Service History
The wooden steamer
Alice E. Wilds was considered a first-class lumber carrier. It was built by John Oades enrolled at Detroit, Michigan, on June 14, 1883. It had one mast and a high-pressure engine from Dry Dock Engine Works in Detroit. In 1892, ownership was transferred to Barney Wilds of Detroit. Throughout its service, the
Alice E. Wilds was also chartered for the ice trade. The vessel was only in operation for under ten years before its demise.
Final Voyage
On June 12, 1892, the steamer
Alice E. Wilds was struck by the small passenger steamer
Douglas, which was bound from Milwaukee to Muskegon, Michigan. The
Douglas had twenty people on board at the time of the incident. Despite the fact that there was a heavy fog at the time the collision occurred, both vessels were traveling at a high speed. The lookouts of neither steamer saw the approaching danger until the vessels were within a few rods of each other, when it was too late to avert the collision. Although the
Wilds sank extremely rapidly, no lives were lost. It went down in over 300 feet of water, and therefore could not be recovered. The crew was rescued by the
Douglas who made it back to port despite its stem being badly damaged. The
Wilds was traveling light at the time of the collision, bound for Escanaba, Michigan, from Chicago. One source says it had a cargo of coal. The final enrollment document was surrendered at Detroit on June 20, listed as a total loss of vessel.
The
Chicago Daily Inter-Ocean reported on October 19, 1892: "The action of the Milwaukee Steamboat Inspectors in revoking the licenses of Captain Barney Wilds, of the
A.E. Wilds and C.B. Coates, of the steamer
Douglas was generally approved by marine men. The two boats were in collision off Milwaukee, and the
Wilds went to the bottom. The testimony showed that both boats were running at full speed, and although they sighted each other twenty minutes before the crash, neither changed course. Not even a whistle was sounded."
Today
The wreck of the
Alice E. Wilds was reportedly relocated in 1996. However, it was definitively identified in June of 2015. Diver Jitka Hanakova investigated the intended transport route and reported location of the
Alice E. Wilds's collision and visited the wreck that summer. It sits upright eighteen miles off of Milwaukee, in over 300 feet of water. Further archaeological investigation must be conducted to determine the current location and condition of the
Alice E. Wilds.