While I and my two friends were up at Tahquamenon Falls State Park, we headed north a few miles to the end of the road at Whitefish Point. This point is the Graveyard of the Great Lakes. There have been more shipwrecks here than anywhere else on the Great Lakes. It is the entrance to Whiefish Bay and the St. Mary's River and was where the Edmund Fitzgerals was attemping to get to on the night it sank.
The current lightower is now automated and is still in use. There has been a light at this point for 150 years. If you happen to be up there on a foggy day, you will be treated to the mournful sound of the foghorn sending out it's warning to those on the big lake.
The keepers house and the area surrounding the light are now part of the Great Lake shipwreck Museum. If you have been interested in Maritime History or just want to learn about the Great Lakes and the ships that sail them, sometimes never to be seen again, stop and see this museum.
The light station
The point. As you can see by the debris, it is indeed a treacherous place and extremely dangerous in a violent Lake Superor storm. There is a saying about Lake Superior in that she never gives up her dead.
The point is also a Bird Sanctuary and is a must stop for those who are avid birders. Here is a link to more information on the area
http://www.exploringthenorth.com/whitef ... efish.html