Sinking of Michigan’s ‘Christmas Tree Ship': See the Wreckage
Beneath the icy waters of Lake Michigan lies a tragic tale of Christmas past - the Rouse Simmons, also known as The Christmas Tree Ship. Once a maritime workhorse, this schooner spent its final days ferrying trees from Northern Michigan to Chicago before being etched into the annals of Great Lakes maritime history.
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It was a particularly frosty December day in 1912, when the Rouse Simmons, set sail from Thompson, Michigan on a mission to bring the joy of Christmas to countless homes. Some reports claim there was an 8-foot stack of trees on the deck 123-foot-long schooner.
The Last Voyage of Lake Michigan's Christmas Tree Ship
The ship, already navigating through the rough conditions December holds for mariners on Lake Michigan, found itself now dealing with an emerging winter storm. With a deck and cargo hold full of evergreens, ice began to build up on the trees.
Last seen by the Kewaunee Life-Saving Station in Wisconsin, it is said that the Rouse Simmons was flying a distress flag. The Kewaunee station then telephoned the Two Rivers’ Life-Saving Station, 25 miles south, who promptly set sail, but the Christmas Tree Ship would not be seen afloat again.
The crew battled the elements, but eventually, it is thought that the Rouse Simmons was overtaken by a wave and sank with its crew and cargo of northern Michigan evergreens to the icy depths of Lake Michigan.
The Christmas Tree Ships Final Resting Place Under the Waves of Lake Michigan
It would be nearly 60 years after the 1912 sinking of the Rouse Simmons before the wreckage was found in 1971 about 12 miles northeast of Two Rivers, Wisconsin, under 165 feet of water. The collapsed deck reveals a cargo hold full of mostly needless Christmas Trees, but a select few have retained them.
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In the gallery below you'll see how sturdy the ship remains and get a close look at the ship's cargo hold.
The Christmas Tree Ship's Century-Long Rest in Lake Michigan
Gallery Credit: Scott Clow