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Hesper (shipwreck)

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Fate
  
Sank 4 May 1905

Draught
  
20.2 ft (6.2 m)

Length
  
76 m

Draft
  
6.16 m

Builder
  
Cleveland

Beam
  
41.6 ft (12.7 m)

Launched
  
28 June 1890

Area
  
8,094 m²

Year built
  
1890

Added to NRHP
  
14 April 1994

Hesper (shipwreck) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Namesake
  
Hesperus, the evening star

Displacement
  
1540 long tons (1560 metric tons)

Propulsion
  
Vertical triple-expansion reciprocating steam engine, 825 horsepower

Hesper was a bulk-freighter steamship that was used to tow schooner-barges on the Great Lakes. She sank in Lake Superior off Silver Bay, Minnesota, in a late-spring snowstorm in 1905. The remains of the ship are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Hesper was a wooden-hulled, single-screw, triple-masted, cargo ship built by the Bradley Transportation Company in Cleveland, Ohio. She was used to haul both iron ore and grain, two products important to Minnesota′s economy at the time.

Hesper was caught in a late-spring snowstorm on 4 May 1905, with a strong nor'easter with winds of 60 mph (97 km/hr) driving her off her intended course and smashing her into a reef that now marks the southwest end of the harbor in Silver Bay, Minnesota. The ship foundered and sank in about 42 feet (13 m) of water. The crew was able to escape in the ship′s lifeboats, but the ship was a total loss.

The wreck of Hesper is well preserved and lies in 30 to 48 feet (9 to 15 meters) of water about halfway down the west breakwall of the Silver Bay harbor. The hull is split apart at the turn of the bilge, and the port and starboard sides of the ship lie alongside and roughly parallel to the ceiling of the hull. The sides both contain timbers that were used to mount the decks, which are no longer present. The decks are presumed to have washed ashore after the ship sank. The aft end of the hull contains a number of long bolts that were presumably used to mount the engine.

References

Hesper (shipwreck) Wikipedia