Shotline Diving Wreck Profile
- Name: Charles J. Sheffield
- Type: Steel-hulled bulk freighter
- Year Built: 1887
- Builder: Globe Iron Works, Hull No. 13
- Dimensions: 259.5 ft (79.0 m) X 38 ft (11.6 m); Depth of hold: 19.5 ft (5.9 m)
- Registered Tonnage: 1699.59 tons
- Depth at Wreck Site: 274 m / 900 ft
- Location: Approximately 96 km (60 miles) west of Whitefish Point, Lake Superior
- Coordinates: Not precisely recorded
- Official Number: 126414
- Original Owners: Harvey H. Brown Steam Ship Company, Cleveland
- Number of Masts: 3
Wreck Location Map
Vessel Type
The Charles J. Sheffield represented the cutting edge of Great Lakes bulk freighters in the late 19th century, built of steel and designed for the iron ore trade, at a time when wooden vessels were rapidly being eclipsed by modern materials and engines. With a fore-and-aft compound steam engine and a large cargo capacity, the Sheffield was a robust and powerful member of the new steel fleet, carrying bulk ore from Lake Superior ports to steel mills along the lower lakes.
Description
Commissioned in 1887 by the Harvey H. Brown Steam Ship Company of Cleveland, the Sheffield was built by the Globe Iron Works, a shipbuilder known for its early adoption of steel hulls and advanced machinery. She was among the first generation of large, steel-hulled ore carriers on the Great Lakes, purpose-built to meet the soaring demand from the iron and steel industries.
History
On 17 June 1889, while operating on Lake Superior roughly 60 miles west of Whitefish Point, the Sheffield was rammed by the steamer North Star. The collision — noted historically as the first recorded collision between two steel ships on the Great Lakes — breached the Sheffield’s hull, causing rapid flooding. Despite damage, all crew were safely evacuated. The Sheffield, heavily laden with iron ore, foundered and settled in an estimated 900 feet (274 m) of water.
Its enrollment was formally surrendered at Cleveland on 19 December 1889, closing the Sheffield’s brief but significant career.
Significant Incidents
- Rammed by the steamer North Star during heavy weather, leading to sinking.
Final Disposition
The Sheffield is an invaluable benchmark in maritime history — the first steel-on-steel collision on the lakes — symbolizing the dawn of the steel freighter era. Its loss highlights the growing pains of transitioning from wooden hulls to steel, including underestimating collision risks among new, fast, and heavy steel vessels. It is also a vivid cautionary tale of how even advanced materials cannot fully protect against navigational mishaps on inland seas.
Current Condition & Accessibility
- Status: Likely upright on the bottom, extremely deep
- Depth: Approximately 274 m (900 ft)
- Accessibility: Beyond standard technical diving; ROV only
- Preservation: Expected to be well-preserved in cold, deep, oxygen-poor water
- Legal Status: Unconfirmed; no formal site designation
Resources & Links
No known photographs of the Sheffield’s wreck exist, but comparable steel bulk freighters of the same era can be found in various collections.
