Was Gordon Lightfoot’s song about the Edmund Fitzgerald accurate?
The Edmund Fitzgerald was a Great Lakes bulk carrier that went down in 1975. (Photo: Bob Campbell/Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum)
The Edmund Fitzgerald was a Great Lakes bulk carrier that went down in 1975. (Photo: Bob Campbell/Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum)

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In the wake of the death of musician Gordon Lightfoot and his famous folk song, “The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald,” FreightWaves Classics is taking a look back at the wreck itself and the historical accuracy of the song.

“The ship was the pride of the American side/ Coming back from some mill in Wisconsin/ As the big freighters go, it was bigger than most/ With a crew and good captain well seasoned/ Concluding some terms with a couple of steel firms/ When they left fully loaded for Cleveland/ And later that night when the ship’s bell rang/ Could it be the north wind they’d been feelin’?”

The lyrics of Lightfoot’s song, which is almost an anthem in the Midwest, tell the story of a cargo ship lost during a storm on Lake Superior. The song was released in 1976 and made it into the top 40 charts fairly quickly.

That was a little odd, according to The New York Times. Typically, pop songs in the mid-1970s were relatively short and focused on love. “The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald” is a 6.5-minute tune about the sinking of a ship and is told with surprising historical accuracy.

FreightWaves Classics covered the famous story of Casey Jones and its appearances in pop culture over the years, most notably a song by the Grateful Dead. However, references to the story in entertainment were often quite different from the man himself and what actually happened.

Lightfoot did not make the same mistake with his tribute to the tragic incident on Lake Superior.

The song was published a year after the tragedy and its lyrics hold true to the real story. The artist was inspired by an article he had read on the sinking of the ship. Family members of the lost crew told S.S. Edmund Fitzgerald Online that Lightfoot often attended memorial services for the ship and crew members and described him as “a good guy,” “a genuine man” and “blessed.”

The Edmund Fitzgerald is memorialized in Gordon Lightfoot’s song of the same name. (Photo: Bob Campbell/Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum)
The Edmund Fitzgerald is memorialized in Gordon Lightfoot’s song of the same name. (Photo: Bob Campbell/Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum)

As for the tragedy itself, the Edmund Fitzgerald set sail on Nov. 9, 1975, with 26,116 tons of taconite pellets of processed iron ore and 29 crew members. It launched from Burlington Northern Railroad Dock No.1 in Superior, Wisconsin, and joined up with another ship, the Arthur M. Anderson, which had departed Two Harbors, Minnesota.

Overseen by the experienced Capt. Ernest M. McSorley, the Edmund Fitzgerald took the lead only 10 to 15 miles from its partner, maintaining radio communication. McSorley and Capt. Bernie Cooper of the Anderson opted to sail toward the north of Lake Superior due to a growing November storm. The thought was that the path would keep both ships protected between Isle Royale and the Keweenaw Peninsula, according to the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum.