News

This is live video of the Wisconsin Underground Archeological Association acquired a high-resolution image of what's believed ...
"Sometimes we find something new that we were not looking for," the Wisconsin Historical Society said about the discovery.
The scan revealed a partially buried ship's hull about 90 feet long and 23 feet wide. The wreck is likely that of the L.W.
Scanning showed a partially buried hull, about 90 feet in length and 23 feet wide. With a boxy shape and a bow like a Great ...
A new 145-year-old shipwreck discovery in the Fox River is putting a spotlight on the maritime history of Berlin.
Archaeologists unexpectedly uncover the long-lost shipwreck of the L.W. Crane, a steamboat that sank in 1880.
Wisconsin Historical Society announced a new shipwreck was recently found while searching for a different shipwreck in the Fox River.
Researchers surveying a Wisconsin river unexpectedly uncovered a 145-year-old shipwreck, according to officials.
Archaeologists from the Wisconsin Historical Society's Maritime Preservation Program and the Wisconsin Underwater Archaeology Association made an accidental discovery.
During a survey of the Wisconsin River to map potential cultural sites, the team accidentally found the potential resting ...
Archaeologists think they may have identified the final resting place of the L.W. Crane, a steamer ship that caught fire and sank in Wisconsin’s Fox River in 1880. Researchers with the Wisconsin ...