Shotline Diving

Connecting You to the Depths of the Great Lakes

Great Lakes Research Archive

Search the Shotline archive

Wreck Finder

Search thousands of wreck records by vessel name, region, official number, type, river, lake, or project. Browsing 5,000 records is the backup plan; search is the front door.

  • John A. Francomb (1889)

    Explore the submerged remains of the John A. Francomb, a historic three-masted schooner, located near Marine City in the St. Clair River.

    View wreck

  • Martha (1930)

    Explore the tragic story of the Martha, a wooden fish tug that capsized in a gale on Lake Michigan, resulting in the loss of all four crew members.

    View wreck

  • Tuscarora (1906)

    Explore the wreck of the Tuscarora, a wooden-hulled fish tug lost in a storm on Lake Michigan in 1933. Crew survived, but the vessel remains unlocated.

    View wreck

  • Tuscarora US 203453

    Explore the story of the Tuscarora, a gas-powered wooden fish tug lost in a storm in 1933, with no known remains today.

    View wreck

  • Eastnor C 126058 (Charles Lemcke, Henry Pedwell, Kagawong)

    Explore the wreck of the Eastnor, a wooden steamship lost to fire in 1933 while loading coal at Wiarton, Ontario.

    View wreck

  • Florance (1885)

    Explore the wreck of the Florence, a steam-powered tugboat that sank in 1933, now a site for divers interested in maritime history and underwater exploration.

    View wreck

  • T. S. Christie US 145402

    Explore the remains of the T. S. Christie, a wooden steambarge that succumbed to a storm in 1933, now a part of Great Lakes maritime history.

    View wreck

  • T.S. Christie (1885)

    Explore the wreck of the T.S. Christie, a wooden schooner lost in a blizzard on Lake Michigan in 1933.

    View wreck

  • E.M.B.A. (A.C. Tuxbury) US 106706

    Explore the wreck of the E.M.B.A., a converted schooner-barge scuttled in 1933, resting at 170 feet in Lake Michigan, offering a unique dive experience.

    View wreck

  • Manistique C 96860

    Explore the remains of the Manistique, a wooden screw steamer scuttled in Lake Huron in 1933, with a rich history of service and salvage operations.

    View wreck