For a quiet guy, Elmer Engman has started some powerful conversations about
Lake Superior and the Great Lakes.
He began an annual gathering - the Gales of November - for divers to talk
shop; it’s grown into a chance for hundreds of Great Lakes lovers of every
ilk to discuss the latest thing on diving, maritime history and the lake
environment. He provided food for thought and discussion by making public
his 4,000-plus volume collection on all things aquatic.
For generous efforts to promote enthusiasm and protection for Lake Superior
and its history, Lake Superior Magazine presents Elmer Engman with
its 2002 Achievement Award.
“Elmer is an inspiring example of how individuals can contribute to the
preservation of our maritime culture and natural resources,” says Editor
Konnie LeMay.
The
Duluth, Minnesota, man has taught people - young and old - diving skills
to enhance their enjoyment of Lake Superior and other waters. His Innerspace
Scuba Center offers advice as well as equipment, and he has guided divers
around the world. He has served on countless boards and advisory committees
charged with the care of maritime treasures like the SS Meteor, the
Lake Superior Marine Museum and the Great Lakes Aquarium & Freshwater
Discovery Center.
Elmer has always had a passion for waters both fresh and salt. Although
he grew up literally beside Lake Superior, it was a Frank Sinatra movie,
“Assault on a Queen,” that inspired him and a teen-age friend to take their
first diving class. Diving the lake later, they found two unopened bottles
of champagne. Being from Minnesota, they weren’t tempted to tipple - “we
were underage,” Elmer says - but the bottles reinforce what Elmer loves
about diving: “You never know what you’ll find.”
A man of few words, Elmer speaks with actions, says Dennis Medjo, also
in the Lake Superior Marine Museum Association. Medjo points to Elmer’s
hybrid electric/gas car as an example. “He’s a real solid environmentalist.”
Elmer simply calls the car “the right thing to do.”
The aquatic collection that Elmer donated to the University of Wisconsin-Superior
holds materials on diving, archeology, oceanography, marine life, maritime
history and even a few children’s pop-up books on marine topics.
“We get contributions constantly, but one that is so focused and of this
quality, you don’t get one more than every 20 years or so,” says UWS archivist
Laura Jacobs. UWS also holds archives of Lake Superior Marine Museum Association.
Elmer is most known for creation of the Gales of November, now in its 15th
year. When he started Gales, Elmer wanted to bring together Great Lakes
divers and to promote the SS Meteor museum. Over the years, program
proceeds aided many lake groups, and it has developed into a forum for
information on diving and maritime history and research. The program discourages
dive scavenging, which cannot be justified in fresh water that preserves
wrecks, Elmer says. Last year, Elmer officially passed the Gales torch
- and fund-raising benefits - to Lake Superior Marine Museum Association,
co-sponsors with Lake Superior Magazine. Last year more than 600
people attended.
The Gales of November program and other such Great Lakes-wide conversations
go a long way toward recognizing and preserving our special resources.
For his part in this conversation, we honor Elmer Engman with our Achievement
Award, given each year to a community, organization or person for making
a lasting contribution to the whole of Lake Superior.
Past Award Winners
2001 Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior Chippewa
2000 Crisp Point Light Historical Society
1999 C. Patrick Labadie, Maritime Historian
1998 John and Ann Mahan, Authors/Publishers
1997 North of Superior Marina Marketing Association
1996 Cities of Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan & Ontario
1995 Lake Superior Binational Forum
1994 Craig Blacklock, photographer
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