Pirate Hunters: Treasure, Obsession, and the Search for a Legendary Pirate Ship (11 page)

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Authors: Robert Kurson

Tags: #Caribbean & West Indies, #History, #Nonfiction, #Retail

BOOK: Pirate Hunters: Treasure, Obsession, and the Search for a Legendary Pirate Ship
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Soon, he was pressing deeper into the ocean, but charters to these places were rare, and there was a reason for that. At depths past 130
feet, people started to die—from the bends, nerve damage, deepwater blackout, hallucinations, panic, and fear. Sometimes the bodies were never found. Captains shunned greenhorns like Chatterton, wannabes who didn’t understand how the deep could kill. Chatterton showed up anyway. But he was in small company. Of the ten million certified scuba divers in the United States, only a few hundred dove deeper than 130 feet—the true deep.

Chatterton loved the wrecks. Twisted and bent—some collapsed on their sides—they were snapshots of moments when men had lost hope, when plans and futures and families had changed. Each wreck was different, sometimes by the day, changing with the temper of the ocean. Many divers lived for the artifacts these wrecks surrendered—teacups, dishes, portholes, a bell—but to Chatterton the stuff hardly mattered. To him, shipwrecks were puzzles that rewarded a man in exactly the measure to which he challenged himself. The farther a person swam into a wreck, the more of its secrets she revealed. Before long, Chatterton was seeing things no one had seen before.

Much of what made him special happened before he arrived at the dock. He prepared relentlessly, studying deck plans, rehearsing scenarios, and imagining the shipwreck not as a structure but as a story—one with a beginning, a middle, and an end. By seeing the ship’s final moments unfold in his mind, he could see how she broke, and that meant he could move into places that had ceased being places, he could reach areas accessible only to those who could see backward in time.

Soon, he felt ready to challenge the
Andrea Doria
, by many accounts the most dangerous shipwreck in American waters. Sunk in 1956 after colliding with the MS
Stockholm
off Nantucket Island, the massive Italian passenger liner lay on her starboard side in 250 feet of water. The ship’s interior was deep, dark, and dangerous. Narcosis and the bends could result from the slightest mistake. Passageways and staircases were twisted and disorienting. Silt and particulate reduced
visibility, sometimes to mere inches. The
Doria
had a reputation for giving divers whatever room they needed to kill themselves inside.

Before long, Chatterton was venturing into areas on the
Andrea Doria
, and other great wrecks, no other diver had dared. To him, the risk was the point: If he went somewhere easy, he knew what he’d find there, and how could a person look forward to that? By 1991, some were calling Chatterton the greatest wreck diver they’d ever seen. Charter captain Bill Nagle paid him the ultimate compliment: “When you die, no one will ever find your body.”

In the summer of 1991, Nagle got a tip from a fisherman about a possible shipwreck located sixty miles off the New Jersey coast. He called Chatterton and they made a plan to check it out. The trip would cost several hundred dollars in fuel alone, and the odds of finding anything important were almost nil, but to Chatterton and Nagle, a man had to look. Who were you if you didn’t go look?

They recruited a dozen other divers, each of whom paid one hundred dollars to help defray costs, and made their way to the site. Scuba tanks strapped to his back, Chatterton descended 230 feet to the bottom by himself, where he discovered a mostly intact World War II German U-boat. Chatterton knew his ocean and he knew his history; there was not supposed to be a U-boat within a 100-mile radius of this location. Wreck divers dreamed of finding a virgin U-boat. To discover one in American waters was the holy grail. All that remained was for the divers to identify the wreck, and they would make history.

When the team returned to the site, however, a diver died on the bottom, his body swept away by currents. Chatterton and the others risked their lives looking, but they couldn’t find the man. The tragedy hung heavy over the group.

Nagle moved to replace the fallen diver with Richie Kohler, owner of a local glass business and a member of the Atlantic Wreck Divers, a notorious gang of tough guys who wore matching skull-and-crossbones jackets, and raised hell on shipwrecks across the Eastern
Seaboard. Kohler and his crew were accomplished divers, but they were everything Chatterton despised. They seemed to care for nothing but artifacts, risking their lives to get a twentieth teacup when they’d already bagged nineteen. They mooned passing dinner cruises, used stuffed animals for skeet-shooting targets, leaped naked into the water. They returned to the same wrecks to do the same things over and over, and for that, Chatterton dismissed them out of hand.

