The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘Lost in the Deep’

Episode Date: November 8, 2020

On the afternoon of Sept. 15, 1942, the U.S.S. Wasp, an aircraft carrier housing 71 planes, 2,247 sailors and a journalist, was hit by torpedoes fired by a Japanese submarine, sending it more than two... and a half miles to the bottom of the Pacific. It has remained there ever since.Last year, a team on the Petrel — perhaps the most successful private vessel on Earth for finding deepwater wrecks — set out to find it.In his narrated story, Ed Caesar, a contributor to The New York Times Magazine, joins the team aboard the Petrel and speaks to the family of Lt. Cmdr. John Joseph Shea, a heroic naval officer killed in the attack on the Wasp.This story was written by Ed Caesar and recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publishers like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, my name's Ed Caesar. I am a contributing writer at the New Yorker magazine. And in 2019, I wrote a story for the New York Times magazine called Lost in the Deep. It's about the hunt for a shipwreck. And the ship in question was the USS Wasp, which was downed by Japanese torpedoes in 1942. Japanese torpedoes in 1942. And you might wonder, why does a Brit like me get interested in a story like that? Well, there are a lot of different answers to that question. The first is that it was a fascinating, technological, scientific quest. The shipwrecks that lie on the bottom of the Pacific Ocean are sometimes 6,000 meters down.
Starting point is 00:00:46 So in order to find them in that permanent midnight, you have to use the most advanced underwater robotics. And you have to have an incredibly expert crew. But there was also a spiritual and emotional side to the story that I found absolutely captivating. that I found absolutely captivating. The search for these lost ships was about reclaiming the stories of the men who had served on board during some of the most ferocious fighting of the Second World War. In particular, I was drawn to the story of John Shea, who wrote a heartbreaking letter to his five-year-old son
Starting point is 00:01:22 just before he left for the battle theatre. And this letter is one of the most beautiful you could ever read. It adumbrates quintessentially American values, but it's also personal. It talks about all the things that he wishes he were doing with his son, hunting and fishing and playing out in the backyard. Guard. The Dear Jackie letter, as it was known, touched my heart. My father was a lieutenant commander in the British Navy, and he died when I was two years old. And I had a young son of about the same age as Jack Shea was when he received that letter. And so I read that letter both as a father and also as a son who a long time ago had to deal with a father who never came home. And I became enormously involved emotionally in the search
Starting point is 00:02:14 for the lost battleship. So this is my story, Lost in the Deep, read by Grover Gardner. Americans have the best names. read by Grover Gardner. Americans have the best names. On July 1st, 1942, the USS Wasp, an aircraft carrier holding 71 planes, 2,247 sailors, and a journalist, sailed from San Diego to the Western Pacific to join the battle against the Japanese. On board was a naval officer named Lieutenant Commander John Joseph Shea. Two days before he left San Diego, Shea wrote his five-year-old son a letter. Dear Jackie, This is the first letter I have ever written directly to my little son,
Starting point is 00:03:06 and I am thrilled to know that you can read it all by yourself. If you miss some of the words, I am sure it will be because I do not write very plainly. Mother will help you in that case, I am sure. I was certainly glad to hear your voice over the long-distance telephone. It sounded as though I were right in the living room with you. You sounded as though you missed your daddy very much. I miss you too, more than anyone will ever know. It is too bad this war could not have been delayed a few more years
Starting point is 00:03:38 so that I could grow up again with you and do with you all the things I planned to do when you were old enough to go to school. I thought how nice it would be for me to come home early in the afternoon and play ball with you and go mountain climbing and see the trees and brooks and learn all about woodcraft, hunting, fishing, swimming and things like that. I suppose we must be brave and put these things off for a little while. When you are a little bigger, you will know why your daddy is not home so much anymore. You know we have a big country and we have ideals as to how people should live and enjoy the riches of it,
Starting point is 00:04:18 and how each is born with equal rights to life, freedom, and the pursuit of happiness. Unfortunately, there are some countries in the world where they don't have these ideals, where a boy cannot grow up to be what he wants to be with no limits on his opportunities to be a great man, such as a great priest, statesman, doctor, soldier, businessman, etc. Because there are people and countries who want to change our nation, its ideals, forms of government, and way of life, we must leave our homes and families to fight.
Starting point is 00:04:55 Fighting for the defense of our country, ideals, homes, and honor is an honor and a duty which your daddy has to do before he can come home to settle down with you and mother. When it is done, he is coming home to be with you always and forever. So wait just a little while longer. I am afraid it will be more than the two weeks you told me on the phone. In the meantime, take good care of mother. Be a good boy and grow up to be a good young man.
Starting point is 00:05:27 Study hard when you go to school. Be a leader in everything good in life. Be a good Catholic, and you can't help being a good American. Play fair always. Strive to win, but if you must lose, lose like a gentleman and a good sportsman. to win, but if you must lose, lose like a gentleman and a good sportsman. Don't ever be a quitter, either in sports or in your business or profession, when you grow up. Get all the education you can. Stay close to mother and follow her advice. Obey her in everything, no matter how you may at times disagree. She knows what is best and will never let you down or lead you away from the right and
Starting point is 00:06:05 honorable things in life. If I don't get back, you will have to be mother's protector because you will be the only one she has. You must grow up to take my place as well as your own in her life and heart. Don't let her brood over me nor waste herself on anyone not worthy of her or you. Love your grandmother and granddad as long as they live. They too will never let you down. Love your aunts and see them as often as you can.
