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Home Local News Veteran AP Journalist Played a Key Role in Preserving the Legacy of the Edmund Fitzgerald Shipwreck

Veteran AP Journalist Played a Key Role in Preserving the Legacy of the Edmund Fitzgerald Shipwreck

Retired AP reporter helped cement the legend of the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald
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Published on 09 November 2025
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LANSING, Mich. – On November 10, 1975, when the notorious storm hit, Associated Press journalist Harry Atkins was miles away from Lake Superior. However, his reporting the next day on the tragic sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald played a key role in cementing its place in history.

Atkins, now 86, was stationed in Detroit at the time and was dispatched to Michigan’s Upper Peninsula to cover the disaster. The Edmund Fitzgerald, a freighter carrying iron ore from Wisconsin to Zug Island near Detroit, was caught in a fierce storm, resulting in the loss of all 29 crew members. The true cause of the shipwreck remains a mystery to this day.

Marking the last significant shipwreck on the Great Lakes, the tragedy spurred technological advancements in maritime safety. The Edmund Fitzgerald’s story, immortalized by Gordon Lightfoot’s haunting folk song, continues to resonate, making it one of the Great Lakes’ most famous maritime disasters.

Inspired after reading Atkins’ detailed coverage and a subsequent Newsweek article from November 24, 1975, Lightfoot released his poignant tribute to the Fitzgerald in August 1976, just months after the calamity.

As the 50th anniversary of the wreck approaches, family members and maritime enthusiasts plan to gather on Monday to pay their respects. In a recent interview with the Associated Press, Atkins, reflecting on that day, shared his vivid recollections of the events surrounding the ill-fated voyage.

How did you first hear about the wreck?

Atkins, who now resides in Savannah, Georgia, said he was working on the AP Detroit broadcast desk when the bureau heard something was wrong. A Whitefish Bay resident that Atkins described as an “old hermit” was listening to radio communications from ships on the water and called radio stations to relay what he heard.

“He could figure out that the Fitzgerald was not doing well,” Atkins said.

The last message ever heard from the Fitzgerald was sent to the Arthur Anderson, a vessel nearby. “We are holding our own,” the Fitzgerald’s captain said.

Atkins said he worked up a quick story about how the ship was in trouble and then drove overnight to Sault Ste. Marie, about 347 miles (559 kilometers) north of Detroit. He set up shop at the Sault Ste. Marie Evening News, a newspaper that had relayed the message from the radio eavesdropper to Detroit.

“I got the Yellow Pages,” Atkins said, “and started looking for an airplane.”

What did you see over Whitefish Bay?

Atkins said he found a retired Navy pilot with a four-seat aircraft “with the wings above the cockpit instead of below,” to fly him and a photographer out over nearby Whitefish Bay. When they arrived at the Canadian side of the lake, Atkins said he could see two two freighters, two Coast Guard boats and one other vessel pointed at each other “like the Chrysler star.”

“So we had to figure the Fitzgerald’s down there in the middle of where all those boats were pointed,” Atkins recounted.

From the skies, Atkins said, he saw a lifeboat and vest. But no bodies of the crew were ever recovered.

To this day the Fitzgerald remains beneath 535 feet (165 meters) of water, about 17 miles (27 kilometers) north-northwest of Whitefish Point, Michigan. The wreck is protected as a gravesite under Canadian law.

Once on land, Atkins called his colleagues in Detroit to relay his draft that spread the news. He wrote in his “lede,” the first paragraph of his story: “Rescuers searched Lake Superior’s chilly waters Tuesday for the 29-member crew of the sunken ore-carrier Edmund Fitzgerald but found only an oil slick, empty lifeboats and life jackets.”

When did you know the ship had become a legend?

Atkins went on to be a longtime sports journalist for the AP in Michigan. He heard Lightfoot’s song from time to time.

“It’s a haunting ballad,” Atkins said, his voice thick with emotion. “I get choked up every time.”

But he didn’t realize just how infamous the disaster was until 25 years later, when he first saw news coverage of the anniversary.

“To think that 29 guys were alive yesterday and dead today,” Atkins said. “I cared a lot about what I was writing.”

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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