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Michigan town rebrands itself as shipwreck capital of the Great Lakes

The Shamrock was a steam barge that sank in 1905.
NOAA
The Shamrock was a steam barge that sank in 1905.

Wedged between Fletcher Street and the waterfront is a long row of warehouses. They used to be a paper mill, but these days they are home to Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary.

Inside one of the buildings is a little visitor’s center, with art and artifacts and interactive games that broadcast old sailors' songs to kids playing pirates. But the main attraction is offshore. Hundreds of shipwrecks lie at the bottom of this part of Lake Huron.

Down inside the glass bottom charter boat the Lady Michigan, passengers explore shallow wrecks through clear panes lining the hull.

Passengers of the Lady Michigan look down through its glass bottom in hopes of spotting one of the area’s many shipwrecks.
Credit Veronica Volk
Passengers of the Lady Michigan look down through its glass bottom in hopes of spotting one of the area’s many shipwrecks.

Brandy Kozlowski squints into the sunken, splintered deck of the Shamrock -- a wooden steam barge that sank in 1905. She grew up here, but left Michigan years ago to find a job. Back visiting family, she says the place has changed a lot.

"The marine sanctuary, it’s all brand new, everything on that side of town is new. It’s good for the area. It really needs a boost in the arm."

This area has collected shipwrecks for centuries, with the help of heavy shipping traffic, shallow water, and the storms that give Thunder Bay its name. But tourism has grown since Alpena was designated the first – and so far only – fresh water national marine sanctuary by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

At Thunder Bay Scuba, Joe Sobczak gets most of his business from tourists. But he used to work in the shipping industry, and isn’t sure tourism jobs are enough to keep people, especially young people, from moving away.

"They aren't the same as a blue-collar industrial job. You don't have the benefits; you don't have the pay scale."

Still, Sobczak thinks it’s the best way to move Alpena forward, and not just for dive shops and charter boats. Downtown is full of shops that have adopted the shipwreck theme. Visitors can buy a maritime blend coffee or a sundae named after a wreck, and new businesses are coming in – including the first waterfront hotel on Thunder Bay River.

The success of Alpena’s rebranding has other communities along the Great Lakes applying for similar national marine sanctuary status from the federal government.

Veronica Volk is a senior editor and producer for WXXI News.