Heart Starts Pounding: Horrors, Hauntings, and Mysteries - 129. Unsolved Mysteries of The Great Lakes: Ghost Ships, Lost Crews & Ancient Curses // DARK SUMMER VOL. 2
Episode Date: July 24, 2025Mysterious disappearances, lost shipwrecks, the Lake Michigan “Stonehenge”, strange lights above Lake Erie and more. There’s something strange happening in the great lakes. These lakes in No...rth America are much bigger than you would ever imagine, they hold about a fifth of the entire world’s freshwater. But they also hold some of the greatest unsolved mysteries. They are quite literally full of secrets. Subscribe on Patreon for bonus content and to become a member of our Rogue Detecting Society. Patrons have access to bonus content as well as other perks. And members of our High Council on Patreon have access to our after-show called Footnotes, where I share my case file with our producer, Matt. Apple subscriptions are now live! Get access to ad-free episodes and bonus episodes when you subscribe on Apple Podcasts. Follow on Tik Tok and Instagram for a daily dose of horror. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The Great Lakes are a chain of five enormous lakes
straddling the US and Canadian border,
creating the largest freshwater system
on earth by surface area.
Together, they hold about 21% of the world's freshwater.
The lakes include Lake Superior,
which is the largest and deepest,
with a maximum depth of about 1,300 feet.
Then there's Lake Michigan,
which sits entirely within the United States.
There's also Lake Huron, which sits entirely within the United States. There's also
Lake Huron, which reaches a maximum depth of around 750 feet and is dotted with numerous islands.
There's Lake Erie, the shallowest with an average depth of only 62 feet. And finally, there's Lake
Ontario, the smallest by surface area, but significantly deeper than Lake Erie with depths reaching just over 800 feet.
And during the summer these lakes are picturesque. Waves lap on the shores,
boats full of family and friends bob on the surface. But what you may not know and what I'm
about to freak you all out about today is that as you float slowly across the lakes on a beautiful summer's day, there is mystery and horror that is settled
at the lake's bottom, just hundreds of feet below you.
For instance, deep beneath the waves of Lake Huron,
along the Northwest Coast, lies what's known
as Shipwreck Alley, a graveyard of vessels
spanning hundreds of years that never finished
their voyages.
Down there, nearly 100 shipwrecks lie eerily preserved
entombed beneath the icy water.
And it's also not just shipwrecks either.
Bodies are down there and they actually go through
a process called saponification where the fat in the body
turns essentially into soap and it preserves them
and gives it this terrifyingly waxy look.
Here, when the summer season ends,
storms rise out of nowhere,
fog blinds even the most experienced navigators,
and hidden reefs tear through steel and wood alike.
And many of these boats
have actually been rediscovered over the years.
For instance, there's the irononton, which sank in 1894, and it was discovered in Shipwreck
Alley in 2023.
According to the two crew members that survived the wreck all the way back in the day, the
Ironton's captain and six sailors tried to get into a lifeboat, but they were dragged
to the bottom of the lake before it could detach from the ship.
And when the ship was eventually found,
that lifeboat was still attached to it,
ready to be deployed.
And now we know that it was mere seconds away
from saving the lives of those seven men.
And while many of these shipwreck mysteries
are being solved by divers who go down to shipwreck alley,
one ship is noticeably absent from the area.
See, there is one boat that vanished
off the face of the earth.
It's like it slipped out of existence
while crossing the Great Lakes.
And while some people believe that
with all the technology we have today
and how much we know about where
the Shipwreck Graveyards are,
it should be easy to find this one.
And yet, this ship has evaded divers and researchers for centuries.
So today, in this edition of Dark Summer here at Heart Starts Pounding,
I want to tell you about some of the eeriest mysteries coming out of the Great Lakes,
starting with the mystery of Legraphon.
But before we dive in, just a reminder
that we now have merch available in our store.
That's shop.heartstartspounding.com.
There you can find t-shirts, sweatshirts,
rogue detecting society notebooks.
We even have a special edition dark summer t-shirt.
And as always, patrons and Apple podcast subscribers
get a very special discount. And this week, patrons and Apple podcast subscribers get a very special discount.
