Dive Sites

 

St. Clair River Dive Sites

M.E. Tremble: Wooden Schooner, three mast, 198 Feet, Sank Sept 7, 1890 just South of the Blue Water Bridge in the St. Clair River.

Ben Hur Sank: November 8th while being used in the salvage attempt on the Tremble

John Martin: Wooden Schooner 220′ long and 34′ wide. She sank September 21, 1900
Fontana: 231′ wooden schooner with a 38′ beam. Sank Aug 3rd 1900.

Charles H. Weeks: 134′ wooden schooner sank October 1889.
Monarch: Tugboat sank July 1934 in 50′ of water near the Canadian shoreline.

The Colborn: Wooden Lumber Hooker of 129 feet built in 1882.
The Steam Crane: An old steam crane laying on it’s side in about 30′ of water.

The Baird and Lansing: Two shallow river wrecks with unconfirmed local names.

Lake Huron Dive Sites

Charles Price: 504′ Steel hulled steamer sank Nov. 1913 in the Great Storm.

The Regina: 249′ Freighter sank in Nov. 1913, 80′ of water, Built in Scotland in 1907.

Sweetheart: Built as a 175 foot three masted schooner in 1867. She now rests in twenty seven feet of water three miles into Lake Huron from the St. Clair River.

Amaranth: Schooner barge sunk in September 1901 off Keewahdin road in Fort Gratiot.

Wexford: Recently found (Aug 2000) victim of the Great Storm (1913) and the only known steel freighter sunk in that storm resting upright.

Dunderberg: 150′ Schooner in beautiful condition laying in 150′ of water. Built 1867 and sank in 1868.

Photos & More

Shipwreck Map

PLEASE NOTE SHIPWRECK SITES ARE NOT ACCESSIBLE BY KAYAK.

Huron Lady II Sightseeing cruises