Service History
                    
                    The 
A.L. Hopkins, also known as the 
Amos L. Hopkins, was built and launched as a package freighter in Marine City, Michigan in 1880. Its engine reportedly came from the steamer 
Merchant, which wrecked in Racine in 1975. The 
Hopkins was converted as a bulk freighter at the American Ship Building Company in Cleveland, Ohio in 1910. The bottom of the hull was recaulked in 1887.                
                    Final Voyage
                    
                    At about 11 pm, October 2, 1911, the lumbersteamer 
A.L. Hopkins, bound from Bayfield, Wisconsin, with a cargo of lumber loaded at the Wachsmuth docks, ran into "heavy seas and a squall," which nearly capsized the small steamer and left it waterlogged. After losing part of its deck load and a seaman overboard, the crew of the 
Hopkins attempted to abandon their vessel, only to have the lifeboat washed away with only one man aboard it. Later, both the man in the lifeboat and the seaman who had washed overboard were able to reboard the 
Hopkins. With the rest of the crew, they were rescued by the ore carrier 
Dinkey on October 3, 1911, when the 
Hopkins was about 15 miles north-east of Michigan Island in the Apostle Islands.  Although partially submerged, the 
Hopkins did not sink immediately and was blown about Lake Superior for two weeks, being last sighted by the steamer 
William F. Corey on Oct. 17, 1911 about 50 miles east of Michigan Island.                
                    Today
                    
                    The 
A.L. Hopkins wreckage lies east of Michigan Island, at the bottom of Lake Superior.