Starting point is 00:06:35 Last of all, don't ever forget your daddy. Pray for him to come back, and if it is God's will that he does not, be the kind of a boy and man your daddy wants you to be. Thanks for the nice sweater and handkerchiefs, and particularly for the note and card. Write me very often and tell me everything. Kiss mother for me every night. Goodbye for now. with all my love and devotion for mother and you, your daddy. On the afternoon of September 15th, the WASP was in the Coral Sea, escorting a convoy of United States Marines bound for Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands, when it was hit by torpedoes fired at close range by a Japanese submarine.
Starting point is 00:07:24 Explosions immediately rocked the ship. Many men were killed instantly. The ship's magazines and fuel stores detonated like bombs. The hangar deck where most of the planes were stored was soon entirely ablaze. At the same time, water rushed into the breaches in the ship's hull, and the wasp lurched 15 degrees to its starboard side, like a boxer buckling at the knee after a body shot.
Starting point is 00:07:52 The commanding officer of the Wasp, Captain Forrest P. Sherman, swung the ship around so that the flames and smoke blew toward the ocean rather than across the deck, but it made no difference. More than 300 feet of his ship from the bow to the central island containing the bridge was subsumed by an uncontrollable inferno. Within minutes, the wasp had become a vision of hell. Half an hour after the strikes, Sherman realized the situation was hopeless. He made the order to abandon ship. Sherman realized the situation was hopeless.
Starting point is 00:08:24 He made the order to abandon ship. The worst injured were loaded onto rafts. Many other survivors simply jumped into the flaming waters around the ship with only life preservers, flotsam, or mattresses to keep them afloat. Five hours after the Wasp was hit, it was irreparably damaged, but still drifting with the current. after the wasp was hit, it was irreparably damaged, but still drifting with the current. The USS Lansdowne was ordered to scuttle the carrier with a volley of torpedoes. The wasp slipped below the surface at 2100, 9 p.m., then sank through more than two and a half miles of water to the bottom, where it has remained ever since, a giant carcass surrounded by miles of desert
Starting point is 00:09:06 in the permanent midnight of the deep ocean floor. In total, 194 men on the Wasp were deemed killed or missing on September 15, 1942. One of them was John Shea. On January 2nd of this year, a research vessel called the Petrel set out from Honiara on Guadalcanal to find the wasp. To locate a shipwreck, even a 741-foot aircraft carrier, it's essential to have an accurate idea of where to start looking.
Starting point is 00:09:50 The ocean is vast. You need to find the haystack before you can find the needle. In the Second World War, before the advent of satellites, a ship's position was plotted using traditional open-sea techniques. There was celestial navigation, using a sextant to navigate by the sun and the stars, and dead reckoning, the estimation of current position based on time, speed, and bearing. In dead reckoning, a tiny miscalculation of one variable over a great distance
Starting point is 00:10:21 can lead to a large error in final position. A navigator's skill was particularly tested when his ship was under fire or sinking. As a result, separate reports from naval battles of the era can show the same vessel in positions more than 20 nautical miles apart. The ocean is also frighteningly deep. Much of the bottom of the Coral Sea, where the wasp went down, lies between 4,000 and 6,000 meters in what is known as the Abyssal Zone, a lightless realm characterized by frigid water temperatures,
Starting point is 00:11:01 scant animal life, and crushing atmospheric pressure. Below 6,000 meters in the oceanic trenches, the deepest part of the ocean, is known as the Hadal Zone. It is truly the underworld. It can be hard to grasp the profundity of the abyss. You could imagine its depth as being between eight and twelve Freedom Towers, stacked one on top of another, or at the higher end of the range, one Denali. But even thinking about the distance to the ocean floor in terms of height is ultimately unhelpful,
Starting point is 00:11:37 because to imagine skyscrapers or mountains is to imagine them made visible by light, and the sea is entirely dark below about 1,000 meters. When I was on board the Petrel, the concept that I found most vivid and unsettling was the idea of sinking time. When the crew dropped a transponder fitted with a 60-pound weight from the deck of the Petrel, it took more than an hour to reach the bottom.
Starting point is 00:12:06 A result of this profound inaccessibility is that scientists know the surface of Mars in greater detail than they do the abyssal plains of the ocean, which cover more than 50% of the Earth's surface. An international project called Seabed 2030 aims to recruit enough vessels to conduct a full bathymetric survey of all the world's oceans within 11 years, a laudable, if wildly ambitious, task. The oceans cover 140 million square miles. At present, less than 10% of the ocean floor has been adequately mapped. The Petrel is perhaps the best equipped and certainly the most successful private vessel on Earth for finding deepwater wrecks.
Starting point is 00:12:54 A 250-foot North Sea oil and gas maintenance vessel, bought in 2016 and retrofitted for wreck hunting, it is a strange but beautiful ship. It's the petrel's height that strikes you first. The ship is steered from a bridge on the seventh deck, more than 40 feet above the waterline, with 360-degree windows that lend it the feel of an aircraft control tower or an eyrie.
Starting point is 00:13:22 The ship's most precious assets are housed several decks below the bridge. They include an autonomous underwater vehicle, or AUV, an underwater drone that looks like a fat yellow torpedo. The AUV uses side-scan sonar to look for anomalies on the seafloor.
