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Sinking of the 'Marquette
and Bessemer'

Railway Art Forms and Events

Captain McLeod and the Marquette & Bessemer No 2

The Train car ferry Marquette & Bessemer No 2 was a large vessel, 350 feet long, which carried freight across Lake Erie from Conneaut, Ohio to Port Stanley.

On December 9, 1909 the ship left Ohio on a routine crossing. On board was a crew of thirty-six, including Captain Robert McLeod, with his brother John, first mate, as plus thirty rail cars loaded with coal and steel. Suddenly a vicious winter storm lashed the vessel with a seventy knot gale, huge waves and a blinding blizzard. The ferry’s distress signal was heard on the Canadian shore from Rondeau to Long Point, and much later on the American shore, but no one was able to come to its aid. The vessel simply disappeared, presumably swamped. Three days later, a lifeboat containing the frozen corpses of nine crew members was found about thirty kilometers off Conneaut. But despite sonar searches throughout the shallow lake, no further sign of The Marquette & Bessemer No. 2, has ever been found.