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The Mataafa was one of the ships caught on Lake Superior during the storm of 1905. Duluth residents watched as the ship's drama played out only 700 feet from shore. (Hugh McKenzie, Lake Superior Maritime Collections, UW-Superior)

Remembering a fierce Great Lakes storm

by Cathy Wurzer, Minnesota Public Radio
November 27, 2008

In the fall of 1905, a powerful storm struck the Great Lakes, causing one of the most dramatic shipping disasters in the nation's history.

Dozens of ships were on Lake Superior making the season's last run when the storm hit. The stories from that night are harrowing -- stories of crew members freezing to death, and others who survived by dancing around bathtubs set ablaze.

The disaster was so extreme that, in its wake, Congress appropriated money for the now-famous Split Rock Lighthouse on Lake Superior.

Curt Brown tells the story in a new book, "So Terrible a Storm: A Tale of Fury on Lake Superior." Brown is a reporter at the Minneapolis Star Tribune, where he has worked for 20 years.

Morning Edition host Cathy Wurzer talked with Brown, who says the story first caught his attention when he was on a family trip up north.

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