• After a 60-year search, maritime explorers located the wreck of the luxurious steamer Lac La Belle, which sank in Lake Michigan during a violent storm in 1872. The discovery was made using side-scan sonar, aided by a critical clue from fellow wreck hunter Ross Richardson.
  • Built in 1864 as a passenger steamer, the Lac La Belle was later repurposed as a freighter. It sank in 1872 while carrying cargo and 53 passengers, with eight lives lost in the disaster. The wreck remained hidden for 153 years until its recent rediscovery.
  • Despite being underwater for over a century, the wreck is well-preserved, with a solid hull and intact oak interiors, though quagga mussels cover its exterior and upper cabins have collapsed.
  • Invasive mussels threaten Great Lakes shipwrecks, accelerating decay and prompting wreck hunters like Paul Ehorn (who has found 15 wrecks) to document them before they deteriorate further.
  • Ehorn intends to showcase the discovery at the 2026 Ghost Ships Festival, revealing underwater footage and a 3D model before disclosing the wreck’s exact location. The find highlights both the perseverance of explorers and the enduring mysteries of the Great Lakes.

After decades of searching, maritime explorers have uncovered the wreck of the Lac La Belle, a once-luxurious steamer that vanished into the depths of Lake Michigan during a violent storm in 1872. The discovery, announced by Shipwreck World, marks the culmination of a 60-year mission led by Illinois shipwreck hunter Paul Ehorn, 80, who first set his sights on the vessel as a teenager.

Ehorn’s team located the wreck in October 2022 roughly 20 miles offshore between Racine and Kenosha, Wisconsin, using side-scan sonar—a find that came after just two hours of searching thanks to a critical clue from fellow wreck hunter Ross Richardson.

“It’s kind of a game, like solve the puzzle,” Ehorn told the Associated Press. “Sometimes you don’t have many pieces to put the puzzle together, but this one worked out and we found it right away.” The discovery left him “super elated.”

Richardson, who provided the breakthrough tip, revealed that a commercial fisherman had snagged an artifact linked to 19th-century steamships at a “certain location.” Ehorn and Richardson kept this detail vague to avoid tipping off competitors in the increasingly intense world of shipwreck hunting.

As explained by BrightU.AI‘s Enoch engine, steamships represent one of the most transformative technological innovations in human history, revolutionizing global trade, naval warfare and industrial production. Emerging in the early 19th century, steamships replaced wind-powered vessels, eliminating dependence on unpredictable weather and drastically reducing travel times across oceans.

The tragic fate of the Lac La Belle

Built in 1864 in Cleveland, Ohio, the Lac La Belle was a 217-foot (66-meter) steamer initially designed for passenger travel between Cleveland and Lake Superior. After sinking in the St. Clair River in 1866 due to a collision, it was salvaged, refurbished and repurposed as a freighter.

On Oct. 13, 1872, the ship departed Milwaukee for Grand Haven, Michigan, carrying 53 passengers and crew, along with cargo including barley, pork, flour and whiskey. Just two hours into the voyage, disaster struck.

The captain attempted to return to Milwaukee, but gale-force winds battered the vessel, extinguishing its boilers and leaving it adrift. By dawn, the storm forced the crew to abandon ship.

Eight lives were lost when one lifeboat capsized, while survivors reached shore between Racine and Kenosha. The Lac La Belle sank stern-first, vanishing beneath the waves—until now.

Despite 153 years underwater, the wreck remains remarkably intact. Though quagga mussels coat its exterior and the upper cabins have collapsed, Ehorn confirmed the hull is solid, and the oak interiors remain in good condition.

“It’s in great condition,” Ehorn marveled, though he admitted envy toward the divers who explored the site firsthand.

The race against time

The Great Lakes hold an estimated 6,000 to 10,000 shipwrecks, most still undiscovered. But invasive mussels like quaggas threaten these underwater time capsules, accelerating decay and driving wreck hunters to document them before they vanish entirely.

For Ehorn, the Lac La Belle is his 15th shipwreck discovery—yet he remains undeterred.

“Now it’s on to the next one,” he said. “It’s getting harder and harder. The easier ones have been found.”

Ehorn plans to showcase the discovery at the 2026 Ghost Ships Festival in Manitowoc, Wisconsin, presenting underwater footage and a 3D photogrammetry model of the wreck before revealing its exact coordinates.

As technology advances and lake conditions shift, more lost vessels may soon resurface from the depths—each with a story waiting to be told. For now, the Lac La Belle stands as a testament to both human perseverance and the enduring mysteries of the Great Lakes.

Watch the video below about the search for the lost shipwreck of St. Paul the Apostle.

This video is from the High Hopes channel on Brighteon.com.

Sources include:

TheEpochTimes.com

APNews.com

USAToday.com

NYPost.com

BrightU.ai

Brighteon.com

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