There aren’t many things left from the early 1900s that are still operating exactly the way they were designed.
But on Lake Michigan…
There’s one.
And it’s still chugging along every day.
On March 21, 1953, a massive car ferry made its first official crossing from Ludington, Michigan to Manitowoc, Wisconsin.
That ferry was the S.S. Badger.
And more than 70 years later…
…it’s still in service.
🚢 A Floating Piece of History
The S.S. Badger isn’t just any ferry.
It’s the last coal-fired passenger ship operating on the Great Lakes.
Yes — coal-fired.
Not diesel.
Not electric.
Not hybrid.
Coal.
🔥 Wait… It Still Uses Coal?
Yep.
The Badger was built to carry:
• Cars
• Freight railcars
• Passengers
Back in the day, it was part of a fleet that moved goods across the lake faster than going around Chicago.
Most of those ships are long gone.
But the Badger?
Still running.
Still powered the old-school way.
🚗 Why It Still Exists
At one point, ferries like this started disappearing.
Highways improved.
Trucking became easier.
Shipping methods changed.
But the Badger survived by becoming something new:
👉 A unique travel experience
Today, people ride it for:
• The shortcut across Lake Michigan
• The nostalgia
• The experience of being on a working piece of history
🤯 The Weird Part
Think about this.
You can:
• Drive your modern car onto the ship
• Cross Lake Michigan
• While riding on a vessel powered the same way it was in the 1950s
That’s like stepping into a time machine…
…with Wi-Fi.
📍 A Michigan Original
The Badger is based in Ludington, and it has become a point of pride for Michigan.
It’s not just transportation.
It’s:
✔ History
✔ Engineering
✔ A tourist attraction
✔ A floating museum you can actually ride
🧠 Final Thought
In a world where everything keeps changing faster and faster…
It’s kind of amazing that something like this still exists.
Still working.
Still crossing the lake.
Still doing things the old way.
Next time you’re near Ludington, you might want to check it out.
Because you’re not just taking a ferry ride…
You’re stepping onto a piece of Michigan history that never stopped moving.
Find more info here: SSBadger.com
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