A ship that went missing in Lake Michigan 138 years ago was discovered by a rafter and shipwreck hunter from Door County, located on the peninsula of northeast Wisconsin.
In mid-July, Matt Olson, owner of Door County Adventure Rafting, said he was clicking through satellite images online when he noticed a dark shape in the water near Rowley’s Bay.
A week later, he was in the area scouting for new rafting spots and confirmed the shape was, in fact, a long-lost wreck.
“I was surprised by how big it was,” Olson told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. “A lot of it still there today, which is pretty cool because a lot of these wrecks get destroyed by the wind and ice as time goes on.”
Olson — who has previously discovered two other shipwrecks — is a Door County local who grew up hunting for lost ships in Lake Michigan. After finding and reporting the wreck, he also went back diving for a closer look.
“I took out my six-year-old son to snorkel on it, too,” Olson told the Sentinel, “So he was one of the first people to see this ship in over 100 years.”
In follow-up diving missions, the Wisconsin Historical Society’s maritime archaeologists identified the ship as the Frank D. Barker, a two-masted, 137-foot-long wooden schooner that sank in 1887.
“Whenever we receive this type of call, it’s hard to know exactly what we will find. We were excited to identify the wreck as the Frank D. Barker, whose exact location has been lost for over a century,” Tamara Thomsen, Wisconsin Historical Society maritime archaeologist, said in a statement.
What caused the Frank D. Barker to sink?
The Frank D. Barker’s last voyage was from Manistee, in Michigan’s Lower Peninsula, across the lake to Escanaba, in the Upper Peninsula, to collect a load of iron ore, according to a news release from the Historical Society.
On the way, the ship encountered foggy conditions and ran into a limestone outcropping. Despite the captain and crew’s attempts to correct course, the Barker ended up stranded on Spider Island, just off Newport State Park. No lives were lost.
Where is the shipwreck located?
The Frank D. Barker is now 24 feet underwater off of Door County’s coast, between the two arms of Barker Shoal — a landmark that is actually thought to be named after the lost ship.
The Historical Society is working to further document the site and eventually make it eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places.
To learn more about the shipwreck, see reporting from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and Green Bay Press-Gazette.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Shipwreck from 1887 discovered in Lake Michigan. See video.