
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


A Nazi cargo ship sits rusting in plain sight off South Manitou Island, Michigan, visible from shore, frozen in time since a 1960 snowstorm drove it into the shallows. This is the Francisco Morazan, a 235-foot former German naval vessel that survived Operation Sea Lion only to meet its end in Lake Michigan's treacherous Manitou Passage.
But the Morazan is just one ghost among many. These islands sit at the heart of one of the busiest, and deadliest, shipping lanes in 19th-century America, where an 1840 lighthouse tried desperately to save lives, and more than 50 shipwrecks still rest beneath the water. Behind it all lies a Native American legend of a mother bear who swam her cubs across 118 miles of open water, only to lose them in sight of shore.
This is the story of Michigan's Sleeping Bear Dunes and the islands she watches over, a landscape where mythology, maritime tragedy, and forgotten history converge at the edge of America's third coast. From ancient Ojibwa spirituality to Civil War-era lighthouse keepers to literal Nazi naval vessels, these waters hold more secrets than most people realize.
Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten stories from America's small towns, strange places, and overlooked corners, where the past is never quite as simple as you thought.
Key Figures:
Timeline:
Hometown History explores forgotten stories from small-town America. The overlooked events, hidden triumphs, and buried tragedies that shaped the country we live in. New episodes every Tuesday. Find every episode at mythsandmalice.com/hometown-history
By Shane Waters4.5
138138 ratings
A Nazi cargo ship sits rusting in plain sight off South Manitou Island, Michigan, visible from shore, frozen in time since a 1960 snowstorm drove it into the shallows. This is the Francisco Morazan, a 235-foot former German naval vessel that survived Operation Sea Lion only to meet its end in Lake Michigan's treacherous Manitou Passage.
But the Morazan is just one ghost among many. These islands sit at the heart of one of the busiest, and deadliest, shipping lanes in 19th-century America, where an 1840 lighthouse tried desperately to save lives, and more than 50 shipwrecks still rest beneath the water. Behind it all lies a Native American legend of a mother bear who swam her cubs across 118 miles of open water, only to lose them in sight of shore.
This is the story of Michigan's Sleeping Bear Dunes and the islands she watches over, a landscape where mythology, maritime tragedy, and forgotten history converge at the edge of America's third coast. From ancient Ojibwa spirituality to Civil War-era lighthouse keepers to literal Nazi naval vessels, these waters hold more secrets than most people realize.
Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten stories from America's small towns, strange places, and overlooked corners, where the past is never quite as simple as you thought.
Key Figures:
Timeline:
Hometown History explores forgotten stories from small-town America. The overlooked events, hidden triumphs, and buried tragedies that shaped the country we live in. New episodes every Tuesday. Find every episode at mythsandmalice.com/hometown-history

17,325 Listeners

2,790 Listeners

10,972 Listeners

958 Listeners

2,825 Listeners

2,863 Listeners

1,016 Listeners

1,926 Listeners

19,133 Listeners

47,718 Listeners

375 Listeners

17,948 Listeners

8,022 Listeners

3,982 Listeners

10,359 Listeners

75 Listeners

61 Listeners

136 Listeners

378 Listeners

896 Listeners

8 Listeners

3 Listeners

11 Listeners

336 Listeners