And this week, I actually want to shout out a listener with a very darkly curious job,
Jordan, who is an ocular recovery technician, aka she scoops out eyeballs from corpses for
donations. And she works directly with the families of the donors. It's a very honorable and very morbid job,
so of course I love it.
Keep sending me your darkly curious jobs, hobbies,
you name it.
Jinx and I love hearing about all of them, right Jinx?
Okay, let's get back to it.
This is the mystery of Le Griffon.
Le Griffon is a supposedly cursed ship
that vanished without a trace on September 18th, 1679.
The ship was constructed by a Frenchman
named René Robert Cavallet,
who was referred to by his title, La Salle.
In January of 1679, he arrived in upstate New York
to build Le Graffphon out of resources he could
scour from the land, much to the local Iroquois tribes' dismay.
The story goes that Iroquois tribesmen watched from the forest as La Salle and his men cut
down tree after tree after tree to make logs for this ship.
Eventually, the Frenchmen actually did move the construction site further south out of
the area of the Iroquois because the construction site further south out of the area
of the Iroquois because they started to fear what some of the tribe's members might do to them.
And even then, some crewmen believed it was too late. They thought that the ship already had a
curse placed on it by an Iroquois elder. Because as construction continued, the winter became harsher and harsher, making it nearly
impossible to build. Tools broke, wood warped, and relentless storms pummeled the construction
site. LaSalle would walk back to the ship after just a short break, only to find entire sections
had been destroyed by the cold. It was like there was a force out of their control that wanted
construction to cease. Still, against all odds, Legraphon was completed. It boasted a striking
carved griffon at its bow. Part lion, part eagle. It was supposed to act as a guardian against
misfortune. And finally, on August 7th, 1679, Legraphon launched onto Lake Erie,
pushing boldly into the unknown
towards the far end of the Great Lakes
to what is today Green Bay, Wisconsin.
The journey was supposed to look like this.
The ship would start in the most northeast corner
of Lake Erie, almost in Lake Ontario,
and then it would go north towards Lake Huron,
and then west to Lake
Michigan until it got to Green Bay in the northwest part of the lake. At first, the journey seemed
really promising and pretty easy. LaSalle and his crew were navigating through the rough waters with
relative ease, but as the voyage continued, this sense of unease began to settle amongst the crew.
The deeper they traveled, the clearer it became that these lakes were much more dangerous than they ever imagined.
There were violent storms that were capable of swallowing entire ships.
Hidden reefs were lurking just beyond the waves, waiting for someone to crash into them.
But still, by September 18th, Le Graffon finally reached
Green Bay, Wisconsin. And here, LaSalle made a really fateful decision. See, Le Graffon was full
of all these furs that they'd collected along the route, and he actually wanted to bring all of this
valuable cargo back to their fort before the winter ice trapped them. So he ordered the ship,
which was now heavily loaded with furs,
to sail back towards the French fort that they came from.
And LaSalle himself decided to stay behind
on the shores of Lake Michigan.
And so he watched as Legraphon set sail
into the relatively calm waters
and faded slowly into the misty horizon.
And that was the last time anyone saw Legraphon or its crew alive.
Since then, not even so much as a splinter of this ship has been seen.
After he learned that his crew hadn't made it back home, LaSalle had entire parties of
men walk the shores and scour the waters for a
piece of wood, a lifeboat, really anything that indicated the ship had been lost.
But nothing was ever found. It had vanished entirely as though the lake had
swallowed it whole. And eventually over time equipment for finding shipwrecks
got better and hundreds of wrecks were identified
beneath the waves of the Great Lakes.
But still, there has been no sign of Le Graffon.
So as years turned into decades, turned into centuries,
the mystery has only deepened.
How could an entire ship vanish
without leaving behind so much as a splinter?
Some believed that Le Legraphon fell victim
to Lake Michigan's notorious, sudden, and vicious storms,
storms powerful enough to shred sails and crack holes,
but the lack of wreckage made others suspicious of this.
Could the crew have actually conspired against LaSalle
to steal his valuable cargo of fur and maybe
started their new lives as rich men somewhere.
Local indigenous tribes like the Iroquois actually had their own chilling explanations
on what happened.
