Pilot Island Site
Ellison Bay, United States
<br> <i><b>J.E. Gilmore</b></i> · Type: wooden schooner · Built: 1867, Asa Wilcox, · Three Mile Bay, N.Y. · Length: 137.7' · Beam: 25.4' · Propulsion: sail, 2 masted. <br><br> <i><b>Forest</b></i> · Type: wooden scow-schooner · Built: 1857, David Lester, · Newport, Mich. / rebuilt 1880 · Length: 87.5' / rebuilt 115.6' · Beam: 22.25' / rebuilt 23' · Propulsion: sail, 2 masted / rebuilt 3 masted. <br><br> <i><b>A.P. Nichols</b></i> · Type: wooden schooner · Built: 1861, Bailey Brothers, · Madison Dock, Ohio · Length: 145' · Beam: 30' · Propulsion: sail, 3 masted. <br><br> Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992<br> Depth: 20 ~ 50'<br> Location: <small>NW</small> side of Pilot Island, a seasonal mooring buoy marks the site. <br><br> <b>O</b>n the night of Oct. 28, 1891, the <i>Forest</i> entered Death's Door en route from Chicago to Nahma, Mich. A gale struck and drove the schooner onto the reef at Pilot Island. The next day, the crew of five rowed to shore and took refuge at the lighthouse. The following fall the dangerous passage wrecked two more ships at the same spot. On Oct. 17, the <i>Gilmore</i>, sailing from Chicago to Elk Rapids, Mich., entered the passage in heavy, shifting winds and was blown onto the reef. The crew waited out the storm on board. On Oct. 28, fierce winds and blinding snow struck the <i>Nichols</i> on its way from Chicago to Escanaba, Mich. The storm tore apart the <i>Nichols'</i> rigging and drove her onto the rocks near the <i>Gilmore</i> and <i>Forest</i>. In a daring rescue, the lighthouse crew helped the sailors leap from the rolling <i>Nichols</i> onto the icy deck of the <i>Forest</i> to reach Pilot Island. <br><br> The wrath of Death's Door battered the three stranded schooners for several years, scattering pieces in all directions. The tangled wreckage now allows divers to visit three victims of Death's Door in a single dive. <br><br> <small>Through the Maritime Trails, the Wisconsin Historical Society and Wisconsin Sea Grant are working with local communities to preserve our maritime heritage. To learn more, visit www.maririmetrails.org.</small>