All but 16 of 132 people on board perished when Le Lyonnais sank in 1856 off Massachusetts. Now a New Jersey dive team has ...
Le Lyonnais was making its first trip from America to Europe in 1856 when it collided with another ship and sank.
Volunteers work with museum staff to get the triple-expansion steam engine aboard the world's only above-water whaleback working again.
On November 2, 1856, the passenger steamship Le Lyonnais was sailing off the coast of Massachusetts when it collided with a ...
A marine salvage firm has found the wreck of a long lost French steamship about 200 miles off New Bedford, Massachusetts ...
Two Wisconsin maritime historians discovered the John Evenson steam tug about five miles northeast of Algoma, Wisconsin.
More than 100 lives were lost when the ship, Le Lyonnais, collided with another ship about 200 miles off the Massachusetts ...
Le Lyonnais was discovered in the Atlantic Ocean about 140 miles east of Nantucket, Mass. More than 100 died after the French ...
A French ship that sunk in 1856 was recently discovered off the coast of Massachusetts.
Trembley's ether engine, in a ship. It was stated that the engine was 75 horse power, and that its superiority was so great over the steam engine, that it saved 75 per cent, of fuel. The same ...
For crew member Jennifer Sellitti, the discovery is the culmination of eight years of research, which was so voluminous that ...
All but 16 of 132 people on board perished when Le Lyonnais sank in 1856 off Massachusetts. Now a New Jersey dive team has ...