MAGIC MASTS AND STURDY SHIPS
  • Welcome to Magic Masts and Sturdy Ships
  • Immigrant Engineer Joseph Van Blerck
  • The Fitzgeralds :Ships and Men
  • Captain John Miner: Savvy Sailor, Skillful Skater
  • Eber and Samuel Ward, Captains of the Great Lakes Shipping Industry
  • Does Captain Byron Inman Haunt His Tug Record in Duluth Harbor?
  • Great Lakes Captains
    • Chaplain John David Jones Preached on the Cleveland Waterfront
    • Great Lakes Winds in the Rigging..
    • Captain Robert Mayo Invents a Revolving Life Boat
    • Did Captain John McKay Float a Bottle Note as the Manistee Sank?
  • The Lake Michigan Steamer Alpena Sinks in a Monster October Storm
  • Captain Delos Smith Says Rescues Are All in a Day's Work
  • Captain William Callaway Sailed a Milwaukee Schooner to Hamburg
  • The Maritime Mixed Blessings of Captain John Pridgeon
  • Captain Henry Woods, Muskegon's Traveled and Talented Lifesaver
  • Captain George L. Thompson and the Pere Marquette 16
  • CQD, Captain Peter Kilty, and Pere Marquette Car Ferry No. 18
  • Silver Islet - Mining Silver Under Lake Superior
  • The Eastland/Wilmette Steamed a Wide Wake on the Great Lakes
  • Captain Amos Foster Meets Admiral Porter and President Lincoln
  • The Newly-Weds, a Winter Storm, and the Waubuno
  • President Grover Cleveland's Secret Surgery on the Steam Yacht Oneida
  • Yankee John Murray vs. Conspirator Charles Cole - the Johnson's Island Plot
  • Ice Skater Benjamin Langford is Rescued from Lake Erie Ice
  • The Legend of Cape Maleas in Greece Transcends Time
  • The Miami Canal Is Part of Toledo Maritime History
  • Does Columbus Sail His Ships in Jackson Park Lagoon?
  • The Ticonderoga's Haunted Blue Bell with the Bewitching Tone
  • The Last Voyage of the Slave Ship Martha Kane and Her Haunted Jolly Boat
  • Two Great Lakes Ships Still Make Ghostly Voyages on Lakes Superior and Michigan
  • The Poet and the Prisoners: Philip Freneau and the Revolutionary War Death Ships
  • A Thanksgiving Break in Lake Michigan Breakers
  • Titanic Headlines, Titanic Questions
  • George Gordon Meade Built Lighthouses and Surveyed the Great Lakes Before the Civil War
  • President Abraham Lincoln Refused to Pardon Slave Trader Captain Nathaniel Gordon
  • A Privateer Whaleboat Raid on a New Jersey Night
    • CSS Shenandoah, the First World Voyager Fires the Last Shot in the Civil War
    • The CSS Tallahassee - Terror of the Eastern Seaboard
    • The CSS Alabama's Canon is Home in Alabama
    • Thomas Adams Fought the Great Detroit Fire and Sailed with Captain Robert Hackett
    • Two Rival Captains Challenge the Atlantic Ocean in Small Boats
    • A German U-Boat Sinks the Algonquin and Bombs America Into World War I
    • Six Small Boys in a Lifeboat - The Story of the City of Benares
  • "I have One More Hour of Fuel"- Operation Frequent Wind and the USS Midway
  • SS Orduna- Warrior, Troop Ship, and Stage for Human Drama
  • Operation Dynamo at Dunkirk is an Inspiring Maritime Historical Story
  • Christmas Parties on Captain Hiram Meeker's Floating Bethel
  • Colonel Lafourche Reported the Story of the Capture of Sam Ferrell's Mississippi River Pirate Gang
  • "Father Put Me in the Boat -" The Story of the Northfleet
  • Veterans Stories - Charles Wedel
  • The Thirteenth Voyage of the USS Northern Pacific
  • Maritime People
    • Bill and Nell Lively Make Maritime History on Isle Royale
    • Captain James Byers Hijacks His Own Steamer and Rejoins the Union
    • Canadian and American Fishermen Fight a New Battle of Lake Erie
    • Sturdy Ships >
      • Ecorse Rowing Club History
      • A Bright Red Lightship, LV75, Guided Ships Across Lake St. Clair
      • The USS Michigan - the First Iron Ship of Her Age
      • The USS Yantic Enjoys a Sixty Year Career and a Home Birth on the Great Lakes
      • Gun Fight at the Cape Florida Lighthouse
      • The Coal Pirates of Cold Spring Harbor
      • Maria Bray Lights Up a Christmas Celebration on Thacher Island
    • The Steamship Pulaski's Passengers Survive Her Sinking and Fall in Love
    • Women Help Save the Crew of the Bark Martha P. Tucker >
      • Does Faithful Florence Martus Still Wave to Her Yankee Lover?
      • Captain Matthew Webb Challenged the English Channel and Niagara Falls
      • Lights Shine from St. Philips and Beverly Baptist Church Steeples
      • Lightkeeper Chase and His Crew Rescue the H.P. Kirkham and Its Crew
      • Major Archie Butt and His Titanic Gift >
        • Captain Harry Ward Cruised Gold Fields and Commanded a Slave Ship
        • Alfred Lord Tennyson and the River Witham - Re-Crossing the Bar
  • Imaginary Lenses: Great Lakes Lighthouse Fiction
  • Immigrant Engineer Joseph Van Blerck
  • Immigrant Engineer Joseph Van Blerck