Starting point is 00:13:42 The petrol also houses a remotely operated vehicle, or ROV, a four-ton square submersible robot that looks like a futuristic elevator car, which is fitted with powerful lamps, high-definition cameras, and hydraulic arms, and is connected to the Petrel by a 6,000-meter umbilical cord on a winch. connected to the petrol by a 6,000-meter umbilical cord on a winch. The petrol owes its existence and success to Paul Allen, the multi-billionaire who founded Microsoft with Bill Gates and who died in October at age 65 after a recurrence of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
Starting point is 00:14:21 For Allen, underwater exploration and World War II history were abiding interests. Allen's lavishly appointed 414-foot yacht, the Octopus, had its own submarine and ROV, which he used for subsea exploration. But after a few notable successes, including the discovery in 2015 of the wreck of the largest battleship ever built, the Japanese Musashi, Alan decided he wanted his own separate research vessel that wouldn't stop exploring every time he wanted to use the octopus for the Cannes Film Festival or for New Year's in St. Barts. Alan bought the petrol, paid for its renovation,
Starting point is 00:15:03 salaried its crew, and sourced its rare and expensive underwater research tools. The investment has paid off abundantly. In the two years since it became a dedicated wreck hunter, the Petrel has discovered, among many other ships, the remains of the USS Lexington and USS Juno, as well as perhaps the most infamous American warship of all time, the USS Indianapolis, which sank with tremendous loss of life in 1945. The vessel itself is worth $15 million. The AUV and the ROV cost around $5 million each.
Starting point is 00:15:50 The crew is highly skilled and could easily be employed in oil and gas or other fields. To fill the petrol's fuel tank from empty costs $650,000. Chartering the petrol, fully crewed as the United States Navy has done when American aircraft have been lost at sea, costs about $80,000 a day. But to Allen, at least, its expense was trifling. In 2010, he pledged to give away more than half his wealth. That goal proved impossible within his lifetime. His investment portfolio grew faster than he could spend it. Allen bought super yachts, estates, and sports teams that barely dented his pile. He collected vintage planes, guitars, and cars. He threw Gatsby-esque parties.
Starting point is 00:16:35 He started a minor space program. He also gave $2 billion away in the fields of education, health care, science, and the arts, and appeared on the Chronicle of Philanthropy's list of the 50 most generous Americans 17 years in a row. Nevertheless, he was worth more at the time of his death, $20 billion, than he was in 2010, $13.5 billion. $13.5 billion. Allen's portfolio of business and philanthropic interests, including the petrol, is now being managed by his sister Jody and the senior management of his company, Vulcan.
Starting point is 00:17:15 When the petrol sailed from Honiara, there were 37 people on board, including a photographer for this magazine and me. Most of the crew were maritime, that is, they attended to the continued smooth and safe running of the ship itself. A separate exploration team consisting of ten highly caffeinated British and American engineers and programmers was dedicated to the subsea mission. This group was called ATU, which stands for All Things Underwater. Leading the expedition was Robert Kraft, a former army medic and civilian submarine pilot who bore more than a passing resemblance to a The Fugitive era Harrison Ford
Starting point is 00:18:00 and who was known to his colleagues as Hollywood Rob. Kraft had allotted 15 days to search for the Wasp, after which the petrol would change course to look for another sunken American carrier. In theory, this was plenty of time. Searching one ocean floor grid of about 40 square miles with the AUV took about 18 hours. If the sortie yielded no clues, it was possible to reprogram and relaunch the probe in a few hours. Roughly speaking, the AUV could complete a new mission every 20 to 22 hours. When you deducted the time it took to travel to and from
Starting point is 00:18:39 the rough spot in the ocean where the WASP was believed to have sunk, a little less than three days in total, that gave the crew something like fifteen opportunities to find the wreck. But deep-sea exploration rarely runs smoothly. Time is always lost for equipment repair and recalibration, bad weather, and other unforeseeable delays. It seemed most likely that the Petrel might have no more than a dozen attempts to find the Wasp. As in a game of battleship, Kraft had to call his shots with care. The Wasp's navigator was a 38-year-old officer named Lieutenant Commander John F. Greenslade. When lookouts spotted the Japanese torpedoes coming toward the Wasp, Greenslade was in the chart house, his maps spread before him.
Starting point is 00:19:29 He heard the shout, torpedoes on the starboard bow, and immediately went outside where he watched as two of them disappeared out of sight and thundered into the Wasp's flank, just forward of where he stood. flank, just forward of where he stood. The blast forced Greenslade back inside the chart house. His formerly tidy office had become a shambles. Greenslade gathered his maps and ran forward to the bridge along with several other officers. Debris from explosions slammed against the windows and superstructure. Within minutes, Greenslade and his fellow officers evacuated the bridge, which by now was roasting hot, and moved to the back of the ship. They did so just in time. The bridge structure was soon completely wrecked by a huge explosion. Both the five-inch magazines and the thousand-pound bombs were housed directly underneath the central island.
Starting point is 00:20:26 Evidently, one or both of these stores had detonated. What happened to Greenslade over the next few hours is difficult to piece together. In the account he later wrote for the official action report, he neglects to narrate what must have been a harrowing escape, noting only that he was rescued by the USS Lansdowne. But Sherman, the commanding officer on the Wasp, mentions Greenslade as having helped wounded and helpless men into life rafts before abandoning ship. From the reports, it can be assumed that, like many other senior officers on the Wasp, including Sherman, Greenslade swam. In fact, as I later discovered from Greenslade's grandson, the navigator spent several hours in the ocean without a life preserver, having given his own to a fellow
Starting point is 00:21:17 sailor who was not a strong swimmer. When Greenslade was rescued by the Lansdowne, he watched as its commanding officer scuttled the Wasp. Evidently, Greenslade was rescued by the Lansdowne, he watched as its commanding officer scuttled the wasp. Evidently, Greenslade had stowed his charts somewhere waterproof. His final report offers startlingly precise coordinates for the ship's position as it sank. On board the Petrel during the first afternoon of the mission, Kraft agonized over how much to trust Greenslade's positions. He needed a sounding board. The deputy leader of ATU was a wry 50-year-old Californian
Starting point is 00:21:53 named Paul Mayer, bald except for a fringe of gray hair, who was known to his colleagues as Pops. Mayer has a background in commercial diving and submersibles, but he has also become ATU's historical researcher. When on dry land, he spends weeks in the National Archives
Starting point is 00:22:12 in College Park, Maryland, pulling naval records to pinpoint the most likely place a potential target sank. Mayer then plots the various positions noted in the official records onto a Google Earth map. On the petrol, Mayer then plots the various positions noted in the official records onto a Google Earth map.
