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U-869

An expedition on September 2, 1991 aboard
the dive boat Seeker left Manasquan inlet to
examine one of thousands of lumps that litter the floor of the Atlantic
along the East Coast. The boat pulled away from the dock at midnight for a
five hour journey across open ocean to a point 65 miles off the New Jersey
coast. The trip is an annual event set aside from the usual schedule to
investigate clues to a lump that may hold more promise of interest than an
old trash barge or pile of rocks. These clues are usually obtained by
trading locations with fishermen, or dragger captains who wish to avoid
these lumps so as not to lose their nets.
As Seeker neared
its destination, Captain Bill Nagle - owner-operator of the boat - was
called to the wheelhouse. The sun had just risen into a clear sky and the
seas were tolerable as he took over the helm. On approach to the
coordinates Captain Bill slowed the engines and began a search pattern.
Within a few minutes an erratic jump on the bottom recorder traced an
outline of an object resting on the bottom. The signal was given to toss
the grapnel off the bow. The anchor line jerked back as the grapnel
clambered over the wreckage then fetched up securely, and the line was
quickly tied off.
A glance at the depth sounder revealed
deeper water than anticipated. Captain John Chatterton decided to tie in
the anchor line and make a reconnaissance dive. He quickly geared up then
flopped over the side of the boat. Descending the anchor line, John
reached the bottom and quickly secured the grapnel so it couldn't pull
free of the wreckage. It was very dark and visibility was only 10 to 15
feet as he continued his survey. With light in hand illuminating only a
small area John swam along what appeared to be the upper edge of the hull.
He recalls noticing the top of the hull curved inward to meet the deck
area, unlike a ship, which would have a gunwale that protrudes above the
main deck. "Another barge," he thought to himself.
Continuing he noticed a hatch and again it
was unlike one found on a ship or barge. This one was built to withstand
great pressure. Pictures started forming in John's mind as he surveyed the
wreckage further. A high pressure cylinder and narrow beam were revealed
while swimming up over the wreck. The answer was soon unveiled. "It's a
sub!" John excitedly looked for evidence to substantiate his discovery.
Checking his gauges, the bottom timer indicated the dive was over and John
reluctantly swam back to the anchor line.
Ascending the anchor line, John stopped at
fifty feet to begin his lengthy decompression. As the divers on board
waited impatiently, diver Kevin Brennan noticed John's bubbles close to
the surface near the anchor line indicating he was decompressing. Kevin
decided not to wait for John to surface. He donned his gear and splashed
into the water. Kevin figured John would indicate whether or not there was
anything of interest before he made the descent. When Kevin reached the
anchor line John saw him and quickly scribbled something on his slate. As
Kevin made his descent, John held out his slate: "SUB!" Kevin's eyes
opened wide with excitement, then he ascended to alert the others of their
impending dive. The remaining divers moved about in a frenzy to don their
gear, each exuberant to be one of the first to dive a virgin wreck. The
excitement must have been too much that day for not one artifact was
recovered to give any clue of the wreck's origin.
The next trip proved unproductive and
ended in tragedy. A diver, [Steven Feldman] for reasons unknown, was
rendered unconscious and swept away in the current. He was not recovered
until several months later, far from the wreck, by a commercial fisherman.
Diver John Yurga did recover the first artifacts that day but they added
no immediate evidence to the wreck's identity.
As the weeks passed between trips much
research was underway. This also proved fruitless as to the origin of the
wreck. No naval records showed the sinking of any submarine within
hundreds of miles of the wreck's location. Though the records showed no
sinkings they did reveal the bombing of anything that even remotely
resembled a shadow below the surface of the water by naval and civil
defenses. We theorized that in at least one case, this method to defend
against a U-boat attack was more than effective. Through conjecture, our
opinion was formed that the wreck was of German origin.
The third trip was greatly rewarding. John
Chatterton, Steve Gatto and I all recovered artifacts that would confirm
the wreck as being German. I recovered items from one of the survival
canisters with operational instructions written in German. Steve Gatto
recovered a part of U.Z.O., a torpedo aiming device with the Kreigsmarine
insignia stamped into it. John recovered china from deep inside the wreck.
Not only did the china have the Kriegsmarine insignia but also the date,
1942. John's find narrowed the field of research considerably but the
definitive answer to the mystery remained elusive.
On the fourth and final trip of the 1991
season many more artifacts were recovered. One in particular may hold the
key to unlock the mystery. A knife with a name crudely inscribed in the
handle was recovered by Chatterton near the same area as the china.