Captain Henry Woods, Muskegon's Traveled and Talented Lifesaver

PictureMuskegon Harbor


Captain Henry Woods of the Muskegon Life Saving Station built innovative machinery and wrestled mariners from the grip of Lake Michigan storms.

Captain Henry J. Woods, keeper of the United States Life Saving Station at Muskegon, Michigan, for 16 years, considered the resue of the schooner Donaldson one of the most thrilling episodes of his career.

Captain Woods and the Muskegon Life Saving Crew to the Rescue

On March 29, 1882, Captain Woods and his surf men rescued the crew of the S.B. Pomeroy and helped saved the schooner. Later that year, they rescued the crew of The Donaldson, a three- masted schooner, measuring 420 tons, and valued at $20,000. Built at Tonawanda, New York by J. Martell in 1866, the Donaldson was the property of the Donaldson Brothers of Buffalo, New York, and considered one of the finest vessels on the Great Lakes at the time.

A fierce storm lashed Lake Michigan on November 28, 1882, and a look out from the Life Saving Station spotted the schooner Donaldson, dismasted, but still afloat. They couldn’t get a tug so they pulled out a life boat. The crew lashed themselves to the thwarts so they wouldn’t be lashed overboard, and Captain Woods and his men guided the lifeboat through a blinding snowstorm and heavy seas.

They finally reached the Donaldson, which lay seven miles out in Lake Michigan and sixteen miles north of the station. Captain Robert Young and his crew climbed into the lifeboat and after a twelve hour trip, the Donaldson crew and Captain Woods and his life saving crew finally reached the lighthouse, drenched to the skin and covered with ice.

Captain Robert Young and the crew remained at the light house, while the mate, Mr. Cameron sent a telegram to Chicago, asking for a tug and line. He set off for Chicago by train the morning after the rescue and planned to return to Muskegon and the stranded schooner aboard the tug. The Donaldson was believed to be salvageable.

A clipping in the J.W. Hall Great Lakes Marine Scrapbook No. 2, dated November 1882, reported that there were hopes of saving the Donaldson if the weather moderated for a few days. It also noted that the Chicago Grain Insurance Pool had not yet had a serious loss in the 1882 season, something that had never before happened in the history of Great Lakes navigation.

The Donaldson Sinks for the Last Time

The Donaldson, in fact, proved to be salvageable. She was repaired and remained in service until August 17, 1913, when another Great Lakes storm threatened her, this time a Lake Erie gale outside of Cleveland Harbor. The Donaldson began to leak heavily, and she sank into Lake Erie near the Cleveland harbor entrance. This time she was considered too old to salvage, so she was left to rest on the bottom of Lake Erie.

The Life Saving Crew at Muskegon Keeps Busy

The Donaldson rescue was not the only time that Captain Woods and his crew pulled stranded mariners from a watery or frozen death. A list of the ships and crews that he and his Life Saving Crew at Muskegon rescued included the steamer Michael Grohand and 14 men and the schooner Trial and three men. They also saved many people in Muskegon Lake, including two sailboats and six people, the yacht Viking and four men, and the life of a boy that Captain Woods found floating under the water.

