The Adella Shores left her home dock in Ashland with a load of lumber in April 1909. She was never seen or heard from again.
Many Great Lakes sailors claim that Lake Superior is home to a “Ghost Fleet” of ships that have vanished without a trace between Duluth and Sault Ste. Marie. The Adella Shores, the Bannockburn, and the Hudson are among the ships that make up the “Ghost Fleet”.
The Adella Shores was built in Gibraltar, Michigan, and towed to Ashland, Wisconsin, before she was finalized for Ashland mill owner Walter Shores, a leading supporter of the Wisconsin temperance movement. The fate of the lumber hooker Adella Shores was determined when she was launched, according to some who believe in superstitions. The Adella Shores had a storied career. Built in Gibraltar, Michigan in 1894 the 195-foot, 735-ton wooden steamer was owned by the Shores Lumber Company and named after the owner’s daughter, Adella. Adella’s sister, Bessie, christened the new ship with a bottle of water (not champagne or wine) as the family was strict about alcohol consumption. Old time sailors might have seen that as a bad luck omen.
The Adella Shores had her share of trouble…she sank twice in fifteen years in shallow waters, later being refloated each time and put back into service.
On April 29th, 1909, the Adella Shores was upbound for Duluth with a load of salt. The Shores was following the larger steel steamship, Daniel J. Morrell, through a thick ice flow, with the Morrell plowing a path through the ice as they went. As both ships rounded Whitefish Point, they were met by a fierce northeast gale. The Shores was already two miles behind and out of sight of the Morrell. The Adella Shores was never seen again, disappearing with all fourteen crew members. Some debris was found, but no bodies. Captain Millen of the Morrell thinks the smaller Shores might have struck a large ice flow, puncturing her hull, and quickly sank.
In the summer of 2021 GLSHS Director of Marine Operations, Darryl Ertel and his brother Dan were out running grids towing the society’s Marine Sonic Technology side-scan sonar system when they found a target. “I pretty much knew that had to be the Adella Shores when I measured the length of it, because there were no other ships out there missing in that size range”, said Ertel. “As soon as I put the ROV down on it for the first time, I could see the design of the ship and I could match it right up to the Adella Shores”.
“Not only is she a member of the “Went Missing” club… those ships on the Great Lakes that disappeared with all hands… decades later, to be discovered. She still tells a very poignant and fascinating story”, reflected maritime historian and author of “Went Missing”, Fred Stonehouse. “The folks that are out there actively hunting for shipwrecks like the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society are helping to answer that story. And they keep looking for the ones that are not yet told and not yet found. For that, they deserve the highest commendation”.
Press Release: Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum (Summer 2021)