Though the wreck holds no real
archeological value or treasure, the thrill of discovery and exploration
is more than enough reward to justify the time, expense and risk of those
experienced and daring individuals willing to be part of the adventure.
CHAPTER
ONE
THE BOOK OF NUMBERS
Brielle, New Jersey, September 1991
Bill Nagle's life changed the day a fisherman sat beside him in a
ramshackle bar and told him about a mystery he had found lying at the
bottom of the Atlantic Ocean. Against his better judgment, that fisherman
promised to tell Nagle how to find it. The men agreed to meet the next day
on the rickety wooden pier that led to Nagle's boat, the Seeker, a vessel
Nagle had built to chase possibility. But when the appointed time came,
the fisherman was not there. Nagle paced back and forth, careful not to
plunge through the pier where its wooden planks had rotted away. He had
lived much of his life on the Atlantic, and he knew when worlds were about
to shift. Usually, that happened before a storm or when a man's boat
broke. Today, however, he knew it was going to happen when the fisherman
handed him a scrap of paper, a hand-scrawled set of numbers that would
lead to the sunken mystery. Nagle looked into the distance for the
fisherman. He saw no one. The salt air blew against the small seashore
town of Brielle, tilting the dockside boats and spraying the Atlantic into
Nagle's eyes. When the mist died down he looked again. This time, he saw
the fisherman approaching, a small square of paper crumpled in his hands.
The fisherman looked worried. Like Nagle, he had lived on the ocean, and
he also knew when a man's life was about to change.
In the whispers of approaching autumn, Brielle's rouge is blown away and
what remains is the real Brielle, the locals' Brielle. This small seashore
town on the central New Jersey coast is the place where the boat captains
and fishermen live, where convenience store owners stay open to serve
neighbors, where fifth graders can repair scallop dredges. This is where
the hangers-on and wannabes and also-rans and once-greats keep believing
in the sea. In Brielle, when the customers leave, the town's lines show,
and they are the kind grooved by the thin difference between making a
living on the water and washing out.
The Seeker towers above the other boats tied to this Brielle dock, and
it's not just the vessel's sixty-five-foot length that grabs one's
attention, it's the feeling-from her battered wooden hull and nicked
propellers-that she's been places. Conceived in Nagle's imagination, the
Seeker was built for a single purpose: to take scuba divers to the most
dangerous shipwrecks in the Atlantic Ocean.
Nagle was forty years old then, a thin, deeply tanned former Snap-On Tools
Salesman of the Year. To see him here, waiting for this fisherman in his
tattered T-shirt and thrift-shop sandals, the Jim Beam he kept as best
friend slurring his motions, no one would guess that he had been an
artist, that in his day Nagle had been great.
In his twenties, Nagle was already legend in shipwreck diving, a boy
wonder in a sport that regularly kills its young. In those days,
deep-wreck diving was still the province of the adventurer. Countless
shipwrecks, even famous ones, lay undiscovered at the bottom of the
Atlantic, and the hunt for those wrecks-with their bent metal and arrested
history-was the motion that primed Nagle's imagination.
Treasure never figured into the equation for Atlantic shipwreck divers in
the Northeast. Spanish galleons overflowing with gold doubloons and silver
pieces of eight did not sink in this part of the ocean, and even if they
had, Nagle wouldn't have been interested. His neighborhood was the New
York and New Jersey shipping lanes, waters that conducted freighters,
ocean liners, passenger vessels, and warships about the business and
survival of America. These wrecks occasionally surrendered a rare piece of
china or jewelry, but Nagle and his kind were looking for something
different. They saw stories in the Modiglianied faces of broken ships,
frozen moments in a nation's hopes or a captain's dying instinct or a
child's potential, and they experienced these scenes unbuffered by
curators or commentators or historians, shoulder to shoulder with life as
it existed at the moment it had most mattered.
And they did it to explore. Many of the deep wrecks hadn't been seen since
their victims last looked at them, and would remain lost while nature
pawed at them until they simply didn't exist anymore. In a world where
even the moon had been traveled, the floor of the Atlantic remained
uncharted wilderness, its shipwrecks beacons for men compelled to look.