Starting point is 00:22:26 On the Petrel, Mayer and Kraft scour the data and original documents in meetings known by both men as Speculation Club. As the Petrel sailed eastward from Honiara, along a stretch known as Iron Bottom Sound for the concentration of World War II shipwrecks in its relatively shallow waters, Speculation Club convened in Craft's windowless office on the second deck.
Starting point is 00:22:56 Craft and Mayer discussed the Wasp's complicated final movements. When it was hit at around 1445, the Wasp was traveling southeast. It was then abandoned between 1520 and 1600. From that point on, the Wasp became what is known as a dead ship, floating without power. Speculation Club believed that the current pushed the Moribund Wasp west and northwest at a speed of just over one knot for around four hours. Then came the Lansdowne's scuttling torpedoes, after which the wasp finally sank.
Starting point is 00:23:33 Mayer and Kraft worked on the supposition that ships sink straight down, with little variation for current. After I left the petrol, I asked a lecturer in ship technology at Britannia Royal Naval College about this question. He told me that, in deep water at least, a vessel could behave like an aerofoil, especially when picking up speed, and might move a significant distance off the vertical when sinking. But he also said the process was complex, dynamic, and based on so many unknown factors, including air pockets, buoyancy, and the asymmetrical nature of the damage that caused the ship to sink. In other words, even if you knew that ships tracked away from the point of sinking while underwater, it wouldn't change much about how you looked for a wreck.
Starting point is 00:24:21 you looked for a wreck. Besides Greenslade's reckoning, several nearby American ships gave estimates of the Wasp's final position at 2100. These data points spanned around 25 miles. The question was, whom to trust? Craft was skeptical about how much credence to give Greenslade's reckoning, not least because the Lansdowne's own navigator had marked his map 17 miles south of the spot Greenslade noted. You'd think, Kraft said, birds of a feather,
Starting point is 00:24:56 he'd at least go chat to the navigator on the Lansdowne. There were often long periods of silence at Speculation Club. This was one such time. Both men sat with their feet up on desks, hands cradled, trying to imagine the mindset of a World War II navigator who, in one afternoon and evening, had watched friends die, seen his ship destroyed, swum with sharks, and still found time to note down the wasp's final longitude and latitude. Eventually, Mayer spoke. He was thinking about how many other data points seemed
Starting point is 00:25:34 to roughly tally with Greenslades, and how the only outlier on the Google Earth map was the spot recorded by the Lansdowne's navigator. There's no way she's down there, he said, tapping his finger on the spot at the southern end of the map where the Lansdowne's Navigator said the wasp sank. I've heard that from you before, Kraft said. Both men laughed. The Petrel had invited a special guest for this mission, an amiable retired two-star admiral named Sam Cox, who now
Starting point is 00:26:07 leads the Naval History and Heritage Command in Washington. Cox is interested in the cataloging and preservation of United States Navy wrecks, some of which, at least in shallower waters, are at risk of being damaged by bounty hunters or raised by salvage firms who chase value in large supplies of metal. Cox told me that the wrecks of United States warships were the Navy's equivalent of the Arlington National Cemetery and should be accorded similar respect. But he was also a walking encyclopedia on naval history and a distinct help in interpreting the original documents used by the petrol to find lost ships. At one point during speculation club, Cox stopped by Kraft's office and
Starting point is 00:26:55 Mayor asked him which position he trusted more, Wasps or Lansdownes. I think I'd trust the navigator on a carrier over a navigator on a destroyer, Cox said. More experience. Soon after, the decision was made. Kraft put a yellow pin where he wanted the AUV to begin its first mission, near Greenslade's spot. The petrol was just out of sight of land and still more than a day's sailing away from the yellow icon on the Google Earth map. At a little after 10 p.m. on January 3rd, we were on site and the AUV was primed for its first mission. The petrol rolled in a three-meter swell. The ocean was inky and purplish here.
Starting point is 00:27:44 Pink squid jumped near the surface in the light the ship cast into the water. Giant tuna swam off the stern. Craft watched on the aft deck as the fat yellow drone was rolled out of its hangar on a cradle. A white light blinked on its fin. One of the ATU team, a jovial, shaven-headed Englishman named Scott Matthews, operated a crane fixed to the port side of the deck, which lifted the vehicle up and into the water. The AUV is designed to be slightly buoyant. In order to save battery life, a weight is affixed to its nose so that it dives. At a pre-programmed depth, in this case 4,000 meters, the AUV is instructed to detach the weight,
Starting point is 00:28:34 at which point it engages its propeller and spirals the remaining couple hundred meters to the bottom. If the vehicle aborts for any reason, a not uncommon occurrence, it also detaches its weight and rises to the bottom. If the vehicle aborts for any reason, a not uncommon occurrence, it also detaches its weight and rises to the surface. The team peered over the port side as the yellow drone dived beneath the ship, its blinking light growing fainter, then disappearing.
