Title: Lake Washington's Hidden Treasures
Description: From: Seattle Times, November 29, 2004
Owen Ruger - April 27, 2007 12:11 PM (GMT)
From garbage to collectible
(copied from part of a news article, Seattle Times Nov. 29 2004)
At the bottom of Lake Washington, there are seven documented military aircraft, all Navy planes once based at the old Sand Point Naval Air Station. Local experts such as Fenn and Bob Mester, who use specialized sonar equipment to locate sunken historical treasures, said there are 100 to 300 vessels at the bottom, maybe more.
They include a 55-foot passenger steamer, a 137-foot schooner, a surplus 136-foot minesweeper and all kinds of other craft, from drag boats to sailboats.
Mester remembered a spring day in 1991 that he dived down 140 feet off of Sand Point and saw a Lockheed PV2-D Harpoon patrol bomber that had sunk in September 1947, when it went out of control during takeoff.
"There you see this fully armed World War II combat aircraft, its nose stuck in the bottom. The guns are pointing to the surface as if ready to fire right in front of you. You can touch the wheels in the tail and they spin perfectly," Mester said.
"And here it is, all in the middle of a recreation lake with Jet Skis above you and people fishing."
The bottom also holds 18 wooden coal cars, which went down in January 1875, when a stern-wheeler rounding Mercer Island was a hit by a windstorm (back then, coal from Newcastle was shipped to Seattle, with much of it then going to California). The coal cars sit 195 feet down just south of the middle of the Evergreen Point Bridge, many of them upright.
"They are still filled with coal, although the coal flakes in your hand when you pick it up," said Mark Tourtellot, 51.
At age 9, he began diving off Richmond Beach. Now he's co-owner of Fifth Dimension Dive Center in Issaquah and on the board of directors of Submerged Cultural Resources Exploration Team (SCRET), a nonprofit group that documents wreckage found in Pacific Northwest waters.
In his store, Tourtellot showed off items he has collected from the bottom of the lake, such as a J.G. Fox & Co. glass root-beer bottle from the early 1900s, found in 40 feet of water off of Leschi. Then, he said, when ferries took passengers from Mercer Island to Seattle, it was common for Eastside residents to take their garbage and use wooden boxes or burlap bags and dump it into the lake. The old garbage now is a collectible.
The state Department of Natural Resources says it's OK for divers to take photos of such artifacts but not to touch or move them. But it acknowledges it's not equipped to enforce a state law saying treasures abandoned 30 years or more become untouchable state property.
The state did go after a Kirkland man who was eventually convicted of stealing a history of sorts in the early 1990s from the bottom of Lake Washington: trees that had sunk either when being transported from logging mills or that had been part of an ancient forest that ended up in the lake after landslides 1,000 to 3,000 years ago. The salvager had hired divers to cut the trees and bring them to a barge.
The Navy doesn't want its old planes brought up, either because they are gravesites containing human remains or because of fears about pillaging.
In 1985, the Navy did lose one court battle with McCauley and Jeff Hummel, then 20, who had brought up a Curtiss SB2C-1A Helldiver bomber a year earlier from 150 feet near Juanita Point. The two had heard stories that the Navy would take useable parts of planes that had been in accidents, torch the planes for training in fire drills and then dump them in the lake. They decided to go looking for the wreckage.
"We and our friends took a 17-foot ski boat, a fish finder and sidescan sonar, and the plane showed up," McCauley remembered. The group pulled a 15-foot wing section and 10 feet of fuselage onto a boat ramp, and then towed it to McCauley's driveway. McCauley and Hummel thought they might break even on their efforts by selling the plane to a museum or collector.
Mostly, though, it was about the excitement of the search, and the find. "You feel like you've found a galleon full of treasure," McCauley said. "You're swimming on this eerie, muddy bottom, and all of a sudden you see a wall of burnt aluminum sticks": parts of an old fighter plane.
The judge ruled in favor of the two divers, telling the Navy to "back off a little" in its quest to protect planes it had junked. That plane and four other discarded hulks that McCauley, Hummel and fellow divers later brought up ended up with Minnesota and Pennsylvania collectors.
McCauley, 40, no longer dives as frequently; now that he's a husband and father, his wife isn't keen on 200-foot underwater explorations.
But a diver such as Mester, however, who has explored the lake more than 100 times in the past decade, isn't about to give it up. His three adult children also are divers. It never gets boring for him.
"The visibility is limited, maybe five, six, 10 feet," he said. "Another 10 feet, and it's all new."
[B]The Puget Sound rocks for diving! I've dove several areas in the Sound but I've never had the chance to dive the lakes.[B] cop:
Riyukco - April 27, 2007 12:23 PM (GMT)
Amazing what you will find under the water, isn't it. th: b:
Owen Ruger - April 27, 2007 12:57 PM (GMT)
I used to go scuba diving every Sunday at a little beach in Kent WA and one day found a complete tolet sitting upright. Somewhere I've got a picture of me sitting on it in scuba gear at 30 feet. lol. cop:
Riyukco - April 27, 2007 01:05 PM (GMT)
If you can find it, post it.
loren1 - April 28, 2007 06:12 AM (GMT)
:lol: :lol: that is funny.
Riyukco - April 29, 2007 01:45 AM (GMT)
| QUOTE (loren1 @ Apr 28 2007, 02:12 AM) |
| :lol: :lol: that is funny. |
j: j:
Owen Ruger - May 4, 2007 02:30 PM (GMT)
I'm still looking for the picture, I asked my friend who was there if he has a copy. I hope I find it, you guys will crack up. cop:
DirkPitt - May 4, 2007 08:44 PM (GMT)

Like this? :lol:
Mostly Heep - May 5, 2007 04:10 PM (GMT)
Don't you just hate it when the water splashes your bum :blink:
loren1 - May 6, 2007 11:47 AM (GMT)
Andy in West Oz - May 6, 2007 11:12 PM (GMT)
Nothing worse than soggy toilet paper...
beer:
Owen Ruger - May 7, 2007 04:21 AM (GMT)
Ha, and to think I was the only one to try it! I think the toilet we found still had the back waterbowl on it, and being that it was the Puget Sound, visibility wasn't that good.... we had a little more privacy. lol cop:
Riyukco - May 7, 2007 12:07 PM (GMT)
:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: