Carl D. Bradley was built to meet Michigan Limestone's lucrative contract with a cement firm in Gary, Indiana. SS Carl D. Bradley was an American self-unloading Great Lakes freighter that sank in a Lake Michigan storm on November 18, 1958. She did go down. (Manistique, MI) Square pyramidal lighthouse first lit in 1916. 'Manistique On The Harbor' is a unique waterfront tasting room. She was in dry dock in Chicago for seven days in May 1957 for major repairs to her hull. Contains: Admitting, Cafeteria, Center for Healthy Aging, Conference Room A, Conference Room C, CT Scan, EEG, File Room, Gift Shop, Home Health, Kitchen, Library, Lobby, Maintenance Shops, Medical Records, MRI, PAT, Pharmacy, Purchasing, Radiology, SPD, Special Procedures Unit, Ultrasound, Volunteer Office, X-Ray, Contains:Admin. Death record, obituary, funeral notice and information about the deceased person. It was restored and unveiled in a ceremony held on the weekend of the 49th anniversary of the Bradley sinking. S. Bradley Kreider, 59, of Lancaster, passed away on Sunday, February 26, 2023 unexpectedly at home. The first mate turned aft and saw the stern of the vessel sagging. Discover your ancestors burial place. Remembering the S.S. Carl D. Bradley - 58 years later (Hiawatha National Forest) This 2 mile long loop trail meanders along the edge of Colwell Lake and is surfaced to be fully accessible to people with mobility impairments. [52], After the ice broke up in the spring of 1959, the United States Army Corps of Engineers located Carl D. Bradley's wreck using sonar equipment aboard MS Williams. Home Activity About Blog Funeral Services for Carl D. Bradley, age 72 of Whitehouse will be 10:30am Friday at Tyler Memorial Funeral Home with Bro. At approximately 5:30 p.m., a loud thud was heard aboard the ship. The two survivors said that they fired two of the three signal flares stored on the life raft not long after Carl D. Bradley sank. A commissioner was appointed to determine how the settlement money would be divided among the families. It was restored and unveiled in a ceremony held on the weekend of the 49th anniversary of the sinking. It used author Andrew Kantar's book, Black November, as a major source and focused on the repercussions on the small community of Rogers City after the Bradley sank. Right at first light onto route 120 (Meriden Ave.). [49] Another crew member from Carl D. Bradley, Deck Watchman Gary Strzelecki, was also found alive, but died not long after being rescued. He decided he was going to work a year or so. [30] However, there is evidence that regardless of his reputation, Bryan likely had his doubts concerning how well the 31-year-old vessel could manage in rough seas. A very high degree of technical skill and long decompression are required to dive this wreck. The ship went down during a brutal storm on Lake Michigan enroute to its homeport of Rogers City on November 18, 1958. On December 7, 1941, Carl Bradley was killed at Pearl Harbor while serving as a fireman in the boiler room area of the USS Oklahoma Battleship, as the Japanese Naval Air Service struck the ship with nine torpedoes.