LA Times article about the SS Central America

Shipwreck With $450 Million in Gold Believed Found

Los Angeles Times, Sunday July 19, 1987.
From the Washington Post

WASHINGTON – A partnership of low-profile treasure hunters has laid claim to what they believe is one of America’s most historic shipwrecks. a paddle-wheel steamer sunk in 1857 with about $450 million in gold coins from the California Gold Rush.

The broken wreck of the Central America, a US. Mail steamship that went down in a hurricane with a loss of 428 lives, lies in 8,003 feet of water just within the 200-mile continental limit off the South Carolina coast, the Columbus America Discovery Group says.

The limited partnership, based In Columbus, Ohio, claims to have found the wreck last summer. It made public Its discovery after suing successfully In U.S. District Court in Norfolk. Va., last week for jurisdiction over its claim.

Thomas G. Thompson, 35, founder and principal director of Columbia America, said the partnership’s chartered 220-foot salvage vessel Nicor Navigator has been on the site since May 25 filming the wreck with underwater cameras.

He said the group plans a salvage effort next year, which he said would be accomplished entirely by undersea robotics operated from ships on the surface, rather than manned submersible.

It will be, he said, a significant departure from the undersea technology employed so far in the exploration of any shipwreck, including that of the Titanic.

The sinking of the Central America was nearly as famous in the 19th Century as that of the Titanic is in the 20th.

The golden age of American sail, which began with the fast clipper ships in 1848, reached its apogee in the Cold Rush years as the square-riggers raced around Cape Horn from New York to San Francisco in as little as 90 days.

But completion of the railroad across Panama in 1855 spelled the death of the clipper ships. More and more passengers and shippers chose to avoid the hazardous Cape Horn passage under sail for the steady route by steam packet down the coasts to the isthmus and across by rail.

The Central America had completed 43 such voyages between New York and Panama when it left the isthmus in September 1857, carrying a regular monthly shipment of gold from the new San Francisco mint to the banks of New York.

Some historians say its failure to arrive prevented the banks from staving off the Panic of 1857, which was one of the major economic depressions of the 19th Century.

The gold was a government shipment valued at $1219,189 in 1357 dollars, when gold was valued at roughly 90 cents an ounce. Gold closed at $448.10 an ounce on Friday. [Note: July 17, 1987]

Records show 103 crew members and 478 passengers—many of them homebound prospectors carrying their own gold—were aboard the Central America-when it left Havana after a brief stop September 8, 1857 and headed north for New York. Three days later ft steamed into a hurricane and began to take on water.

As rising water extinguished the boiler fires and power to the pumps, the passengers bailed with bucket, for 30 hours—buying enough time for all 31 women and 29 children. and 39 of the male passengers and crewmen to be safely transferred by boat to a nearby sailing vessel, contemporary newspaper accounts said.

But the steamer sank shortly after dark September 12. Fifty-four men were later rescued from the water by other passing ships, but 428 passengers and crewmen were lost.

Thompson, a mechanical engineer from Ohio State University who had worked as a research scientist on ocean mining projects, said he first learned of the disaster in 1977 after researching shipwrecks as a hobby.

He said he became convinced that the accelerating advances in undersea technology would make recovery of deep ocean wrecks possible sometime in the 1980s.

The catalytic event. he said. was the development in 1985 of a computer-based imaging system that permits ocean searchers to view on a video screen the profile of objects detected by a towed apparatus that bounces sound waves off the ocean floor.