The Huron Lightship was launched in 1920 as Lightship
103 of the United States Lighthouse Service. She was later re-designated
U.S. Coast Guard WAL-526, then WLV-526. From 1935 until 1970 she served
at Corsica Shoals, at the southern end of Lake Huron, approximately
6 miles north of the Blue Water Bridges, 3 miles east of the Michigan
shoreline. When she was withdrawn in 1970 she was the last of 22 lightships
on the Great Lakes and the only lightship to keep her station throughout
World War II. In 1972 she was enshrined alongside the St. Clair River
at Pine Grove Park in Port Huron as a tribute to her vigilance and
in memory of a by-gone era. In 1989 the Lightship was designated a
National Historic Landmark.
Museum Hours and Info: The new Thomas Edison Depot
Museum & the historic Huron Lightship Museum are open for tours Fridays
from 1:00 to 8:00 p.m.(May 17-September 27, 2002).and Daily from 1:00
to 4:30 p.m. in the Summer. The Port Huron Museum, Depot and Lightship
normal hours are 1:00 to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday the balance
of the year. Purchase a Passport and SAVE up to 50%! Passports are
valid for and available at all three museums and cost $3.00 for students
and seniors, $5.00 for adults. Children six and under are FREE accompanied
by an adult. For additional info call 810-982-0891 or visit web site
www.phmuseum.org
Article of Interest:
The Ultimate Price By Wayne Arnold, Site Manager, Huron Lightship
Museum, Port Huron, Michigan. Website: www. phmuseum.org On October
6, 2000, the Lightship Sailors Association presented to the Huron
Lightship Museum a plaque in memory of Seaman Robert Gullickson, age
21, who drowned while serving in the U. S. Coast Guard aboard WLV-526.
Forty-two years after his death his sister visited the Lightship to
view the memorial to her brother who lost his life while serving his
country. She was only sixteen when, on May 7, 1958, her brother and
two other sailors boarded the shipÕs liberty boat for a six-mile journey
to the Ft. Gratiot Coast Guard Station in Port Huron, Michigan. They
were to pick up groceries, mail and payroll. However, upon arrival
they learned that the groceries had not yet been delivered to the
station; so, according to Fireman (FM) Neil Hamilton, he asked SN
Gullickson and Chef (CS) Vincent Disch to go ahead and deliver the
mail and payroll to the ship and he would wait for the groceries and
bring them out later. They set out for the Lightship at 10:45 a.m.
On their journey back to the Lightship, a large wave swamped the liberty
boat. Bob endeavored to bail the water out but the boat sank. They
floated for 45 minutes in their life jackets, talking and holding
hands, blowing whistles trying to hail a tugboat and a freighter that
passed--all to no avail. After a wave separated them Bob made the
decision to swim to shore to get help. The water temperature was 47
degrees F, and hypothermia had already set in as he struck out for
shore. It was his last decision. At noon the lightship radioed the
station to find out why the sailors had not returned. The station
immediately dispatched another boat that found CS Disch at 1:07 p.m.
in semi-conscious condition with his arms raised ready to slip from
his life jacket into the cold depths of Lake Huron. Amazingly he survived,
but Bob Gullickson's body was never found. He was the only crewman
lost during the 35 years the Lightship guided freighters safely into
the narrow channel leading to the St. Clair River. On October 28,
2000, as guests were eating dinner at the Thomas Edison Inn in Port
Huron; two couples overheard a discussion at an adjacent table about
their tour to the Huron Lightship Museum. They interrupted to say
that their cousin had served aboard that ship but had drowned while
on duty. The other group asked if his name was Bob. They were astonished.
How did they know? There is a memorial to him on his bunk, they were
told, with a U.S Flag, the history of the event and a new plaque in
his memory. The next day the cousins and their spouses visited the
ship and I had the honor of escorting them on a tour of the museum.
When we reached the crew's quarters, the tour turned into a wake.
The volunteer crew and family both shed tears as the family reminisced.
For many years after Bob gave his life in the line of duty, each time
a body washed up on shore the family contacted authorities to find
out if it wasÉ. They stated that his sister lives in metropolitan
Detroit and they were going to let her know about the Lightship and
the memorial. The family had been unaware that the ship was still
in existence. Two days before Veterans Day, 2000, Robert GullicksonÕs
sister, Carol Von Kampen came aboard the Lightship with his dress
uniform and presented it to the Museum volunteers in memory of her
brother. ÒI was very moved,Ó she said upon seeing the memorial. ÒItÕs
very emotional to see this 42 years later. ItÕs a beautiful tribute.Ó
The crew held a small service, then Ms. Von Kampen was escorted to
the pilothouse, where a full master's salute was issued from the ship's
whistle: Three long and two short blasts resounded over the St. Clair
River and out into Lake Huron.