If anything, Kohler detested Chatterton even more. “Who is this uptight asshole talking about excellence and art?” Kohler would ask. He knew Chatterton was an exceptional diver, but believed him to be missing the point. Shipwreck charters were supposed to be about fun, camaraderie, brotherhood. Without that, the sport became labor, and weekends weren’t made for that. “Imagine the life this guy leads,” Kohler told his buddies. “Fuck him and the boat he came in on.”

Over Chatterton’s protests, Nagle brought Kohler aboard the U-boat project. Working separately, Chatterton and Kohler pressed into the submarine, where they encountered hanging pipe and wire and conduit (any bit of which could have entangled and trapped them inside the wreck), dead ends and tangled passageways, and live explosives ready to detonate from a single wayward touch. Throughout the wreck, they found the remains of fifty-six German sailors, some of them still dressed, their shoes laid out on the floor, left right, left right. But no proof of the U-boat’s identity.

The two men began working together, not just underwater but in government archives, at libraries, with historians and diplomats, and on the phone with old U-boat aces. Slowly, they began piecing together a history different from the official accounts. And they began to understand each other. As months turned into years, they did groundbreaking work, but came to realize that until they found conclusive proof inside the wreck itself, their theories about the submarine’s identity were just a best guess, and neither of them had come this far, risked his life, to say “probably.” For Chatterton and Kohler, it came down to this: A person could have theories about who he was; he
could make predictions about what he might do in a given situation. But he’d never really know until he was tested. For Chatterton and Kohler, the U-boat was their test. The U-boat was their moment.

So they continued to return to the wreck, spending money they didn’t have on fuel and expenses, taking time from their families. Two more divers, a father and son, died while diving the U-boat. Time and again, Chatterton and Kohler might have moved the bones of the fallen sailors or reached inside the dead men’s clothes to search for a pocket watch or cigarette lighter engraved with the submarine’s identity—those items sometimes survived for decades in a cold underwater environment. But neither diver was willing to do that. Swimming among the human remains, Chatterton and Kohler began to see these dead sailors not just as enemies but as someone’s sons or brothers or fathers or husbands, young guys whose country was being destroyed by a madman and whose families never knew where they had died. Searching the bodies would have required disturbing the remains. So Chatterton and Kohler let the bodies rest. Their decision raised the risk that they, too, would die inside the wreck. But they were on the verge of doing something beautiful, and would have rather lost their lives than do it in an ugly way. They kept searching.

Soon, only Chatterton, Kohler, and a few others remained on the project. Chatterton began pressing into the most dangerous corners of the wreck—places so cramped and strewn with hanging debris it was hard for the eels who lived inside to find a way out. But with every dive he seemed only to drift further from an answer.

At home, marriages grew distant and strained. To save his family, Kohler quit the U-boat and hung up his dive gear. By 1995, Chatterton found himself at a crossroads unlike any he’d known. He had unleashed all of himself on the U-boat, all that he knew about diving and life. And he was failing.

In a fury of protest, he discovered and identified several new wrecks, enough to make any other diver’s career, but he only sank further
into despair. By 1996, his marriage to Kathy was over, he was nearly broke, and Nagle, whom he adored, had died a broken man. When people tried to console Chatterton, he told them, “I no longer know who I am.”

But by 1997, Kohler had sorted out his family issues and returned to the project. Chatterton devised a final plan to identify the U-boat, one that incorporated all his principles for living—and that Kohler felt certain would be deadly. Slithering inside a room that looked impossible to exit, Chatterton freed a supply box that held a key piece of evidence, then found he’d run out of air. Holding his breath, he pushed the box through a narrow opening to Kohler, then removed his tank and made a desperate swim for his partner. A few moments later, the supply box gave up its secret and the U-boat had its name. The journey had cost six years, three lives, two marriages, and two life’s savings. But Chatterton had his answer.


I
N THE SPRING OF
1998, a friend invited Chatterton to a party at a hotel in Manhattan, promising good food and the chance to meet a woman he knew. Chatterton hated formal wear and fix-ups, but he liked his friend and said he would go.

