Service History
The
Aetna was originally constructed as a two-masted schooner at Madison Dock, Ohio, by Bailey Bros. It was measured with a gross tonnage of 416 tons. It was enrolled in the same year in Cleveland to transport grain and corn across the Great Lakes. Then, in 1865, it was enrolled in Chicago and remeasured to a tonnage of 317 gross tons. The
Aetna went ashore on Thunder Bay Island in Lake Huron during June of 1866. It was involved in a collision with the schooner
Arrow on Lake Michigan in October of the same year; the collision resulted in the loss of the
Aetna's bowsprit.
In 1871 and 1873, the vessel received repairs including new decks. While wintering in Chicago over 1875 to 1876, the
Aetna was rebuilt as a three-masted schooner.
Final Voyage
At the time of its final voyage, Charles Class H. Meyer captained the
Aetna. The foundering of the ship was described by Captain Meyer in an article by the
Chicago Inter Ocean published on November 20, 1878. The crew onboard at the time included the captain, First Mate John Kroon, Cook James Halpin, and five seamen: John F. Mitchell, Amos Marshall, John Davis, Evan Reynolds, William Reaber. While crossing Lake Huron, loaded with coal, with schooners
S.H. Foster and
J.D. Sawyer, the
Aetna lost sight of the two other ships and proceeded to cross Saginaw Bay. During the night of October 15, 1878, the
Aetna had made it to Lake Michigan. Captain Meyer discovered four feet of water in the hold and quickly called for all hands to pump water out of the vessel. These efforts proved futile, as water continued to flood the
Aetna's decks.
Luckily, the
Aetna was in close proximity to another schooner
Fleetwing. Within minutes, the crew escaped the sinking ship onto the
Fleetwing. The
Aetna sunk within forty minutes, four miles west of South Fox Reef, in, reportedly, 480 to 570 feet of water. The cause for the leak is yet uncertain. Captain Meyer then reported that one crew member informed him, "when the
Aetna was between Skillagallee and the Beaver, he felt her scrape as if passing over a reef. She may have sustained damage at this time, but I don't know."
Today
The actual location and condition of the
Aetna have not yet been confirmed by field investigation.