Light Keeping at the Cotton Centennial Exposition

The United States government appointed Captain Henry J. Woods as keeper of the light house station at the federal exhibition in the Cotton Centennial Exposition at New Orleans in 1885-1886. The United States Building where the Federal Government and several of the states had their exhibits was 885 x 565 feet. Contemporary reports said that Captain Woods and his crew kept the lighthouse station well.

Captain Woods Invents and Improvises

Besides his light keeping and live saving duties, Captain Woods put his considerable mechanical ability to practical use. He invented several items to enhance life saving efforts, including a system of carriages to carry and launch the large lifeboats that all life saving stations used. He fashioned and patented oar locks and steering oar locks that life saving officials valued so highly that they authorized him to build some for government use. He fitted up a machine shop next to the Muskegon Light at his own expense and supplied it with $1,000 worth of tools.

The Adventures of Henry Woods

It is possible that Captain Woods became enamored of machinery while he ran a stationary engine in the oil country near Erie, Pennsylvania, for he had enjoyed a life full of adventure before he arrived at the Muskegon Light House. Born near Oneida, New York, on May 29, 1850, Henry J. Woods attended the district schools until he turned 14 years old. In 1864, he went to Murfreesboro, Tennessee, where his brother-in-law Captain Frank Jackson commanded the Twelfth Ohio Independent Battery of Artillery in the Civil War. Although he wasn’t an enlisted soldier, Henry fought in the Battle of Murfreesboro and when the battery was transferred to Chattanooga, he went along with it and stayed there until the end of the war.

After the Civil War, Henry worked as a boatman and fisherman in Erie, Pennsylvania, and in 1868, he started out in business for himself with two boats, fishing along Lake Erie’s shore from Erie to Fairport, Ohio. In 1875, he went to St. Joseph, Michigan, and in 1876 returned to Pennsylvania where he spent three years in the oil fields. He returned to St. Joseph in 1879 and in the spring of 1880, he entered the lifesaving station at St. Joseph, Michigan as surf man No. 1. He stayed at the St. Joseph Station for two seasons and played an important part in rescuing men and vessels in distress.

Captain Woods Comes to Muskegon

On February 6, 1881, at Grand Rapids, Michigan, Captain Henry J. Woods married Hulda A. Wells of Marietta, Ohio. They had two daughters, Hattie H. and Gracie B.

An item in the St. Joseph, Michigan Herald dated December 4, 1886, describes the next career move of Captain Henry J. Woods. The Herald noted that since the St. Joseph Life Saving crew was established, five keepers of stations had been appointed from its crew and were stationed as follows: Henry J. Woods, Muskegon; Jas. Flynn, Grand Point au Sable; Chas. Lysaight, North Manitou Island; Charles Morton, Holland; and John Lysaight, Racine, Wisconsin.

In 1882, the Lighthouse Service appointed Captain Henry Woods keeper of the Muskegon Light Station. His biography in History of the Great Lakes notes that his wife Hulda, and daughters made the inside of their lighthouse home as safe and snug as Captain Henry J. Woods did on the outside.

References

Berger, Todd R., Lighthouses of the Great Lakes: Your Ultimate Guide to the Regions Historical Lighthouses, Voyageur Press, 2002.

Mansfield, J.B., History of the Great Lakes, Volume II, Chicago: J.H. Beers & Co., 1899

Wright, Larry and Wright, Patricia, Great Lakes Lighthouses Encyclopedia, Boston Mills Press, 2006

“Marine Briefs,” St. Joseph Herald, December 4, 1886

 

 