A prophecy from this Iroquois prophet, Matiamek, declared that the giant ship was an insult
to the great spirit. He said that he had placed a solemn curse
upon it, whispering that the vessel would never reach its destination, that it would sail
endlessly through a crack in the ice, he called it, which he described as being trapped beneath this
world and the next. So maybe the crew was right, maybe one of the Iroquois tribesmen had placed this
horrible curse on the ship. And this one is particularly scary because people have claimed
to see the ghost of Legraphon to this day. They say that there's a ghostly three-masted ship that
glides silently through particularly misty nights and it disappears as suddenly as it appears.
particularly misty nights, and it disappears as suddenly as it appears.
And in modern times, the search for Legraphon
has taken on almost this obsessive quality
because it is believed that if the ship did sink,
the freezing fresh water of Lake Michigan
would preserve it perfectly for centuries,
and maybe some of the bodies of the crew as well.
Over the years, there's been at least 20 separate claims
that have emerged all saying that they solved this mystery
and found the ship.
Yet every single one of those supposed discoveries
is still unsubstantiated.
And most recently in 2022, after searching for 40 years,
this explorer named Steve Lybert claimed that he
and his wife had actually found Legraphon finally.
They apparently had spent years trying to get permits
to be able to resurface artifacts
from the part of Lake Michigan
where they believed Legraphon sank.
And finally, after 40 years,
they were granted one of those permits.
And that's when they were able to bring up
what they believed was Legraphon's front mounted spar,
also known as a bowsprit.
But funnily enough, when it was sent
to the state archeologists to authenticate
this piece of wood, he actually said,
no, that's not the bowsprit at all of Legraphon.
That's actually a piece of wood that was used for fishing
maybe hundreds of years ago, but it's not part of a ship. But Steve refuses to believe that that's all the piece of wood that was used for fishing maybe hundreds of years ago, but it's not part of a ship.
But Steve refuses to believe
that that's all the piece of wood is.
He said he believes that Legraphon is just 200 yards
off of Big Summer Island
in the Northwest corner of Lake Michigan,
which is very close to where the ship
would have left Green Bay to go back home.
And Steve said that it's also just 50 feet
below the surface.
But this area that Steve is talking about
is almost as mysterious as the vanishing
of the ship itself.
Because this area is known as Death's Door,
which actually brings us to our next mystery.
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Varies by plan.
Death's Door is a treacherous passageway between the Bay of Green Bay and the rest
of Lake Michigan.
It's what Le Graffon would have passed through as it started its journey back to its home
base.
And just like Shipwreck Alley,
Death's Door is known for its converging tides,
its hidden shoals, and these unpredictable winds.
These are all things that could tear a wooden ship
into pieces unexpectedly.
And it's said that over 275 shipwrecks
have been found in this area alone.
And sailors had tried everything over the years
to mitigate the risks in the area.
Like in 1848 and in 1850,
two massive lighthouses were built in the area
as a navigational aid.
And still, over 64 ships were lost over the next 90 years.
It was like the lake fed on ships.
But aside from the area's apparent bloodthirst,
there are a few mysteries about Death's Door
that make it a bit more terrifying than Shipwreck Alley.
For one, no one really knows
where the name Death's Door comes from.
One legend claims that hundreds of years ago,
two large wooden canoes full of Menominee warriors
crashed into a rocky shoal during a storm,
killing every man in the Menominee tribe in one sweep.
And this decimated the tribe's power in the area
and it left them vulnerable to attacks,
so they forever named the passage Death's Door.
And that story is from a 1905 newspaper I found.
And as far as I can tell,
no member of the Menominee tribe has confirmed it.
So for all we know,
the area could have had that name before they even arrived.
After all, people have been living in the area
at least since the ice age, thousands of years ago.
And that kind of brings me to our next mystery.
There are sunken indigenous villages
that seem to be sprinkled
all throughout the passageway of Death's Door.
When Steve Liebert dove to find Legraphon,
he noticed that there were remnants of entire villages
50 feet under the lake amongst the wreckage of the ships.
Could these be from years of rising sea levels
that eventually overtook the area,
or could there have been a devastating storm
hundreds of years ago that swallowed an entire village whole
and made entire communities disappear
without a trace overnight?
And more importantly, who did these villages belong to?
Like I said, there've been people in that area
for thousands of years.
Are these villages from people from the 1800s
or from 5,000 BC?