You had to have steel balls to do what Nagle did in his heyday. In the
1970s and 1980s, scuba equipment was still rudimentary, not much advanced
past 1943, when Jacques Cousteau helped invent the system of tanks and
regulators that allowed men to breathe underwater. Even at 130 feet, the
recreational limit suggested by most scuba training organizations, a minor
equipment failure could kill the most skilled practitioner. In searching
for the most interesting wrecks, Nagle and the sport's other kings might
descend to 200 feet or deeper, virtually begging the forces of nature to
flick them into the afterlife, practically demanding their biology to
abandon them. Men died-often-diving the shipwrecks that called to Nagle.
Even if Nagle's equipment and body could survive the deep Atlantic, he
faced a smorgasbord of other perils, each capable of killing him à la
carte. For starters, the sport was still new; there was no ancient wisdom
to be passed from father to son, the kind of collective experience that
routinely keeps today's divers alive. The sport's cautionary tales, those
lifelines learned over beers with buddies and by reading magazines and
attending classes, were beaten into Nagle underwater at antihuman depths.
If Nagle found himself in some crazy, terrible circumstance-and there were
countless of them on these deep wrecks-odds were that he would be the one
who would tell the first tale. When he and his ilk survived, the magazines
wrote articles about them.
Nagle pushed deeper. Diving below 200 feet, he began doing things
scientists didn't fully understand, going places recreational divers had
never been. When he penetrated a shipwreck at these depths, he was often
among the first to see the vessel since it had gone down, the first to
open the purser's safe since it had been closed, the first to look at
these men since they had been lost at sea. But this also meant that Nagle
was on his own. He had no maps drawn by earlier divers. Had someone
visited these wrecks before, he might have told Nagle, "Don't brush
against that outboard beam in the galley-the thing moved when I swam by,
and the whole room might cave in and bury you if you do." Nagle had to
discover all this by himself. It is one thing, wreck divers will tell you,
to slither in near-total darkness through a shipwreck's twisted, broken
mazes, each room a potential trap of swirling silt and collapsing
structure. It is another to do so without knowing that someone did it
before you and lived.
The Atlantic floor was still a wilderness in Nagle's prime, and it
demanded of its explorers the same grit that the American West did of its
pioneers. A single bad experience on a shipwreck could reroute all but the
hardiest souls to more sensible pursuits. Early divers like Nagle had bad
experiences every day. The sport eagerly shook out its dabblers and
sightseers; those who remained seemed of a different species. They were
physical in their world orientation and sudden in their appetites. They
thought nothing of whipping out a sledgehammer and beating a porthole from
the side of a ship, even as their heavy breath hastened nitrogen narcosis,
the potentially deadly buildup of that otherwise benign gas in their
brains. Underwater, rules of possession bent with the light; some divers
cut prizes from the mesh goody bags of other divers, following the motto
"He who floats it owns it." Fistfights-aboard boats and even
underwater-often settled disputes. Artifacts recovered from wrecks were
guarded like firstborn children, occasionally at knifepoint. In this way,
early deep-wreck divers had a measure of pirate in their blood.
But not Nagle. In the sport's brawniest era, he was a man of the mind. He
devoured academic texts, reference works, novels, blueprints, any material
he could uncover on historical ships, until he could have stood in the
dockyards of a dozen eras and built the boats alongside the workers. He
was a connoisseur of the parts, and he reveled in the life force a boat
took on from the interlocking of its pieces. This insight gave Nagle
two-way vision; as much as he understood the birth of a ship, he also
understood its death. Ordinary divers would come upon a shipwreck and see
the mélange of bent steel and broken wood, the shock of pipe and wire as a
cacophony of crap, an impediment that might be hiding a compass or some
other prize. They would plant their noses in a random spot and dig like
puppies, hoping to find a morsel. Viewing the same scene, Nagle repaired
the broken parts in his mind and saw the ship in its glory. One of his
greatest finds was a four-foot-tall brass whistle from the paddle wheeler
Champion, a proud voice that had been mounted on the ship's mast and
powered by a steam line. The whistle was majestic, but the most beautiful
part of the discovery was that underwater it looked like a worthless pipe.
Floating amid the wreckage, Nagle used his mind's eye to watch the ship
break and sink. He knew the ship's anatomy, and as he imagined it coming
apart he could see the whistle settle, right where that seemingly
worthless piece of pipe lay. After Nagle recovered two helms from the
British tanker Coimbra in a single day (finding one helm once in a career
was rare enough), his photograph was hung-alongside that of Lloyd
Bridges-in the wheelhouse of the Sea Hunter, a leading dive charter boat
of the time. He was twenty-five.
