Courtesy: Edmund Fitzgerald Swim
(GRAND HAVEN, MI) To commemorate the 50th anniversary of the sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald , 68 open water swimmers will participate in a 17-stage, 411-mile relay swim, starting from above the shipwreck in Lake Superior, and finishing in Detroit, the ship’s intended destination. The swimmers aim to symbolically complete the Edmund Fitzgerald’s final journey as a tribute to the 29 crew members who perished.
The Edmund Fitzgerald Memorial Swim, is scheduled to begin on July 26, 2025, and will be the subject of a documentary film, entitled The Legend Lives On.
The 729-foot S.S. Edmund Fitzgerald was bound for Detroit carrying over 26,000 long tons of iron ore when the ship went down in a violent Lake Superior storm on November 10, 1975, taking the lives of all 29 crew members aboard. The ship lies in Canadian waters, 17 miles north-northwest of Whitefish Point, Michigan.
Over the course of more than a month, 17 teams of 4 relay swimmers endeavor to cover the distance of 411 miles to deliver iron ore pellets to Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan. The pellets are from the same dock in Superior, Wisconsin, where the ship was loaded for the last time.
The event is being organized by Jim Dreyer, who has himself swam across all five Great Lakes.
“This special group of swimmers are dedicated to meeting the physical challenge of making it to Detroit for the 29 souls lost on the Edmund Fitzgerald while they were en route to Detroit 50 years ago,” Dreyer said. “This team is driven by a dual mission to preserve the memory of those who died while also preserving the Whitefish Point Light Station to safeguard mariners of today and tomorrow. To date, we have raised over $187,000 toward our mission.”
The Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society is the event’s official beneficiary and is charged with preserving the civil war era lighthouse, a most important beacon to all ships entering and exiting Lake Superior.
Brian VanderHoff, of Kalamazoo, Michigan, is swimming stage 10 from Sturgeon Point to Au Sable in Lake Huron, and was the event’s top fundraiser, raising nearly $9,000.
“The Edmund Fitzgerald Memorial Swim is important to me because it commemorates the 29 lives lost in 1975 in Lake Superior, VanderHoff said. “Although I was young at the time, I learned about the wreck listening to Gordon Lightfoot’s song ‘The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald’ throughout my life. I thought raising funds for the Whitefish Point Lighthouse as part of the swim was a great way to give back to the community as well as Michigan history.”
Tammy Lenarz-Carruth, a swimmer from Montevideo, Minnesota, has developed a special bond with family members of Paul M. Riippa, an Edmund Fitzgerald deck hand from Ashtabula, Ohio, who was a college football player and just 22 when the ship went down.
“I feel very honored to swim in memory of Paul Riippa who was just starting his life when he died on the Edmund Fitzgerald,” said Lenarz-Carruth.
“Being able to communicate with the Riippa family has been very meaningful and real to me. It has been heartwarming to learn about what kind of person Paul was and what his life was like in 1975. Paul’s older sister, Elaine Sespico, describes him as a ‘fine, young, athletic, Christian man. He was honest, dependable, loving and intelligent.’
“Being able to swim in Paul’s memory has brought the Edmund Fitzgerald Memorial Swim even more to life than it already is … and there are 28 more lives with their own stories. Paul’s life was cut short but not forgotten. I will think of Paul, his 28 crewmates and the Riippa family as I swim with my team, in stage 2, crossing Whitefish Bay in Lake Superior.”
The first 4 relay swimmers starting at the wreck site are Joe Barr of Manistique, Michigan, Daniel Chaffin of Moorpark, California, and a father-daughter duo of Dennis Crumpler from Union Hall Virginia, and Cat Murdock, of Marquette, Michigan. This foursome will participate in a memorial ceremony above the wreck while a memorial service is held simultaneously for family members of the crew at Whitefish Point.
The 4 relay swimmers finishing the swim at the Detroit Yacht Club, include Michigan residents Maddie Diedo of Dearborn Heights and Melissa DeLuka of Westland. Tracie Baker of Newberry, Florida, and Barry Alper of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, complete the foursome that will deliver the iron ore carried by the team from Lake Superior.
The iron ore is planned to be presented to the Detroit Mayor during the Mariners’ Memorial Service at the Mariners’ Church of Detroit on August 28th, the day after the swim is completed. In the service, the church bell will be rung 29 times for each crew member of the Edmund Fitzgerald, just as it was 50 years ago and as described in Gordon Lightfoot’s Grammy-nominated song.
The Reverend Todd Meyer, Pastor of the Mariners Church, will officiate both memorial services.
“The history of Mariners’ Church is forever intertwined with the story of the Edmund Fitzgerald,” said Rev. Meyer. “We are honored to offer a spiritual perspective at both the start and finish of this endurance swim. These memorial services will serve as meaningful bookends to an epic tribute—honoring not only the Fitzgerald’s crew, but all sailors lost throughout the maritime history of the Great Lakes.”
Dreyer says there may still be opportunities for others to join in the swim.
“I am truly honored to be directing this historic and meaningful event, Dreyer said. “I would like to invite others who would be honored to swim to join our waitlist. You never know what might happen and we could call on you.”
To learn more about the Edmund Fitzgerald Memorial Swim and to donate in support of the lighthouse preservation, please log on to Edmund Fitzgerald Memorial Swim | historic journey.

The article is indeed correct- the iron ore was headed to Zug Island near Detroit.
Your article is not correct. It was headed for Cleveland, not Detroit. It was gonna go thru Detroit but ultimate destination was Cleveland
I was 14 yrs old when my father and his grandfather drove from Jackson Michigan to Sault Saint Matie in November of 1975
We were on a trip to see the log house my great grandfather was born in 1883. It wad located 14 miles south of the soo. After seeing the abandon house we spent the night at my dad’s uncles house along the river. It was getting dark . As we were standing on the bank my dad’s uncle said this ship comming up is his favorite. The ship sat high out of the water empty. The river was narrow and we could see the lights and waved at the men on deck ad the Edmond Fitzgerald… Read more »
Gordon Lightfoot’s song made us all feel as though we had some sort of connection with the crew that was lost.
They’ll be plucked from the water by ice as suspected Canadians trying to sneak in.
Those wanting more info about the disaster might google ‘Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald by singer/songwriter Gordon Lightfoot. I’m sure it will be on YT.
the legend lives on from the Chippewa on down..
Humans are so adorable sometimes. I love things like this.
Jim Dreyer is an amazing swimmer. Looks like this event combines his open water skills of long distance swimming, endurance, and cold water.
Looks cool!
Interesting