This article argues that the sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald ship was faked, likely for insurance fraud, and that various individuals and organizations involved are connected to intelligence agencies and the peerage. The author questions the official narrative by pointing out anomalies in historical accounts, photographic evidence, and the behavior of those involved in expeditions to the wreck. The author draws parallels to other events, such as the Titanic sinking and the Kennedy assassination, suggesting a pattern of manufactured narratives. The article also heavily scrutinizes the song “The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald” by Gordon Lightfoot, suggesting it was part of a propaganda effort. The author further explores alleged connections between the individuals involved in the Edmund Fitzgerald incident, the ship’s owners and operators, and prominent figures in intelligence and banking, as well as the British peerage. Finally, the article proposes that the Arthur M. Anderson was actually the Edmund Fitzgerald, having undergone a disguise.
Here is a list of subjects, names, references, locations, companies, etc. mentioned in the text:
- Edmund Fitzgerald
- Dagen D. Proveritas
- Gordon Lightfoot
- “Black Day in July” (song)
- Detroit race riots of 1967
- Neil Young
- “Ohio” (song)
- Kent State massacre
- Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co.
- Edmund Fitzgerald (ship namesake)
- FitzGerald (family name)
- Titanic
- Miles (author’s associate)
- Oglebay Norton Co.
- John D. Rockefeller
- Mesabi Iron Range
- Minnesota
- Robert J. Hemming
- “Gales of November: the Sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald” (book)
- Ann Arbor, MI
- San Francisco
- Jean-Michel Cousteau
- Jacques Cousteau
- Michigan Sea Grant Program
- NOAA
- National Geographic Society
- US Army Corps of Engineers
- Chris Nicholson
- Dr. Robert Ballard
- Frederick Stonehouse
- History Channel
- Joseph B. MacInnis
- US Navy
- Canadian Forces
- Russian Academy of Sciences
- Random House
- Fred Shannon
- Deepquest, LLC
- US Dept of Defense
- NASA
- Gitchee Gumee
- Shawn McKenzie
- Coast Guard vessel Naugatuk
- Brady Slater
- Capstone Corporation
- Bob Hom
- Jim Woodard
- Kennedy assassination
- Lake Superior
- Whitefish Point Museum
- Langley (referring to CIA)
- Geni (genealogy website)
- Find-a-grave (genealogy website)
- Shad Wilde
- Intelius
- instantcheckmate
- Shadwick J. Wilde-DeVries
- Shadrak Wilde
- Los Alamos, NM
- Taunia Vanvalkenburg
- Zakary Wilde
- Salt Lake City, UT
- PhantomM5B
- Zoe Quinn
- Kirtland AFB
- Albuquerque
- RatWiki
- Michael Eugene Armagost
- Lorraine Claretta Armagost (nee Berube)
- Kendall Doran Armagost
- Steve Armagost
- Kimberly Fortini
- Hanover, PA
- H. Louise (Fetter) Miller
- Dean E. Armagost
- Ransom Cundy
- Oliver Joseph “Buck” Champeau
- Russell George Haskell
- Cheryl Rozman
- Deborah Gomez-Felder
- Vivian Jacobe
- James Haskell
- IMDB
- Russell George Haskell (peerage)
- Scotts
- Johnstones
- Lathams
- Millers
- Littles
- Morgans
- Jones
- Haskel (name variation)
- Baron Haskel
- Isaac Haskel
- Lithuania
- Jacobe (Jewish name)
- Cundys (peerage)
- William Cundy
- Tavistock
- James Callaghan
- Baron Callaghan of Cardiff
- Chancellor of the Exchequer
- Home Secretary
- Prime Minister
- Phoenician boats
- Bernstein (family name)
- Peter Jay
- Weekend World (UK TV program)
- Robert Maxwell
- Jeffrey Epstein
- Bank of England
- Grahams
- Moons
- Lt. Col. John Graham Moon
- Mary Jane Cundy
- Baronets Moon
- Sir Peter Graham-Moon
- Cundy-Coopers
- Earle Baronets
- Gordons
- Forbes
- James Clerk Maxwell Garnett
- physicist
- Hoch (Robert Maxwell’s birth name)
- Meynard (family name)
- Maynards, Viscounts Maynard
- Fitzroys
- Beauclerks
- Erskines
- Capt. Ernest Michael McSorley
- Pride of the American Side (ship nickname)
- Columbia Transportation Company
- Schumacher* (author)
- Geni (genealogy website)
- WikiTree (genealogy website)
- Woods (family name)
- Tiger Woods
- Natalie Wood
- Pollock (family name)
- McGrath
- Black
- Parks
- McFarlane
- Neal
- O’Neill
- lynch
- McGuire
- Perkins
- Sylvain
- Rooney
- Gervais
- Laframboise
- Cummings
- Rohrmoser
- Arthur M. Anderson (ship)
- Jesse (or Jessie) B. “Bernie” Cooper (captain)
- General Dynamics Corp.
- Gman (slang for government agent)
- Mark Woods (author)
- El Faro (ship)
- hurricane
- Sun Shipbuilding and Drydock Co.
- Sunoco Oil Co.
- US Govts Emergency Shipbuilding Program
- Aerospace industry
- cold war
- Puerto Rico
- Halloween
- JP Morgan
- US Steel
- Milwaukee Brewers (baseball club)
- Cutler-Hammer
- Richard Cutler
- OSS
- CIA
- Liz Fitzgerald (wife of Richard Cutler)
- President Reagan
- National Telecommunications Security Advisory Council
- Francis Fitzgerald
- Elenor Joyes
- Burnchurch (Fitzgeralds of)
- Sir Gerald Fitzgerald KCMG
- Accountant General of the Navy
- Milnes
- Barons Houghton
- Moncktons
- Crewes
- brigadier general
- St. Clair-Erskine
- Earls of Rosslyn
- Andy Murray
- Dukes of Grafton
- Bells (family name)
- Inch
- Cotton
- Bateman
- Mooring
- Kirkpatrick
- Smith
- clark
- Hannah Lightfoot
- King George III
- Quaker
- Baronet Boynton
- Paget
- Beckett
- Baron Grimthorpe
- Henry Neale Lightfoot
- Baronet Hartwell
- Balls
- George Washington
- Warburtons
- Elphinstone Baronets
- Geneanet (genealogy website)
- William Fitzhugh Carter
- Fox
- Garfield
- Chew
- Benjamin Chew
- Stewarts
- Randolphs
- Ayers
- Edmund Bacon Fitzgerald
- Milwaukee
- University of Michigan
- Frank R. Bacon
- Milwaukee Magazine
- “Secret Agent Man” (article)
- Northwestern Mutual
- First National Bank of Milwaukee
- Wisconsin Crimes of the Century
- DJs
- Mighty Fitz: The Sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald (book by Michael Schumacher)
- Bloomsbury Publishing