We just don't know yet
because there hasn't been a ton of effort
into excavating these areas and studying who lived there.
And Death's Door isn't the only area of the Great Lakes
that has these villages.
So what I actually wanna do for this next part
is I wanna continue along the path
that Legraphon would have taken back to its home base
because what if it didn't sink in Death's Door?
So let's travel to the other side of Lake Michigan
where Legraphon would have sailed right past
and Little Traverse Bay
where the Lake Michigan Stonehenge is.
In 2007, an archeologist named Mark Hawley was scanning the bottom of Lake Michigan Stonehenge is. In 2007, an archeologist named Mark Hawley
was scanning the bottom of Lake Michigan's
Grand Traverse Bay for shipwrecks,
maybe seeing if he could solve the mystery of Legraphon
when he saw something that he just couldn't make sense of.
There was a row of large stones
and some of them appeared to be
in a somewhat geometric
pattern. In total, these stones spanned over a mile. Now, some of these stones
were small, about the size of a bowling ball, but others were massive, coming in
close to the size of an SUV. And even though they were positioned in a really
strange shape, they weren't necessarily stacked on top of each other,
like Stonehenge was.
So at first, it wasn't really believed
that these were placed there intentionally, like by people.
They seemed to be some very bizarre natural phenomena.
But then, upon closer inspection,
a diver actually noticed that one of the rocks
had something carved into it.
It looked like a creature, specifically a mastodon,
which was an elephant-like mammal that lived in the area,
but went extinct 11,000 years ago.
So maybe these stones weren't actually
a weird phenomena after all.
Maybe they were part of one of these ancient civilizations
that once lived in the area.
A quick history lesson of the Great Lakes.
So around 20,000 years ago,
the massive Laurentide ice sheet carved out
the Great Lakes basin.
During the post-glacial period,
think like 10,000 to 8,000 years ago,
lake levels were much lower
and areas like Grand Traverse Bay were actually dry
and plenty of creatures lived there.
And this allowed early Native American ancestors
like Oji hunter gatherers to move into the area
and use the landscape for hunting mastodons and caribou.
Eventually water levels rose and the site became submerged.
So one thought is that this ancient community
of hunter-gatherers used these rocks for something. Perhaps maybe it was
something ceremonial in nature. Maybe it was for hunting purposes and actually
helped move the caribou and a pattern that made them easier to hunt. But what's
interesting about that is that if that's true, if this rock formation is manmade,
then it's 4,000 years older than Stonehenge is.
And we can sort of guess that this is manmade
because there are other really bizarre rock formations
throughout the Great Lakes
that also appear to be from ancient civilizations.
For instance, there's a 9,000-year-old rock formation
under Lake Huron that's believed to have been for hunting purposes,
though we can't be 100% sure.
There's a small island in Lake Michigan
called Beaver Island that has some glacial boulders
laid out in a circular formation,
and some of them have holes carved into them.
And it's believed that they may have been used
as a calendar or some sort of celestial marker.
But again, we just aren't 100% positive.
We'll never hear directly from the communities
that used these rock formations
and they didn't keep any written records,
at least ones that survived.
But we do have one group of people
that have been in the Great Lakes region
for about 1500 years.
And they have tried to offer what information they have
that could help solve this mystery.
It's the Anishinaabe people.
And to them, stones are more than just geological artifacts.
As one Anishinaabe man named Hank explained,
quote, we refer to stones as animate objects
because they come from mother earth who is alive.
So stones do have a spiritual meaning
to the indigenous people of that area.
And perhaps these stones were used
in religious ceremonies after all.
But I will add, these were entirely different groups
of people who lived in the area thousands of years apart.
So we just really don't know.
They might not have had anything in common with each other.
And maybe the only thing more mysterious
than what the stones were used for is where exactly
in the lakes they are, because scientists won't tell anyone.
I guess it's because they don't want lay people
like you and me going and scuffing up ancient ceremonial
stones, which is fair.
So for now, these just remain
one of the lake's greatest mysteries.
Now, swallowed villages and rock formations
aren't the strangest thing sitting at the bottom
of Little Traverse Bay.
There's actually a few other oddities down there
that people who don't live in the area
don't necessarily know about.