Starting point is 00:29:04 I'd been reading Sherman's report of the wasps sinking that day. Three torpedoes were sighted close aboard approaching, the captain wrote. Almost immediately the ship received three hits. Watching the AUV barrel underneath the hull of the petrol, I couldn't help but perceive a plangent echo of events 76 years ago in this very patch of ocean. The crew, however, had more pressing concerns. In the online room, the nerve center of ATU's operations, which was furnished with three dozen screens, a monitor tracking the AUV showed that the vehicle had aborted, dropped its weight, and was returning to the surface.
Starting point is 00:29:48 The reasons it does so are sometimes never fully understood, even by the most experienced ATU members. It was accepted that any number of factors, including an obstacle sensed by the AUV's forward-facing sonar, a loss of battery, or a programming malfunction, could cause the drone to abort. One member of ATU told me not to try to understand because it's all witchcraft, he added.
Starting point is 00:30:16 Send stuff down to 4,000, 5,000 meters a few times and stuff's going to go wrong. A two-man team was dispatched in a Zodiac inflatable to fetch the recalcitrant drone where it bobbed, flashing at the surface, more than 100 yards away from the petrol, in an increasingly swollen sea. A risky operation, especially at night. Once the AUV had been affixed to the Zodiac by carabiner and then towed back to the petrol, hauled on board and reprogrammed, it was sent down again at a little before 11 p.m. This time it appeared to dive. I went to bed. I woke up a few hours later to the news that the
Starting point is 00:30:59 AUV had aborted at midnight. The crew worked all night to reprogram her. Kraft now faced another tough decision. The weather was worsening and the swell had risen to a maximum of five meters. That's a big sea. In my cabin on the sixth deck, I felt as if I might be pitched clean out of my bunk. Kraft could easily send the AUV down in this weather, but retrieving it with the Zodiac might put his crew and the drone at risk. Kraft made the call. All operations were delayed until the ocean flattened out. That didn't happen until more than a day later,
Starting point is 00:31:41 an hour or so after breakfast on January 5th, when the AUV was sent down again. At that point the petrol was about 300 nautical miles southeast of Honiara. We hadn't seen another ship in two days. When the Zodiac was dispatched to retrieve the surfaced AUV, it was 1.30 the next morning. The humidity was stifling. Seabirds flew over the petrel, fish thronged the water, and two or three oceanic white-tipped sharks circled
Starting point is 00:32:13 near the zodiac. The drone was returned to its cradle on deck, a wire plugged into its side and its data retrieved, a process that took around 25 minutes. The team convened in the online room to watch as the results of the dive came in. Eric Brager, a bearish, dryly comic AUV expert from New York, had explained what I would be looking at when I saw the sonar data visualized on screen. It would be rows of what looked like a mown Kansas wheat field.
Starting point is 00:32:51 If the seabed were perfectly flat, the sonar image would be featureless. If there were rocky hills or obstructions, you'd see a shadow, known as a holiday, behind the outcrop. What the crew was looking for were items inexplicable by geology. In the case of a debris field, the anomalies would look like a collection of shiny flecks. In the case of a whole preserved shipwreck, the sonar would show what looked like a toy ship dropped in a sandbox. Kraft peered at the screens as the results came in. Mostly the sonar image showed a flat, uninterrupted desert. But scrolling through one line of data, something caught Kraft's eye in
Starting point is 00:33:34 the southeast portion of the image, shiny flecks. Hello, expletive, dolly, he said, Expletive, Dolly, he said, rising slightly from his chair. That's debris. In the next few minutes, the team would identify two distinct patches of debris a few hundred yards apart from each other. It was 2 a.m. Kraft seemed as excited as a puppy. That's a wreck, he said at one point, before walking the comment back. Certainly the debris looked like a promising clue.
Starting point is 00:34:10 The biggest patch was within three miles of where Greenslade, the Wasp's navigator, said the ship went down. Kraft asked his team to run a new search, south of where the debris fields had been located. new search, south of where the debris fields had been located. It seemed very likely, he thought, that the wasp itself would be there, right at the end of the debris trail. When the AUV was pulled out of the water after its next mission, at around 2.30 p.m., the online room filled. Mayer and Kraft hovered by the screens. There was always an air of anticipation when the sonar data came in. Mayor told me that the moment was like opening your gifts on Christmas morning. You're waiting to unwrap your presents and see if you got socks or something you really wanted. It was socks. The AUV found a little more debris in the new grid, but no ship.
Starting point is 00:35:03 Mayor and Kraft spent a while thinking about where to go next. They had used two of their battleship shots. This was the first mission since Paul Allen's death, and the crew felt his absence. On previous missions, Kraft emailed his billionaire boss at least once a day to update him. Allen did not give praise lightly. The highest Honor Craft could hope to receive from his boss was an email with two words in caps. Very cool.
Starting point is 00:35:36 But there was no uncertainty regarding how much Alan loved the petrol. He liked to watch via a remote feed when his team dived with the ROV at a new site. There was never any doubt, an ATU member told me, half-joking. We were in the entertainment business with an audience of one. In August 2017, when the Petrol's ROV dived to 5,500 meters on what the ATU assumed to be the wreck of the Indianapolis, Allen watched the feed from a suite at Century Link Field where the NFL team he owned, the Seattle Seahawks,
Starting point is 00:36:13 was beating the Minnesota Vikings in a preseason game. The only other live feed was provided for Allen's friend, Steven Spielberg, in Los Angeles, a distinctly postmodern arrangement. It had been Robert Shaw's booze-addled speech about the hundreds of American sailors from the Indianapolis eaten by tiger sharks with lifeless eyes in Spielberg's jaws that helped to fix the story of the Indy in the American psyche as the quintessential naval nightmare.
