Minnesota News

Voyageurs National Park ranger dies while helping stranded boaters in rough waters

A boat passes through a channel in Voyageurs.
A lone boat cruises through island channels in Voyageurs National Park in 2016. The National Park Service said a ranger drowned in Namakan Lake on Sunday, amid high winds and rough waters.
Evan Frost | MPR News 2016

A Voyageurs National Park ranger died Sunday while responding to a call for help from a family stranded on an island on Namakan Lake amid high winds and rough waters.

The law enforcement ranger responded to a late-morning distress call, according to the National Park Service.

The family was camping on an island on the huge lake along the U.S.-Canada border. St. Louis County Sheriff Gordon Ramsay said waves five to six feet high had pushed their boat so far up onto the shore that they couldn’t free it.

The ranger picked up the family, consisting of a father, an adult son and a young son about 8 years old. But the Park Service boat flipped on the trip back to the mainland.

“The front kind of nosedived, the boat listed, and flipped over upside-down,” Ramsay said, noting that previous reports indicating that the ranger was towing the family’s boat were inaccurate.

The three family members were able to swim back to the island. But the ranger didn’t surface. Ramsay said the ranger was wearing a self-inflating life jacket designed to inflate when it makes contact with water.

The ranger’s body was recovered from the lake at about 3:20 p.m., after a three-hour search.

“The ranger in this case was known in this community,” Ramsay said. “He volunteered with fire and EMS, and really had a servant’s heart, and he died doing what he liked to do, and that was helping people.”

The ranger’s name is being withheld until family members are notified. The incident remains under investigation.

The United States Border Patrol, St. Louis County Sheriff’s Office, and Kabetogama Fire Department assisted in the search and recovery effort.

Rescue personnel responded to other water emergencies Sunday in high winds and rough conditions. Ramsay said a canoe with three people in it flipped in the Crane Lake area, but they were able to make it to shore on their own.

The St. Louis County Rescue Squad also responded to a report of a capsized canoe on Big Shell Lake in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. Those two individuals also were able to make it to shore.

A first responder involved in the search on Namakan Lake said it was the roughest conditions he’d ever seen, Ramsay said.

“And he’d worked up there for many years,” Ramsay said. “He knows the lake very well.”