Cris Kohl and Joan Forsberg
Cris Kohl and Joan Forsberg,
well-known maritime historians, scuba divers, authors, lecturers,
photographers, and videographers, are a Chicago-area husband-and-wife
team who love to explore shipwrecks, particularly those in the Great
Lakes. They both have underwater archaeology certifications from Great
Britain’s Nautical Archaeology Society (NAS).
Joan has a degree in History and has been the Chairman of the
Shipwrecks and our Maritime Heritage Room at Chicago’s Our World –
Underwater Show since 1996. She is the author of the scuba celebrity
cook-and-tell book, Diver’s Guide to the Kitchen, and articles in
magazines such as Immersed, Great Lakes Boating, and Wreck Diving (for
which she works as Copy Editor). Joan appears behind the camera
shooting underwater video, and in front of the camera as Cris’
underwater model. In her three terms as President of the Underwater
Archaeological Society of Chicago (2008, 2009, 2010), she spearheaded
several significant maritime history projects, particularly the sinking
of the historic ship named the Buccaneer as the newest shipwreck site
off Chicago. Joan was inducted into the international Women Divers Hall
of Fame in 2010.
Cris, a prize-winning underwater photographer with a Master’s
Degree in History, is originally from Windsor, Ontario, was co-founder
of the Windsor chapter of Save Ontario Shipwrecks (1987), is a Past
President of the Underwater Archaeological Society of Chicago (2004),
and has written eleven books and more than 325 magazine and newsletter
articles about Great Lakes shipwrecks. He has appeared on numerous
television programs, including on the History Channel several times and
on the Discovery Channel. He has helped locate and identify many
shipwrecks. He is the 2008 recipient of the annual Our World—Underwater
Outstanding Achievement Award. His most recent book is the expanded
Great Lakes Diving Guide, the most comprehensive book ever published
about Great Lakes shipwrecks.
Co-authors of the recent book Shipwrecks at Death’s Door,
co-editors of the 2010 book Our World—Underwater: The First 40 Years,
and producers of several commercial DVDs about Great Lakes shipwrecks,
Cris and Joan are currently working on more shipwreck book
collaborations. Cris & Joan's web site is Seawolf Communications.
Shipwreck Tales of the Great Lakes
The most dramatic stories of Great
Lakes shipwrecks tinged with murder, mystery, deception and more than
the usual amount of mayhem, plus intense historical research and
exceptional underwater photography, will keep the audience on the edge
of their seats!
Tales include:
-- the story of the fabled Griffon, the first ship on the
upper Great Lakes, lost with all hands (possibly in Canada’s northern
Lake Huron!) on her maiden voyage in 1679, and the many attempts to
locate that shipwreck
-- the Canadian captain who murdered his crew and sank his ship in Lake
Huron
-- the raising of the 1846 schooner, the Alvin Clark, from
Green Bay in 1969, that ship’s fate, and how the same thing happened in
Ontario 70 years earlier!
-- startling new revelations about the Canadian captain who kept his
Lake Ontario shipwreck survival a secret
-- the story of the shipwreck which helped build Chicago
-- the wrecks of the largest sailing ships ever built on the Great
Lakes, the David Dows (USA) and the Minnedosa (Canada)
-- the strange coincidences in the life of the jinxed captain of the
steamer, Myron, which sank in Lake Superior in 1919 with
great loss of life
-- the world-infamous Australian Convict Ship, the Success,
and how it came to be a shipwreck in the Great Lakes
-- the 1875 mystery schooner, the Cornelia B. Windiate, found
in deep waters
plus MORE!
This presentation is based on the popular book, Shipwreck Tales of
the Great Lakes, by Cris Kohl. This book was a FINALIST for the
Book-of-the-Year Award from Foreword Magazine.