wrecksites to further our knowledge of underwater cultural resources. GLSHS's dive team has located and documented numerous previously undiscovered/undocumented shipwreck sites.

The Society has worked with such prestigious organizations as National Geographic Society, Harbor Branch Oceanographic, the Canadian Navy, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, and many state and local governmental agencies throughout the Great Lakes.

GLSHS Diver on Comet
GLSHS diver exploring wreck of the Comet.
Photo by Terry Begnoche.
Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society - Wreck Diving Policy - The Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society (GLSHS) is committed to preservation and interpretation of Great Lakes maritime history.

Specifically relating to Great Lakes Shipwrecks, GLSHS supports and promotes lawful safe diving on all shipwrecks. GLSHS has made a formal agreement with the State of Michigan to preserve and protect Michigan's shipwreck heritage. Further, GLSHS desires to assist all states and provinces bordering the Great Lakes and connecting waters in all efforts which encourage historic preservation.

Sea Cadets
GLSHS Executive Director Tom Farnquist
explains the significance of the replica
bell to Sea Cadets from Sault Ste. Marie,
Ontario aboard HMCS Cormorant
Education - GLSHS is a multi-faceted organization attracting global attention from sailors, educators, historians, divers, archeologists, and museum visitors. Three state universities are involved in the student intern program being offered by GLSHS. Students are provided the opportunity to gain experience in all areas of museum operations and Great Lakes maritime research.

Outreach - More than 100 million people have been introduced to GLSHS and its interpretive programs through television and print. The Discovery Channel's "Shipwreck - The Mystery of the Edmund Fitzgerald" aired in March, 1996. National Geographic Magazine featured the story of the Edmund Fitzgerald's bell recovery in the January 1996 issue. Articles about the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum have appeared in numerous magazines, including Michigan History, Lake Superior Magazine, and Lighthouse Digest.

Lightkeepers Quarters
Detail of restored
Lightkeepers Quarters.
Historic Restoration and Preservation - The museum completed a 6-year restoration of the 1861 Lightkeepers Quarters in 1996. The 1923 U.S. Coast Guard Lookout Tower was restored and dedicated in July of 1998. The Society is currently involved in a $4 million capital improvement project that will restore additional U.S. Coast Guard Lifeboat Station structures.

Captian Carlson Mannequin
Mannequin of Capt. Robert Carlson,
Keeper at Whitefish Point 1903-1931.
Human Figure Sculpture by Craig Yanek
Fine Arts - The Society commissions, on average, three works of art per year with emphasis on paintings, sculptures and models


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