Starting point is 00:36:45 According to those who knew Alan, finding a significant wreck lit him up like Times Square. The work of the petrol was more than entertainment for Alan, however. His father fought in World War II, and he had become increasingly interested in the history of the conflict. The discoveries were a way, he said, to honor all those who served our country. Under the Sunken Military Craft Act, the wrecks of American warships on the bottom of the ocean are designated sovereign United States territory. States territory. Cox told me that the Navy's underwater archaeology branch maintains a database of all known and best estimate locations of lost United States Navy craft. When a wreck is found, the precise location is added to that database but never made public because the Navy has no interest in encouraging exploration on these sites.
Starting point is 00:37:44 The Navy will, however, try to contact veterans and survivors groups associated with the ship in order to break the news of the discovery to them. Two days passed. The crew ate mountains of food three times a day. A few of them fished off the aft deck at shift's end. Sometimes, but not often, they hit the trim room to exercise. The AUV only completed one successful mission, west of the first grid, and came back with nothing but mown wheat fields. Another mission was aborted. Four shots gone. Speculation Club met more frequently as Kraft and Mayer tried to understand the mistake in their theories. The WASP was traveling southeast.
Starting point is 00:38:30 It was hit by the Japanese torpedoes. It was abandoned. It floated with the current west-northwest. It was scuttled by the landstown. It sank. But if all those things were true, then the AUV should have found it already. What had they missed? It was a perpetual intrigue to Kraft and Mayer that facts faithfully recorded in deck logs
Starting point is 00:38:53 and official reports could prove so misleading. After the last fruitless sonar search, Kraft was in the online room with his eyes fixed on a monitor when he said to nobody in particular, the elusive wasp. There was, I thought, some tenderness in it. Then came a setback. A crew member became ill with severe abdominal pains. Nobody on board wanted to take any risks. The petrol steamed back to Honiara, the nearest port, to seek medical help. The journey was thirty hours one way. The importance of finding a shipwreck paled. Nevertheless, the prospects for the mission now looked bad. In the best-case scenario in which
Starting point is 00:39:40 the crew member was successfully and swiftly treated, we'd lose four days of the expedition. Four battleship shots. It was only at the moment when the mission seemed bound to fail, at least within the time I would be on board, that I realized how invested I had become in the Petrel's finding the Wasp. It wasn't only a sense of narrative closure I sought, although that was a part of it. I had by now read widely on the Wasp's history
Starting point is 00:40:12 and was gripped by its stories and characters. There was David McCampbell, who survived the sinking by jumping into the water and who subsequently became the most successful Navy fighter ace of the entire war. There was Benedict Semmes, Jr., who later became a vice admiral. Semmes saw an eight-foot shark circling his group of survivors as they swam toward the USS Duncan, but decided not to tell anybody lest he cause a panic. A wise decision, the shark left his group alone.
Starting point is 00:40:46 There was the indelible vision of the wasp's air officer, Michael Kernodle, who was in the water when he looked back at the carrier and realized that he could see all the way through the ship, from side to side. What caused this large hole I do not know, but it must have been the result of a terrific explosion, Cernodal later wrote. And then there was John Shea, and the letter to his son, which made my eyes brim every time I read it. The action reports on the sinking of the Wasp mentioned Shea in the most glowing terms. As assistant air officer, he would have been in a high part of the Wasp mentioned Shea in the most glowing terms. As assistant air officer,
Starting point is 00:41:26 he would have been in a high part of the central island called the primary fly tower when the torpedoes hit, overseeing the takeoff and landing of the ship's aircraft.
Starting point is 00:41:37 As soon as the explosions started, Shea rushed down a ladder and toward the danger, grabbing firefighting gear as he went. The mains had been knocked out in the torpedo strikes, meaning there was no water pressure in the hoses. Shea did what he could with chemical retardants. He was last seen on the port walkway leading out another hose when an enormous explosion, in the account of one witness, blue steel plating 150 feet above the deck.
Starting point is 00:42:05 Some of the men were blown into the air, the officer wrote, and I did not see them again. It wasn't just Shea's heroism that bit me. The more I learned about him, the more I was drawn in. Shea was a tall, lean, red-headed, soft-spoken Irish Catholic from Cambridge, Massachusetts, and a career naval officer with the body of an athlete but the reflective manner of a poet. At Boston College, where he was an outstanding undergraduate scholar, he had written verse, competed on the debating team, and played varsity football. A reporter on the Wasp wrote that his freckled nose was dented from personal combat.
Starting point is 00:42:49 After college, he waited years to marry his sweetheart, Elizabeth, because of some ill feeling between his family and hers. John and Elizabeth's son, Jack, was an only child and a late blessing. When the news reached home that Shea was missing, presumed dead, two of his four sisters, both Boston public school teachers, remembered the letter their brother had sent to his son and read it to their grade school classes.
Starting point is 00:43:19 The school system then decided to publish it in a pamphlet. Soon the text became a national sensation. The Dear Jackie letter was reprinted in the Boston Globe, which called it an inspiring memorial to American youth. Life magazine followed, as did many other papers. Long before Shea was declared legally dead on September 16, 1943, a year and a day after the WASP was sunk, the story of the letter grew bigger than the story of the WASP itself.