For instance, one thing I found that is down there
is a life-sized marble
statue of the crucified Jesus. The story of how it got there is almost as strange as the sight of
it is. So a local family had the statue commissioned after the death of their 15-year-old son. But when
it arrived, it looked really bad. It was all banged up from the journey from Italy. Its arm was busted and the family was basically like,
we don't really want this anymore.
So they sold it to a local diver
who went and dropped it in the bay.
And today it's about 800 feet offshore and just 20 feet down.
So it can be seen from the surface.
So they'll do these winter viewings of it
where they cut a hole in the ice
and people can stand
over it and observe or pray or just gawk. And it's not really a mystery per se, but I can't
imagine being the first person to see it down there after the diver left it at the bottom.
Okay, let's continue on the voyage of Le Graffon out of Lake Michigan and back into Lake Erie.
Because Lake Erie is home to some of the
strangest mysteries maybe of all of the lakes and some people suggest that one of these mysteries
might have had something to do with the ship's disappearance. Let me explain. Now the mysteries
of Lake Erie go back thousands of years but recently there was something quite odd that happened there.
In 2011, residents along the Detroit River,
which flows into Lake Erie,
woke to a strange sound.
It was this low-level hum
that could be heard coming from every direction,
like a swarm of invisible bees was all around them.
No one could locate the source of this sound, and as the day went on, it made some of the
residents feel sick.
They got headaches from the constant noise.
Some swore they could feel it resonating inside of their chest, vibrating all of their organs around
like it was coming from within.
Others thought that maybe it was their refrigerator
until they went to the store and could still hear this hum.
But strangers still, the hum didn't end that day
or the next or the day after that.
Days went by with no break from this mysterious sound and then
weeks and then years. One day a switch was pressed and the hum turned on and
now there was no indication that it would ever stop. Obviously the residents
were furious about this sound. One woman said that she would have her friend drive
her around town while she had her head out of the sunroof and was looking for
any clue
as to where this was coming from.
Was it louder in certain areas?
Did it fade away at some point?
But she never found any clue.
And eventually the sound got its own name.
It was called the Windsor Hum.
Finally, in 2013, a professor named Colin Novak
was able to conduct a study
to try and find the source of this hum, but get this.
There was an island in the Detroit River
in between Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair to the north
called Zugg Island.
And Colin was not able to get a permit
to search that island for the sound.
Specifically, they couldn't get a permit
from a steel factory that was operating on the island.
And immediately, people started flocking
to some conspiracy theories about this island.
There was something happening there
that they just don't want us to see, they said.
Was it like the Montauk experiments in Stranger Things
where Demogorgons were making these sounds?
Was it from secret tunnels that were being built
below the steel factory
for some unknown reason?
And the theories covered this really wide range too.
Some people thought it was a sound coming from planet X,
which is a theoretical planet that exists beyond Neptune,
whose existence has not been proven.
But a lot of people in the area
thought that this sound had something to do with aliens.
And they pointed to another mystery about Lake Erie
that they said proved this theory.
So on March 4th, 1988, Sheila and Henry Baker
were driving home from a restaurant
with their three children at around 8.45 PM
when all of a sudden they noticed a strange light
hovering above Lake Erie
out in the distance.
The site was so shocking to the couple
that they actually pulled their car over
and got out to look at it.
And what they saw, or at least what they claimed to see,
was a big gray football-shaped object
that was silently hovering over the lake,
kind of rocking back and forth.
The couple was terrified by this sight, so they drove home,
but they could still see it from their upstairs window.
But now it looked like it had blue and red lights
emanating from it.
So they decided that they were going to call the Coast Guard,
who reportedly did also see these lights
when they went out to investigate.
But eventually the craft flew away
and they were never really able to figure out what it was.
However, these lights have been seen a few times since that first sighting.
In the early days of YouTube, there was this guy named Michael Lee Hill and he collected
a few videos on the lights and uploaded them to YouTube.
His videos showed these really bright orbs of light hovering over Lake Erie, often in
a formation and moving silently.
And then in 2010, there was a sighting in Euclid, Ohio, where a paramedic named Eugene
filmed multiple nights of these brilliant orbs hovering, shifting colors, and then disappearing
suddenly.
The event actually ended up getting coverage from Fox 8 and MSNBC.
