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Divers Find (Possibly) Live Ammo In Bay

shells1010a.jpg On March 4, 1954, a stockpile of 14,470 live rounds landed in the Narrows and Gravesend Bay, and they weren't seen again until last week. According to the NY Post, that's when a group of Brooklyn commercial divers found the shells, which 50 years ago were making headlines after they were lost. The paper joined the divers off the former Fort Lafayette, an island near Bay Ridge that was destroyed in 1960 for the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge.

Diver Gene Ritter found eight World War II-era copper artillery shells, up to five feet long, and 1,500 large-caliber machine-gun shells. Upon spotting them, he declared, "What a find! They're all over the place. Hundreds of them." According to accounts, the aircraft carrier USS Bennington had unloaded the firepower onto a barge, but during a storm the barge broke free and drifted six miles to the Rockaways—sending the live ammo to the bay's floor.

It's not confirmed that the ammo is from the Bennington (there is confusion over whether it was recovered long ago), but if it is, it could be dangerous to move. One assemblyman noted that because of this, it raises concerns over whether the city should move ahead with plans to dredge that part of the bay to build a waste-transfer station. He said, “it could be a catastrophe... there’s an oil depot nearby.”

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Comments [rss]

  • chuzzlewit

    this would be a lot more interesting if doubloons, a shit ton of morphine and jaqueline bisset in a wet t-shirt were involved.

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