Model Citizen

A maritime history collector is preserving the lore and legend of Downriver鈥檚 commercial shipping history, one replica at a time
3437

听翱n November 7, 1959, an era rich in local tradition was already drawing to a close when the freighter Arthur B. Homer was launched from the Great Lakes Engineering Works. It turned out to be the final splash for Downriver鈥檚 last remaining shipyard, best known by its acronym, GLEW.

鈥淭wo years later, GLEW was dissolved and sold,鈥 says Keith M. Steffke. 鈥淭hat was it.鈥 At one time Detroit and Downriver shipbuilders were responsible for half the tonnage on the Great Lakes, including such famous vessels as the Edmund Fitzgerald and the Bob-lo steamer Columbia. But they couldn鈥檛 compete with low-cost foreign firms.

After nearly 140 years of commercial shipbuilding along the Detroit River, the once-familiar sound of rattling riveting guns in River Rouge, Ecorse, and Wyandotte was stilled forever.

Steffke, whose Prussian ancestors came to the Wyandotte area (then known as Ford City) before 1870, has several generations of Great Lakes maritime lore in his blood. He also has it stuffed into nearly every available space of the 1920s Lincoln Park bungalow he shares with his wife and two college-age children. Boiler gauges, engineer plates, and life preservers hang on the walls. Boxes of blueprints, charts, records, and photographs overflow his second-floor study. More books are stacked on the steps of a narrow stairwell leading up to it. The handrail has been fashioned out of an oar from the passenger steamer Tashmoo.

鈥淵ou see these?鈥 he says, pointing out several cracks in the living room ceiling. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 from the weight of all the stuff I have upstairs.鈥

If the groaning floorboards overhead were to give way and bury Steffke in a pile of bookcases, filing cabinets, storage boxes, and vintage nautical equipment, the bow-tied eccentric could report to The Great Lighthouse Keeper in the Sky that he had done more than just about anybody to carry on Downriver鈥檚 once-thriving shipbuilding industry, albeit on a teensy scale. Not only is Steffke one of the country鈥檚 leading maritime experts, he鈥檚 also a master model-maker who can accurately recreate a 3-D miniaturized replica of just about any vessel that ever plied the Detroit River.

A fascination with the history of shipbuilding on the Detroit River led Keith M. Steffke to amass a comprehensive collection of documents, photographs, and other maritime-related artifacts.

鈥淚 thrive on the obscure,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 won鈥檛 do any World War II ships. I鈥檒l tell someone who asks, 鈥榊ou can get a kit at the store. Why do you need me?鈥 I do the ships that were historically important, the ones that represent the technological transition from wood to iron and then steel.鈥

Steffke, 50, has branded himself 鈥淭he Old Shipbuilder.鈥 His models typically command between $1,500 and $6,500 each, the price tag determined upfront by the number of hours he figures he鈥檒l need to research and build it. Each is pieced together with meticulous attention to detail.

His crowded basement workshop has a score of vessels in various stages of completion, including a work-in-progress, the Pretoria. The 338-foot schooner-barge was one of the largest wooden ships ever built when it was launched in what was then called West Bay City in 1900. He鈥檚 reproducing the ship in 1/8-inch scale, meaning its 22-foot lifeboat will measure a mere 2 3/4 inches. There are 147 pieces in the Lilliputian lifeboat. 鈥淭hat alone probably took me over a week,鈥 he says.

Steffke is eager to share maritime minutiae. 鈥淚 have the employee records of the Detroit Dry Dock Company,鈥 he says. 鈥淗enry Ford worked for them. I can tell you the dates he worked and how much he was paid.鈥 He fires off figures and anecdotes, names and dates, fueled by his admittedly abnormal intake of black coffee and Coke Zero. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e an insomniac, a caffeine addict, and a type-AA personality, you can really get things done,鈥 he says.

What he has done is remarkable. Over the course of three decades, starting with a shirt box of photographs he got from his grandfather, he has amassed a private collection that rivals the holdings of many institutions. In addition to boxes of blueprints, personal diaries, logbooks, seasonal timetables, advertising brochures, and other ephemera, he has more than 60,000 photographs, including a rare 1843 daguerreotype of the USS Michigan, the Navy鈥檚 first iron-hull warship, which has never been published.

He has about 3,000 reference books and journals, including a complete set of the Annual Report of the Lake Carriers鈥 Association, published between 1902 and 1999. He has some 2,000 subject files ranging from such utterly forgotten firms as the Davis Boat & Oar Works to such famous figures as Frank E. Kirby, whom he regards as the greatest naval architect.

Although Steffke is mostly interested in documents, he has acquired such prize items as the ship鈥檚 bell from the 1890 lighthouse tender Marigold and a silver tea set presented to the captain of the Columbia in 1902. He has rummaged through attics, basements, and dumpsters, snooped around yard sales, and sniped on eBay. He鈥檚 paid as much as $5,000 for a document.

鈥淚鈥檓 most interested in ship builders and shipyards, but I collect anything related to the river and the Great Lakes,鈥 he says. 鈥淧eople, animals, fisheries, shipwrecks, steamship companies, the lifesaving service.鈥 He puts the material to use when researching his models, especially those early 19th-century ships for which little information may exist.

Steffke admits it helps to have an understanding spouse. He met Angela Gorman, a schoolteacher whose ancestors came over on the Mayflower, while both worked as historical interpreters at Greenfield Village. They were engaged on the Columbia, where Steffke once worked as a deckhand. Today, they share a ship captain鈥檚 bed Steffke built in the alcove of a room off his study. A harpsichord is incongruously parked in the middle of the cramped room, presumably because there鈥檚 no other place to put it.

A buttoned-down Lutheran active in Republican politics, Steffke always waltzed to his own music. He grew up in Wyandotte. A thin and sickly child, he 鈥渁spired to be a 98-pound weakling,鈥 he jokes. He poured himself into natural science. As a teenager, he gave classroom lectures and operated 鈥淭he Steffke Collection of Natural History鈥 out of his attic. He startled neighbors by walking around with a convalescing great horned owl named Archimedes perched on his shoulder. 鈥淧eople started calling me 鈥楤irdman,鈥欌 he says.

He also developed a passion for the history of shipbuilding on the Detroit River. His great-great-great-grandfather was an ironworker at the Wyandotte Iron Shipbuilding Company, founded by Capt. Eber Brock Ward, Detroit鈥檚 first millionaire. Five of Steffke鈥檚 ancestors worked at the Detroit Dry Dock Company. Other branches of his family have been involved in maritime activities for the last 200 years. Some were marine engineers or commercial fishermen, others were lighthouse keepers.

Steffke is also a master model-maker, creating miniaturized replicas of historic vessels that once plied the Detroit River.

Steffke wanted to be an ornithologist or a history teacher, but never completed his undergrad studies at Wayne State University. He held various positions in mortgage banking and real estate before turning to model making full time 10 years ago. 鈥淯p to then, it had been a hobby,鈥 he says. He was 8 years听old when he built his first vessel, the Union ironclad Monitor, out of a rat trap and a broom handle.

The ships Steffke builds come in a variety of sizes. The most popular is where 1/8-inch on the model equals 1 foot on the actual ship. Thus a 375-foot vessel would measure just under 4 feet long when completed. Anything larger, such as an ore freighter, is typically built at 1/16-inch = 1 foot scale so that it can fit on a fireplace mantel or desktop.

Most models are made by using the builder鈥檚 original drawings and various photos or engravings. The real challenge is recreating a ship for which there is scant documentation. He usually combs his archives to find a description in a diary, newspaper, or journal to guide him. He鈥檒l use the ship鈥檚 known length, beam, and depth of hull, and his own deep knowledge of shipbuilding technology to create a conjectural drawing. There鈥檚 room for interpretation. 鈥淚 approach it as an artist, not an engineer,鈥 he says.

Steffke habitually makes two of each ship he鈥檚 commissioned 鈥 one for the customer and the other for possible future 鈥渙ff-the-shelf鈥 sale. Overall, he has built about 250 models.

His customers fall into one of three groups. 鈥淵ou have buyers who have an emotional connection to a certain boat, such as the passenger steamer Tashmoo, but really don鈥檛 care about every last detail. Then there are the interior decorators who appreciate it as a design element and don鈥檛 mind paying more. And then there鈥檚 the intense maritime history buff or a museum that wants a top-quality piece.鈥

Steffke has lived Downriver for his entire life. 鈥淚 know some people don鈥檛 like Downriver, but I can鈥檛 imagine living anyplace else,鈥 he says. But he regrets not having dropped anchor in his hometown, closer to the river. As a newlywed, he got a good deal on a starter home. 鈥淚 said, 鈥極K, we鈥檒l stay here five years and then we鈥檒l move.鈥 It鈥檚 been 25 years now. I鈥檓 going to die in this house.鈥

Resigned to staying in land-locked Lincoln Park, Steffke doubled down, buying the house next door as a kind of annex for his ever-expanding archives. He assumes that the 鈥淪teffke Memorial Maritime Collection鈥 eventually will wind up in the Michigan Historical Museum in Lansing, though he refuses to give up on his dream of one day opening a Downriver Maritime Museum in Wyandotte to house it.

Either way, Steffke鈥檚 private archives, which he only occasionally opens up to carefully vetted researchers, merits a public space, says Joel Stone, senior curator at the Dossin Great Lakes Museum.

鈥淚t鈥檚 an incredible collection,鈥 Stone says. 鈥淗e knows more about a wide range of subjects than anyone I know. Now, if you鈥檙e talking about a听museum, you have the issue of financing, as well as competition, to consider.鈥

In addition to the Dossin, there鈥檚 the National Museum of the Great Lakes in Toledo. Among its exhibits are two life rafts recovered from the Edmund Fitzgerald. That鈥檚 impressive, but Steffke also has a few pieces of the vessel鈥檚 history, including steel test plates from the hull. 鈥淭hey were reference plates for each batch of steel as it was being built,鈥 he explains. He also has GLEW鈥檚 corporate records.

鈥淒o you want to know the exact cost of building the Edmund Fitzgerald?鈥澨he asks. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if that鈥檚 ever been published before.鈥

He scrounges around for a ledger book from 1958 and flips through the pages. He runs his finger across a few columns of figures before settling on a number. 鈥淗ere it is. The total cost was $3,966,086.鈥

The Old Shipbuilder flashes a satisfied smile. 鈥淲ho else would have this stuff? When you understand what it is, it鈥檚 priceless.鈥