To Nagle, the value in artifacts like the brass steam whistle lay not in
their aesthetics or their monetary worth but in their symbolism. It is an
odd sight to see grown men covet teacups and saucers, and build noble
display cases to these dainty relics. But to divers like Nagle these
trinkets represented exploration, going off the charts. A telegraph on
display in a diver's living room, therefore, is much more than a shiny
object; it is an announcement. It says, If someone had been to this ship's
wheelhouse before me, he would not have left this telegraph behind.
It was only time before Nagle's instinct delivered him to the Andrea
Doria, the Mount Everest of shipwrecks. The grand Italian passenger liner
had collided with the Stockholm, a Swedish liner, in dense fog off
Nantucket Island in 1956. Fifty-one people died; 1,659 were rescued before
the liner sank and settled on her side at a depth of 250 feet. The Doria
was not a typical target for Nagle. Her location was widely known, and she
had been explored by divers since the day after her sinking. But the Doria
made siren calls to great wreck divers. She was brimming with artifacts
even after all these years: serving sets made of fine Italian china and
painted with the ship's legendary Italia logo, silver utensils, luggage,
ceramic tiles by famed artists, pewter sherbet dishes, jewelry, signs. In
Nagle's day, and even today, a diver could explore the Doria and worry
only about having enough stamina to lug home the prizes he recovered.
Had the Doria only her riches to offer, she could not have romanced Nagle
so hopelessly. The ship's real challenge lay in exploration. The wreck
rested on its side, making navigation dangerous and deceptive. A diver had
to conceive the world sideways to make sense of doors on the floor and
ceilings to the right. And she was deep-180 feet at her shallowest and 250
feet where she crushed the ocean floor. Men sometimes got disoriented or
ran out of air or lost their minds from narcosis and died on the Doria.
The wreck was so deep, dark, and dangerous that decades after her sinking,
entire decks remained unexplored. Those decks were Nagle's destinations.
Over time, Nagle penetrated the wreck in places long relegated to the
impossible. His mantel at home became a miniature Doria museum. Soon, he
set his sights on the bell. A ship's bell is her crown, her voice. For a
diver, there is no greater prize, and many of the greats go a career
without coming close to recovering one. Nagle decided to own the Doria's
bell. People thought he was nuts-scores of divers had searched for thirty
years for the Doria's bell. No one believed it was there.
Nagle went to work. He studied deck plans, books of photographs, crew
diaries. Then he did what few other divers did: he formulated a plan. He
would need days, maybe even a week to pull it off. No charter boat,
however, was going to take a diver to the Doria for a week. So Nagle, who
had saved a good bit of money from his Snap-on Tools days, decided to buy
a dive boat himself, a vessel constructed from his imagination for a
single purpose: to salvage the Doria's bell.
That boat was the original Seeker, a thirty-five-foot Maine Coaster built
in New Jersey by Henrique. In 1985, Nagle recruited five top divers, men
who shared his passion for exploration, and he made this arrangement: He
would take the group to the Doria at his expense. The trip would be a
dedicated one, meaning the divers went with just one objective-to recover
the bell.
For the first few days on the wreck, the divers stuck to Nagle's plan.
They found nothing. The bell just wasn't there. At that point, even the
hardiest divers would have turned back. A single day on the open Atlantic
in a sixty-five-foot boat will turn intestines inside out; Nagle and his
cohorts had been out for four days in a thirty-five-foot glorified
bathtub. But a man is not so inclined to give up when he sees in
panoramas. Nagle abandoned the bow of the Doria, where he and his team had
been searching, and rerouted to the stern. They would now be flying by the
seat of their pants, an improvisation on the deadliest wreck in the
Atlantic. No one had ever been to the stern. Yet by conceiving the Doria
as a single, breathing organism rather than as detached, twenty-foot
chunks of wood and steel, Nagle and the others allowed themselves to look
in unlikely places.
On the fifth day they hit pay dirt-there was the Andrea Doria's bell. The
men rigged it, beat out the bell's pin with a sledgehammer, and sent up
the prize on a heavy-duty lift bag. Shock waves rippled through the diving
community. According to their agreement, Nagle owned half the bell, and
the other five men owned half; the last man living among them would own it
outright. Nagle placed the 150-pound bell into the back of his wife's
station wagon and asked her to drive it home.
From the Hardcover edition.
Deep Explorers, Inc.
P.O. Box 302
Brielle, NJ 08730-0302
Office/Fax - 732-836-0729
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