Starting point is 00:43:53 Jack Shea died in 2015 at the age of 77, a father of three and a grandfather of nine, having enjoyed a happy career as a teacher of Latin and Greek at Boston College. Throughout his adult life, he oscillated between pride in his father's legacy and unease about the strange and unbidden attention the Dear Jackie letter had brought him. From time to time, people would ask him about the letter, and he would answer their questions as politely as he could before moving the conversation on. The tale of the Wasp, however, would never leave him alone. Especially
Starting point is 00:44:32 toward the end of his life, Jack Shea often wondered exactly what had become of his father and the aircraft carrier on which he served. I am the father of two young children, including a bookish six-year-old boy who hid a handwritten note in my luggage saying how much he would miss me while I was on the ship. Thanks for the note and card, John Shea had told Jackie. Write me very often and tell me everything. Write me very often and tell me everything. But I also felt a deeper connection to the Shea story. When I was two, my own father, a pilot who spent much of his career in the British Navy, was killed in a helicopter accident.
Starting point is 00:45:19 My father was 43 when he died. Shea was 44. It was hard for me to read the Dear Jackie letter, with all its vulnerability and old-fashioned man-to-boy wisdom, and not feel a flare of anguished kinship. I realized, of course, that the Wasp's stories existed whether the wreck was found or not. But the physical artifact itself now seemed important, because it might allow these narratives to be reawakened. Anybody interested in the history of World War I infantry battles can tread the same Flanders and Picardy fields as the young men who fought in their millions there and empathize with their experience. I have done so myself. There is no better recruiting sergeant for pacifism than a walking tour of the Western Front.
Starting point is 00:46:08 But the surface of the ocean holds no landmarks. To understand or memorialize the sailors' battle experience, you must dive deep. The sick crew member was swiftly treated. The pain, it turned out, was not a harbinger of a serious ailment. We were swiftly treated. The pain, it turned out, was not a harbinger of a serious ailment. We returned it to the search site as fast as the petrol could motor, which was 12 knots, or about the speed of the fastest 10,000-meter runners. On January 11th, the AUV's data showed nothing but wheat fields.
Starting point is 00:46:42 On January 12th, it came up empty again. On this second occasion, it was 5 a.m. when the drone was retrieved and three sharks circled the Zodiac. A young ATU member, a heavily bearded Englishman named Pat Travis, leaned out to clip the drone to the hook on the crane when a six-foot oceanic white tip glided in between his boat and the AUV. foot oceanic white tip glided in between his boat and the AUV. Had Travis wanted to, he could have stroked the shark's dorsal fin as it swam by. It was a genuinely hair-raising moment, but one quickly dismissed by the crew.
Starting point is 00:47:18 They now had a technical problem to solve. The drone, they noticed, was letting in water. As the ATU team fixed the problem, Kraft used the delay wisely. He chose to dive with the ROV on the big debris fields they had found on the first grid a week earlier. He was still hoping for more clues. Mayer teased him, saying the robot would find a sign saying, WASP, 700 meters this way. Kraft had the grace to laugh. The remote submersible is a remarkable piece of equipment. The petrol sends 4,500 volts and 10 amps of electricity down the umbilical cord to the ROV, as well as instructions that operate its thrusters.
Starting point is 00:48:02 The mothership receives crystalline images from the sub's nine cameras. Through this technological devilry, two pilots, sitting in what look like gaming chairs in the online room, fly the ROV to the bottom of the ocean, inspecting the abyssal surrounds as easily as if they were looking through the glass at the aquarium.
Starting point is 00:48:23 When the pilots dived on the debris field, what they found was ghostly. On the bottom of the ocean, among mesh, iron railings, and shell casings, were dozens of helmets. The find caused more head-scratching from Kraft and Mayer. It seemed quite unlikely that whatever they had found was evidence of one of the wasps, two major traumas, the Japanese strike or the American volley that scuttled the ship. It doesn't seem like a major event, but it is spread over a wide area, so whatever happened, it happened to a ship that was moving fast, Kraft said. A new theory began to formulate in Kraft's mind
Starting point is 00:49:05 that wouldn't reach full expression until he'd sent down the AUV again and seen more lines of wheat fields. The debris they had found wasn't from the wasp. If he was right, every single data point they had on their map was wrong by at least 10 miles. But Kraft could see no other possible explanation. His team had now run
Starting point is 00:49:27 six search grids around 150 square miles and had come up empty. The exact coordinates recorded by a dozen United States navigators didn't matter now. They were all,
Starting point is 00:49:40 in Kraft's opinion, worthless. Cox was more measured in his analysis. It doesn't give you a whole load of confidence in American open ocean navigation, he said, to a rueful smile from others in the online room. Kraft, however, was on the cusp of a breakthrough. If the coordinates were wrong
Starting point is 00:50:01 and the debris hadn't, in fact, come from the WASP, it was most likely to have been a result of torpedo strikes on two other ships in the convoy. The Japanese submarine had in fact fired six torpedoes in the volley that fatally wounded the Wasp. One passed the Wasp but went on to hit the USS O'Brien, compromising it so much that it sank a month later. Another struck the USS North Carolina, forcing it back to Pearl Harbor for repairs. Both were significant events, but not as traumatic as the attack on the WASP.
Starting point is 00:50:40 All that mattered to Kraft now was where the WASP had been in relation to the O'Brien and the North Carolina. Mayer found a sketch and Cox found a photograph. Each seemed to confirm that the wasp had been southwest of the O'Brien and the North Carolina when it was hit. Well, if that's true, then it pushes everything further south, Kraft said. He eyed the map again. There was an empty, unsearched square in the southwest, at least ten miles from any navigator's estimate of where the wasp went under.
