Copyright USGenNet Inc., 2012, All Rights Reserved U.S. Data Repository Please read U.S. Data Repository Copyright Statement on this page: Transcribed and submitted by Linda Talbott for the US Data Repository http://www.us-data.org/ ========================================================================= U.S. Data Repository NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization. Non-commercial organizations desiring to use this material must obtain the consent of the transcriber prior to use. Individuals desiring to use this material in their own research may do so. ========================================================================= Formatted by U.S. Data Repository Chief Archivist, Linda Talbott All of the above information must remain when copied or downloaded. =========================================================================== HURON MYSTERY IS SOLVED --------------- Ship Capsized in Sunday's Storm the Charles S. Price --------------- Port Huron, Mich., November 15 - One of the strangest mysteries in connection with the destruction of vessels and men on the Great Lakes by last Sunday's storm was solved this afternoon when William Baker, a diver, identified the overturned vessel in Lake Huron, thirteen miles northeast of this port, as the Charles S. Price of Cleveland. The Price, a steamer 504 feet long, has been lying in the lake ever since the storm, with only a few feet of the bottom of her bow above water. She is said to have carried a crew of twenty-eight. All of them must have been lost. The establishment of the identity of the mystery ship makes it certain that the boats claimed by the big blow on Lake Huron were the John A. McGean, Charles S. Price, James S. Carruthers, Regina, Wexford, Argus, Hydrus and Isaac M. Scott, involving a death loss of approximately 195. Besides this startling total, the storm took the Leafield, William Nottingham, Henry B. Smith, Plymouth and Lightship No. 82, and in the neighborhood of sixty- one lives on Lake Superior, Lake Michi- gan and Lake Erie. =========================================================================== SOURCE: The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, New York Sunday, November 16, 1913