SS Florida (1889)
SS Florida was a wooden-hulled Great Lakes freighter that served on the Great Lakes from her construction in 1889, to her sinking in May 1897 when she collided with the larger wooden hulled freighter George W. Roby. Her wreck was located in July 1994, in of water almost completely intact, save for her stern.
History
The Florida was built in 1889 by Robert Mills & Company in Buffalo, New York for Peter P. Miller of Buffalo, New York. At a length of in length, the Florida was one of the largest wooden ships ever built; her beam was wide, and her hull was deep. She had a gross tonnage of 2103.36 tons, and a net tonnage of 1834.65 tons. She had a cargo capacity of 2400 tons. She was powered by a 650-horsepower triple expansion steam engine that was built by H.G. Trout of Buffalo, New York, and had three cylinders that had a 32 & 52 × 45 inch bore, and a 20-inch stroke.She was launched on April 25, 1889.
On October 12, 1889, the Florida ran aground at Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, and was freed by the tugs Mystic and Swain after unloading several hundred tons of coal. In 1890, she was chartered to the Lackawanna Transportation Company, where she would carry cargoes of grain and coal between Buffalo, New York and Chicago, Illinois. In October 1893, the Florida went ashore near Whiting, Indiana and was raised and repaired.