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RadioWest

The Tragic Tale of the Edmund Fitzgerald

RadioWest

KUER

Society & Culture

4.7772 Ratings

🗓️ 4 February 2026

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

As big freighters go, the Edmund Fitzgerald was the biggest, the best and the most profitable ship on the Great Lakes. Then, on Nov. 10, 1975, facing gale-force winds and 50-foot waves, the ship sank, taking all 29 men aboard her down into the icy depths of Lake Superior.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Support for the Radio West podcast comes from Harmon's Grocery, committed to excellent service and friendly smiles.

0:06.6

Your food is our passion.

0:12.2

Of course, there were shipwrecks on the Great Lakes before the freighter Edmund Fitzgerald went down with

0:22.2

their 29-man crew in Lake Superior during a massive storm in 1975. In fact, the writer John Bacon says

0:29.3

in a new book that in the hundred years before 75, at least 6,000 ships went down. Bacon says the lakes are different.

0:39.0

They can be more dangerous than the ocean.

0:41.3

The waves are more ragged.

0:42.6

They're steeper.

0:43.5

They're shoals and submerged ridges.

0:46.6

And the weather on the lakes can be more erratic than almost anywhere.

0:51.3

The singer Gordon Lightfoot had it right in his ballad. The lake never gives up her dead

0:56.7

when the Gales of November come early. So yes, there were other shipwrecks on the lakes.

1:02.1

But Bacon tells us it's because of that song, that of the thousands that went down,

1:08.6

it's the Edmund Fitzgerald, people remember.

1:12.4

What's amazing about that song is it's very unlikely creation and it's very unlikely success.

1:19.2

He's working on the song that night the ship goes down. November 10th, 1975, he's in his attic in

1:26.0

Toronto, working on an old Irish sea shanty that he first heard when he's three and a half years old.

1:31.5

But he's got no words.

1:33.9

And as the wind is howling in Toronto past his attic office, he says to himself, man, it must be hell on Lake Superior tonight.

1:43.9

This guy's an experienced sailor. He's been in Lake Superior

1:46.3

many times. That

1:48.1

bond he somehow got with these sailors

...

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