That Saturday night, he pulled up to the hotel on his burnt orange Harley-Davidson Road King, and left his keys with the valet. Inside, he was introduced to Carla Madrigal, a forty-six-year-old operational systems manager for a major commercial airline based in Washington, D.C. She was pretty in the way Chatterton liked—naturally and without trying too hard—slender, with light freckles and high cheekbones, and wore a gold letter
C
that caught Chatterton’s eye.

They talked for hours, hardly noticing the others. At the end of the evening, Chatterton asked to see Carla again. She asked why Chatterton kept looking at her necklace. He told her about a shipwreck he’d found at a time in his life when he’d felt lost. The wreck was the SS
Carolina;
he knew it by finding brass letters on the fantail that spelled out the ship’s name, in a font he’d never seen before—the same font as the
C
on her necklace.


T
HAT SUMMER
, C
HATTERTON AGREED
to join an elite team of American and British divers on an expedition to the HMHS
Britannic
, sister ship to the
Titanic.
Sunk off the Greek island of Kea, the wreck lay on her starboard side in four hundred feet of water, a depth at the very edge of what was possible for world-class divers. Even before it launched, the expedition was being hailed as one of the most ambitious in diving history. For his part, Chatterton would attempt to become the first diver ever to use a rebreather on
Britannic.

Using solenoids, sensors, and a chemical absorbent to manage exhaled gas, rebreathers allowed divers to go deeper and work more efficiently than ever before. The technology was cutting-edge but still hadn’t been perfected; several divers had died using the new apparatus. In experimenting with a rebreather during training for
Britannic
, Chatterton nearly lost his life more than a dozen times. On the wreck, he’d need it to function flawlessly.

To many, his plan seemed suicidal. He intended to go to the boiler rooms to search for evidence as to why the ship sank so fast. If there was a scarier destination on the wreck, no one knew about it. According to deck plans, a diver would have to wriggle through a narrow fireman’s tunnel, a passage so tight a person could not turn around. In deepwater-wreck diving, the inability to turn around was often the last experience a person ever had.

Chatterton wasted little time when he got to the wreck. Dropping down into a fracture in the
Britannic
’s bow, he found the fireman’s tunnel and corkscrewed inside. It was even more narrow and tight than he’d imagined, just inches of room to either side. He checked his depth gauge: 375 feet. Crazy deep.

He moved slowly, past jagged pipe, tangled wires, fallen railing, and razor-sharp coral—the worst place he’d ever been on a wreck. A
single misstep, one brush against an invisible obstacle or a slip into a hanging tangle, and he would be trapped. And it would be hours before they came looking for him, if anyone knew where to come looking at all.

For several minutes, he finger-crawled forward, covering more than a hundred feet before he arrived at the boiler room. Chatterton checked the rebreather’s handset.

The screen was blank.

The computer controlling the rebreather had died. Now he had no idea what oxygen concentration he was breathing, what he needed to survive, or how to keep from dying. And he didn’t have a bailout tank—the tunnel was so narrow he’d left it at the anchor line. He began to say good-bye to himself.

But was he supposed to just give up and scratch out a note to loved ones as he waited to drown? He’d seen others do that. He was not going to die that way. So he started adding oxygen manually. If he added too much, he could become toxic, convulse, lose his mouthpiece, and drown. If he added too little, he could pass out and drown. It would have to be a guess. He adjusted the mix, and waited to see if he’d live.

He stayed conscious.

Now he had to get out. Unable to turn around, be began to slither backward, inching out of the tunnel in the same painstaking way he’d come in. Every instinct demanded he rush, but he knew suddenness would tangle him in the hanging web of wreckage.

He emerged several minutes later, wondering if each breath would be his last. He swam to the anchor line, grabbed his open circuit bailout tank, and began his three-hour decompression ascent to the surface.

That night, Chatterton took a taxi to a small hardware store, where he purchased hacksaw blades and a soldering gun, and went to work repairing the rebreather back in his hotel room. Smoke billowed from under his door before Chatterton put out the small fire he’d started,
but in a few hours he’d Frankensteined the rebreather back into operating form.

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