Starting point is 00:51:14 He tapped on it with his finger. All the clues push me over here, he said. Mayer was silent. He could see his friend was onto something, and he didn't want to disturb his train of thought. The new theory made perfect sense of the nagging but inchoate feeling that Mayer had wrestled with ever since the AUV found the first debris site and Kraft had momentarily declared victory. Speculation Club had been misinterpreting the clues the ocean floor was sending them. Speculation Club had been misinterpreting the clues the ocean floor was sending them.
Starting point is 00:51:49 Indeed, even before Kraft sent the drone down again to scan the new grid, there was a general sense of intellectual accomplishment in the online room. When the AUV re-emerged from the deep, it was around 3.30 a.m. on January 14th. I'd been away since the end of December. It was nearly time to catch a flight home. We were still more than a day's sailing from the nearest airport. There might not be another chance for an AUV mission after this one. The sonar information was spooled onto the screens of the online room. We all peered at the monitors. Sitting in the middle of the grid, unmistakably, was a toy ship dropped in a sandbox. There she is, Kraft said.
Starting point is 00:52:31 Nobody spoke for what seemed like a while. Somebody in the room cried. Those seconds felt complicated emotionally. The petrol's purpose is to find Rex, and this moment was the purest distillation of that imperative, but there was no immediate celebration. Part of the sobriety was that the sound waves drawing the outline of the ship represented the lives of 194 people whose stories, over the past days and weeks, we had come to know. past days and weeks, we had come to know. In my mind, at least, there was also a fleeting, thin, and unexpected sliver of regret, which I still can't fully explain. The pang of watching a hunter standing over a shot stag.
Starting point is 00:53:22 Eventually, Kraft broke the quiet. Nailed it, he said. Hours later, the Petrel's ROV dived, lights blaring, on the wasp. It was accompanied until around 300 meters by two of the sharks who now followed us wherever we went. The ROV took more than an hour to descend to 4,200 meters where the wasp lay. It spent the next half day or so inspecting the wreck from one end to the other, with only the occasional slow-moving deep sea creature interrupting the view. The fire and explosions that had wounded the wasp were evident everywhere. Whole sections of deck were missing. In one spot, forward of the central island, it looked as if the ship had been cleaved like a log.
Starting point is 00:54:09 The bridge was marked with charred flame lines. The funnel had sheared off. But the cold, deep water and the lack of light had preserved the wreck remarkably well. My overriding impression was how small it seemed for a carrier that had housed more than 2,000 sailors and dozens of airplanes. There had been so much life contained within that rusting hulk. Scattered around the wreck of the Wasp were airplanes, Dauntlesses, Wildcats, and Avengers in various states of destruction.
Starting point is 00:54:42 in various states of destruction. Even before the Wasp sank, according to the captain's report, the planes on both the flight and hangar decks were thrown high in the air by explosions and were badly damaged. A trip to the bottom of the ocean had not improved their condition. And then there was the ghostly sight of dozens of helmets lying in the silt. By the time we returned to Honiara days later, Cox's colleagues in the Navy had been officially informed of the wasp's discovery and her location noted. Otherwise, it was left alone.
Starting point is 00:55:17 The process of contacting the families of men who had served on the ship began. I called the family of Commander Shea myself. Jack Shea married a woman named Claudette with whom he had three children, John, Laura, and Christine. Over the period of about a week, I spoke to all four of Jack Shea's immediate family to tell them about the WASP.
Starting point is 00:55:40 It was strange news to deliver. The facts about their grandfather were not changed by the discovery, and yet something had changed. They were all thrilled that a crew had taken the time and effort to locate the ship. Laura, a social worker, reacted to the news surprisingly emotionally. John, a network engineer, was happy there was new information to bolster his understanding of the conflict in which his grandfather served Claudette told me that her husband would have been shocked, amazed, and sad, of course, to relive his childhood memories
Starting point is 00:56:17 The exact site of the wasp, Claudette told me, was a puzzle that Jack always hoped would be solved told me was a puzzle that Jack always hoped would be solved. When I spoke to Christine, Commander Shea's youngest grandchild, a teacher in a public school, she told me she felt some regret because she knew how much the news would have meant to her father. But she also found the discovery thrilling, in part because it would mean that a new generation of people would have a chance to read her grandfather's letter. In a polarized America, she told me, its values sang out. There's a strong sense of living a good life, Christine said. There's nothing in that letter about making a lot of money. Christine also told me about what Commander Shea's example had meant to her father, whom she described as a humble man who did not crave the limelight that sometimes shined on him because of the letter. She said that Jack Shea had lived within the value system his father adumbrated in that short text, almost to the item.
Starting point is 00:57:21 His had been, in every sense, a good life, albeit one touched by tragedy. In a strange way, the discovery of the wasp had brought closure to this complicated episode in the Shea history. The whole family, she said, had believed that the wasp's last resting place would remain unknowable. Now, all these years later, the mystery had been put to rest. Now, all these years later, the mystery had been put to rest. To not be missing forever, Christine said, that seems important. Several days after I spoke to the family about the discovery of the wasp, Jack Shea's widow, Claudette, wrote me an email.
Starting point is 00:58:06 She told me that the news had encouraged her to revisit the Shea family history. She found herself researching her husband's papers. There she discovered a note written by John Shea as a boy. The text was undated, but the childish scrawl suggested it would have been written in the earliest years of the 20th century, when Teddy Roosevelt was president, nobody had yet driven a Ford Model T, and an aircraft carrier was a distant futuristic instrument of war. When I'm a man, I'm going to be a soldier because I like to fight for my country, it read. I like to march and ride on horseback and go on ships. This was recorded by Audem. Audem is an app you can download to listen to lots of audio stories
Starting point is 00:59:04 from publishers such as the New York Times, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, and The Atlantic.

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