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Michigan Marvels: The ghosts of the Davidson Shipyard

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Michigan Marvels: The ghosts of the Davidson Shipyard


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Bay City — If you take a stroll through Bay City’s Veterans Memorial Park along the shores of the Saginaw River, you might see the ghosts of ships from more than a hundred years ago.

You could even be standing right on top of one of them.  A shipyard that once laboriously produced wooden ships stood on the site of the park.

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“The shipyard literally sits under us,” said Don Comtois, a historian with the Saginaw River Marine Historical Society.  

Before the hulking shapes of the ships were lost to history, there was Capt. James Davidson, who started the Davidson Shipyard in 1873. By 1900, he was building some of the largest wooden ships ever made, according to a 1995 report by the State Historical Society of Wisconsin’s State Underwater Archeology Program.

Davidson, who was born in Buffalo in 1841, spent his 20s learning about the shipping business while working on cargo ships that moved between New York and England. By 1870, he began to build ships at sites including Toledo and Saginaw, before settling on a site in West Bay City (before the city was absorbed by Bay City in 1905).

Almost a thousand men worked on the ships in the heyday of the early 1890s, said Comtois.

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The ships were built by hand. There was no automation except in the saw mills, and builders could turn out eight to 10 ships in a season. 

“It would take approximately 28 acres of oak trees to build one of those big wooden boats,” said Comtois. 

Even after other shipyards began to build steel hulled ships, Davidson kept building wooden ones. 

“He had a love for it, I think. Like a guy who collects only ’57 Chevys. Why does he do that? He has a love for it and he has a passion. I think Captain Davidson had that passion for the wooden ships. There were still people buying them, so he kept on building them.”

In its 30 years, the yard built dozens of wooden ships, with names like Oceania, Montezuma, and Wahnapitae. The last one launched in 1903. 

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Davidson died in 1929 and the yard was abandoned. Several ships, like the Sacramento, sat, rotting for decades. 

“When they covered this yard over, the Sacramento was covered over,” said Comtois.

“She sat here in this yard and over the years she gradually burned to the water’s edge in the slip where she was launched,” said Comtois. “She sat there and over the years, it just fell apart. In 1976 she was completely taken apart.”

Visitors to Veterans Memorial Park can see a piece of the Sacramento on display. The rudder from the 300-foot ship sits in the middle of the park, not far from the volleyball courts where the hull is buried.

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“We’re literally standing on history,” said Comtois.

Many other vessels built by Davidson sitting abandoned in the river eventually burned to the waterline. When the water is low on the Saginaw River, you can see the hulls of several big wooden freighters. One of the easiest to spot is the Shenandoah, with her two boilers peeking out of the top of the water.  Built in 1894, the 320-foot wood steamer eventually was abandoned in 1924 after a life of hauling various cargo on the Great Lakes. 

“What we see here is history that will never happen again,” said Comtois.

dguralnick@detroitnews.com

Twitter: @davidguralnick

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Instagram: @groovnick



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Driver swerves to avoid oncoming traffic, dies after crashing into tree in Texas Twp

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Driver swerves to avoid oncoming traffic, dies after crashing into tree in Texas Twp


A 20-year-old Kalamazoo man is dead after crashing his vehicle into a tree Friday evening in Texas Township, according to Michigan State Police (MSP).

It happened on South 3rd Street and West PQ Avenue around 6:50 p.m., troopers said.

While he was driving in a no-passing zone, the Kalamazoo man swerved off the road to avoid an oncoming vehicle and subsequently crashed into the tree, according to MSP.

The 20-year-old died at the scene. A passenger was hurt, but police said their injuries were non-life threatening.

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Troopers do not believe alcohol or drugs were a factor, and the two were reportedly wearing seatbelts.

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This incident remains under investigation by MSP.



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Michigan man pleads guilty to using fake Social Security cards in $550K fraud scheme

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Michigan man pleads guilty to using fake Social Security cards in 0K fraud scheme



A Southfield man has pleaded guilty to illegally possessing driver’s licenses, Social Security cards and equipment to create fake documents, federal prosecutors said. 

Jerome Antwan Andrews, 41, pleaded guilty Thursday to possessing the driver’s license information and Social Security numbers of more than 250 people in a scheme that caused more than $550,000 in fraud losses, U.S. Attorney Jerome Gorgon Jr. said. 

As part of his plea agreement, prosecutors say Andrews admitted to having an embosser, a laminator, a card cutter and an ID card printer and admitted that his business model was aimed at creating and selling fake Social Security cards and driver’s licenses in the names of real people.

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“Jerome Antwan Andrews and his criminal associates stole more than $1.5 million by submitting hundreds of fraudulent claims to a pandemic program intended to help unemployed American workers. Today’s conviction of Andrews represents yet another attack in our war against fraud. It sends a stern warning that my office will relentlessly investigate those bad actors greedily lining their pockets with U.S. taxpayer funds,” said Anthony P. D’Esposito, Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Labor, Office of Inspector General.

Andrews faces up to 15 years in prison and a $250,000 fine or twice the pecuniary gain or loss, according to prosecutors. He will be sentenced at a later date. 

Homeland Security Investigations and the U.S. Department of Labor investigated Andrews’ case. 



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Northern Michigan lake drained after dam failure in Alcona County

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Northern Michigan lake drained after dam failure in Alcona County


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Barton City — This week’s flooding across northern Michigan is being blamed for the collapse of a privately owned dam in Alcona County, washing away the small lake that the structure held back.

Buck’s Pond was reduced to mud this week after its privately owned dam failed, destroying the gravel road over the 94-year-old dam structure.

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The dam burst around 8 p.m. Monday, sending all of the water in Buck’s Pond north through Comstock Creek to Hubbard Lake, a large recreational boating lake in Alcona County that’s ringed by summer cottages and year-round homes, said James Plohg, who owns property on the lake.

“As it was rising, it started like just washing little parts of it away,” Plohg told The Detroit News on Thursday. “And then it just got so big that it wasn’t able to contain it. And it just opened up.”

The Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy classifies the Buck’s Pond Dam as a low-hazard dam because its rupture has little downstream impact on other water infrastructure and property.

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Lakes in the Green Association, a local homeowners group, owned the dam, according to state records.

It was last inspected in August 2017, according to records in the Michigan Dam Inventory, the state’s catalog of data on the ownership, age and condition of 2,552 dams scattered across Michigan’s Lower and Upper peninsulas.

State records indicate the dam was in “satisfactory” condition, able to withstand a 100-year flood and that it “meets applicable tolerable risk criteria.”

Plohg said the demise of the Buck’s Pond Dam will leave a hole in his and his neighbors’ remote corner of rural Alcona County, located between Oscoda and Alpena.

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Plohg said he’s been in contact with state lawmakers who represent Alcona County, hoping they could secure state funding to rebuild the dam — and restore Buck’s Pond.

“It was beautiful,” Plohg told The News. “I mean, people come here to fish. There’s the beach over there. Little kids came to swim, picnics, meetings, a lot of boats, pontoons go around the island. We had (boat) parades on the lake. It’s not much of nothing right now.”

“This doesn’t describe how nice it used to be,” Plohg added.

clivengood@detroitnews.com

DavidG@detroitnews.com

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