And then a similar sighting occurred in 2011
with glowing spheres near the Cleveland waterfront.
Over the years, dozens of similar incidents
have been reported by residents, news crews,
and UFO researchers alike.
And there's never really been a definitive answer
as to what these lights are.
And a theory that is pretty popular,
at least among UFO researchers, is this thing
called the underwater submersible theory, which suggests that there's a hidden alien
base or a docking point beneath Lake Erie. Especially since a lot of witnesses have reported
seeing these lights enter or emerge from the water without any sounds, even a splash.
They say that these aren't UFOs, but actually USOs,
which are unidentified submerged objects,
and that these craft could explain
the lake's recurring activity,
and that they suggest a long-term,
possibly non-human presence
operating covertly in the region.
And some people say it's the real reason
La Graffon went missing.
Others say it's the source of that dang hum
no one can figure out.
Well, while the source of the lights
remains a big Great Lake mystery,
the source of the sound may have actually been discovered.
In April of 2020, the sound just stopped one day,
totally went away.
Residents had their first day of peace in almost 10 years,
and it didn't take very long until they realized
that the steel plant on Zug Island
had shut down due to COVID.
Now, it's still kind of a mystery exactly
where the sound was coming from within the plant.
Was it some sort of machinery that was in there?
Colin Novak thinks that it was actually generated
by the facility's blast furnaces
running at a higher than normal capacity,
but you know, it always could be the aliens tunneling
underneath the plant.
More after short break.
The last mystery I wanna tell you about
is one that has really stuck with me
since I first read about it.
It's one that takes us back to Lake Michigan
in October of 1921.
The summer season had just ended
and the lake was cold and gray,
blurred totally by mist.
A ferry captain from the Grand Trunk Milwaukee Ferry Company
was floating along the lake,
scanning ahead for any hazards.
And that's when something caught his eye.
There was a schooner drifting silently ahead,
unnaturally still, and it was bobbing
completely upside down on the icy waves.
The captain obviously had a horrible feeling about this,
so he guided his ferry over to the schooner
and the sight was way worse than he anticipated.
The boat was totally destroyed.
It looked honestly like a Kraken had come out of the sea
and crushed it between its tentacles.
The stern was shredded
like something massive had rammed into it.
The ship's cabin had also been torn clean away.
The rigging was destroyed
and it was all floating around aimlessly near the boat.
The captain of the ferry called out,
hoping and praying for any survivors, but it was all floating around aimlessly near the boat. The captain of the ferry called out, hoping and praying for any survivors,
but it was dead silent.
A rescue ship finally arrived and carefully boarded the wreck
after identifying the schooner as the Rosabelle.
And that's when they found the strangest thing of all.
There was no sign of life on the schooner at all.
They thought that they would at least find bodies
wrapped up in the mangled mess somewhere, but they didn't find a single one.
The Rosabelle's captain and crew had vanished without a trace.
Now, the Rosabelle was a 100-foot-long schooner designed to transport grain and lumber across
the Great Lakes. She was initially launched on April 12th, 1863,
and though she would go on to have a 59-year career,
there were times when people swore
this boat should have sunk.
In 1875, the Roosevelt capsized,
which gave the captain a severe head injury
that he would never recover from,
and he's considered the ship's first victim.
Then in 1919, the Roosevelt was bought by the House of David,
which was a mysterious religious colony
that lived on a commune in Benton Harbor, Michigan.
The group ran a lumber mill on the isolated High Island,
and the Roosevelt helped them haul potatoes and lumber
back to the mainland.
But the House of David harbored a very dark secret.
The group was founded by husband and wife,
Benjamin and Mary Purnell,
and they claimed to be the religious successors
of a prophet named Joanna Southcott.
Joanna lived in England 100 years
before the Purnells started House of David,
and she made all sorts of ridiculous religious claims about herself.
She said she was pregnant with the Messiah, she wasn't.
She also said that she was the woman of the apocalypse
from the book of Revelation in the Bible, she was not.
House of David quickly grew to hundreds of members
peaking at around a thousand on a thousand acre farm
that they owned on the shores of Lake Michigan.
They built a zoo, they had an amusement park,
but they also had a lot of very strict rules,
some of them sort of strange that they had to follow.
