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3-masted Canadian schooner that sank in 1906 is found by shipwreck explorers in Lake Ontario

ROCHESTER, N.Y. – Undersea explorers have discovered a 19th-century, three-masted Canadian schooner that sank with a cargo of coal in Lake Ontario in 1906.

The 53-year-old Queen of the Lakes had run into a stiff gale and sprung a hull leak off Sodus Bay on the lake’s southern shore. The crew of six abandoned the vessel and rowed to safety.

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Jim Kennard said Friday that he and fellow shipwreck enthusiasts Dan Scoville and Roland Stevens located the ship using side-scan sonar in 2009 in waters too deep for divers to reach.

They confirmed the find and captured images of it this month using a remote-operated vehicle.

In 2008 in Lake Ontario, the team located the wreck of the British warship HMS Ontario, the oldest shipwreck ever found in the Great Lakes.

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