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  • Welcome to Magic Masts and Sturdy Ships
  • Immigrant Engineer Joseph Van Blerck
  • The Fitzgeralds :Ships and Men
  • Captain John Miner: Savvy Sailor, Skillful Skater
  • Eber and Samuel Ward, Captains of the Great Lakes Shipping Industry
  • Does Captain Byron Inman Haunt His Tug Record in Duluth Harbor?
  • Great Lakes Captains
    • Chaplain John David Jones Preached on the Cleveland Waterfront
    • Great Lakes Winds in the Rigging..
    • Captain Robert Mayo Invents a Revolving Life Boat
    • Did Captain John McKay Float a Bottle Note as the Manistee Sank?
  • The Lake Michigan Steamer Alpena Sinks in a Monster October Storm
  • Captain Delos Smith Says Rescues Are All in a Day's Work
  • Captain William Callaway Sailed a Milwaukee Schooner to Hamburg
  • The Maritime Mixed Blessings of Captain John Pridgeon
  • Captain Henry Woods, Muskegon's Traveled and Talented Lifesaver
  • Captain George L. Thompson and the Pere Marquette 16
  • CQD, Captain Peter Kilty, and Pere Marquette Car Ferry No. 18
  • Silver Islet - Mining Silver Under Lake Superior
  • The Eastland/Wilmette Steamed a Wide Wake on the Great Lakes
  • Captain Amos Foster Meets Admiral Porter and President Lincoln
  • The Newly-Weds, a Winter Storm, and the Waubuno
  • President Grover Cleveland's Secret Surgery on the Steam Yacht Oneida
  • Yankee John Murray vs. Conspirator Charles Cole - the Johnson's Island Plot
  • Ice Skater Benjamin Langford is Rescued from Lake Erie Ice
  • The Legend of Cape Maleas in Greece Transcends Time
  • The Miami Canal Is Part of Toledo Maritime History
  • Does Columbus Sail His Ships in Jackson Park Lagoon?
  • The Ticonderoga's Haunted Blue Bell with the Bewitching Tone
  • The Last Voyage of the Slave Ship Martha Kane and Her Haunted Jolly Boat
  • Two Great Lakes Ships Still Make Ghostly Voyages on Lakes Superior and Michigan
  • The Poet and the Prisoners: Philip Freneau and the Revolutionary War Death Ships
  • A Thanksgiving Break in Lake Michigan Breakers
  • Titanic Headlines, Titanic Questions
  • George Gordon Meade Built Lighthouses and Surveyed the Great Lakes Before the Civil War
  • President Abraham Lincoln Refused to Pardon Slave Trader Captain Nathaniel Gordon
  • A Privateer Whaleboat Raid on a New Jersey Night
    • CSS Shenandoah, the First World Voyager Fires the Last Shot in the Civil War
    • The CSS Tallahassee - Terror of the Eastern Seaboard
    • The CSS Alabama's Canon is Home in Alabama
    • Thomas Adams Fought the Great Detroit Fire and Sailed with Captain Robert Hackett
    • Two Rival Captains Challenge the Atlantic Ocean in Small Boats
    • A German U-Boat Sinks the Algonquin and Bombs America Into World War I
    • Six Small Boys in a Lifeboat - The Story of the City of Benares
  • "I have One More Hour of Fuel"- Operation Frequent Wind and the USS Midway
  • SS Orduna- Warrior, Troop Ship, and Stage for Human Drama
  • Operation Dynamo at Dunkirk is an Inspiring Maritime Historical Story
  • Christmas Parties on Captain Hiram Meeker's Floating Bethel
  • Colonel Lafourche Reported the Story of the Capture of Sam Ferrell's Mississippi River Pirate Gang
  • "Father Put Me in the Boat -" The Story of the Northfleet
  • Veterans Stories - Charles Wedel
  • The Thirteenth Voyage of the USS Northern Pacific
  • Maritime People
    • Bill and Nell Lively Make Maritime History on Isle Royale
    • Captain James Byers Hijacks His Own Steamer and Rejoins the Union
    • Canadian and American Fishermen Fight a New Battle of Lake Erie
    • Sturdy Ships >
      • Ecorse Rowing Club History
      • A Bright Red Lightship, LV75, Guided Ships Across Lake St. Clair
      • The USS Michigan - the First Iron Ship of Her Age
      • The USS Yantic Enjoys a Sixty Year Career and a Home Birth on the Great Lakes
      • Gun Fight at the Cape Florida Lighthouse
      • The Coal Pirates of Cold Spring Harbor
      • Maria Bray Lights Up a Christmas Celebration on Thacher Island
    • The Steamship Pulaski's Passengers Survive Her Sinking and Fall in Love
    • Women Help Save the Crew of the Bark Martha P. Tucker >
      • Does Faithful Florence Martus Still Wave to Her Yankee Lover?
      • Captain Matthew Webb Challenged the English Channel and Niagara Falls
      • Lights Shine from St. Philips and Beverly Baptist Church Steeples
      • Lightkeeper Chase and His Crew Rescue the H.P. Kirkham and Its Crew
      • Major Archie Butt and His Titanic Gift >
        • Captain Harry Ward Cruised Gold Fields and Commanded a Slave Ship
        • Alfred Lord Tennyson and the River Witham - Re-Crossing the Bar
  • Imaginary Lenses: Great Lakes Lighthouse Fiction
  • Immigrant Engineer Joseph Van Blerck
  • Immigrant Engineer Joseph Van Blerck