For one, they couldn't eat any meat,
they also couldn't own any personal property,
but married couples also weren't allowed
to consummate their marriages.
This was a very peculiar rule,
and it wasn't long before whispers started spreading
about Benjamin, the group's leader,
that he was actually abusing young female members
in the group.
He had been telling all of his members
that sexuality was a sin,
and everyone, including married couples,
had to look at each other as brother and sister.
Yet starting around 1920, young girls were approaching
their parents and telling them that Benjamin had offered
them salvation through intimacy.
And this started creating cracks
in the foundation of the commune.
Parents panicked, but they didn't really know what to do
because after all, Benjamin was saying that he was the Messiah.
And then on October 30th, 1921, nine men from the House of David loaded onto the Roosevelt,
drifted out into Lake Michigan and were never seen again.
When the wreckage was finally brought ashore. Investigators carefully examined it.
Rumors started spreading pretty rapidly.
Some people believed that maybe the crew
had drowned below deck and they were trapped
as cargo shifted and blocked their exit.
But again, not a single trace of a person
was ever found in the wreck.
And the House of David struggled to identify exactly
who was on board.
It turned out that their own records were very secretive
and hard to get a hold of,
but finally all nine of the men were identified.
And in the years that followed,
there were more theories that arose
about what happened to the boat.
Perhaps it sprang a sudden leak
and it capsized within minutes
and that wouldn't have given the crew any time
to come up with an escape plan.
But that also doesn't really explain
how the ship was so torn up when it was found.
Well, maybe an explosion from gasoline stored on board
had instantly doomed everyone.
That also didn't sit right with a lot of people.
So the most accepted explanation at the time
was actually that a violent collision had taken place.
I mean, that's what looked like had happened,
but that was questioned later by experts
who said that there were no signs
of another vessel striking the Roosevelt.
So maybe the ship's wounds actually happened
after it capsized.
Maybe it hit some rocks or got caught up
in a storm they suggested.
I will say though, I do find it interesting
that some people have always suspected it was sabotage.
Maybe an explosion did happen on board,
but it was caused intentionally by someone.
Was all of this planned by Benjamin
as a way to take out some of the fathers
and other strong men in his community
that could have helped the young girls that he was abusing.
After all, House of David was very secretive
about their records when authorities were trying
to identify some of the people on board.
Could it have been that someone else was also on board?
Maybe it was Benjamin himself
and that person escaped unscathed
after sabotaging the crew.
Well, we will never know.
Benjamin was eventually taken to trial
for his crimes against the girls,
but he was never formally charged with anything but fraud,
and he died of tuberculosis
before he could even be sentenced.
And some people truly believe,
and I tend to agree with them,
that the mystery of the Roosevelt, one of the greatest unsolved mysteries of the Great Lakes,
died with him. The Great Lakes are more than just a massive body of freshwater. They're a time
capsule. They're a guardian of many, many secrets. And they also are a giant graveyard of ships and
civilizations and bodies.
And one thing I can tell you with certainty after doing all of the research for this episode
is that these lakes love to keep their secrets close.
So if you do find yourself floating on the Great Lakes this summer, now at least you
know a little bit more about the absolute horrors that lie underneath you.
But what do you guys think?
Is Legraphon somewhere at the bottom of the lake?
Or did the aliens that are tunneling
under Zugg Island take it?
Is the Stonehenge that's down there just a coincidence
or is it maybe a calendar from an ancient civilization?
Let me know wherever you listen.
And I will be back on Monday with a very special episode of real life
creepy tales of close encounters that my dear friend Investigator Slater will be joining me for.
And then I will be back on Wednesday where it'll just be me again to tell you about a very scary
mystery of two girls who went missing on vacation in Panama. Meet me here in the Rogue Detecting Society next week.
I will have Gordy, my haunted monkey doll with me
and we will see you there.
Until then, stay curious.
Ooh.
Heart Starts Pounding is written and produced by me,
Kaila Moore.
Heart Starts Pounding is also produced by Matt Brown.
Our associate producer is Juno Hobbs.
Sound design and mix by Pete's Tree Sound.
Special thanks to Travis Dunlap, Grace Injuringan, the team at WME, and Ben Jaffe.
Have a heart pounding story or a case request?
Check out our website at heartstardspounding.com.