March 15

Ship of Gold’s Arctic Discoverer on St. Johns River

Does Crime Pay?

One day, there will be an account for every person and all that has been done. So, this saga is not over. 

In 1998, the Arctic Discoverer ship was used  by lead treasurer-hunter Tommy Thompson to find the sunken ship S. S. Central America. The Discoverer had originally been named The Cameron, a Canadian ship in 1958. Then went on to take the name, the Arctic Ranger and when sold again in 1988 became the Arctic Discoverer which would be used to explore, and find with success,  the sunken S. S. Central America.

The S. S Central America was launched with great fanfare and success in October of 1852  but met its fate  with most of the crew and passengers on board, on September 12, 1857.  In  category 2 storm off of the coast of the Carolinas the ship took on water and while the inverted distress flag was hailed, no one came until the following day. Only about one hundred passengers were transferred to life boats onto other ships. The storm of over 100 mile an hour winds eventually sent  the S. S. Central America to the bottom of the ocean with most of the remaining passengers and what has been valued as over $8,000,000 in gold and artefacts. The remaining passengers who survived hung on to pieces left in the water from the ship going down.They were rescued by a Norwegian sailing vessel and as far out as 8 days later the last 3 were rescued. The total loss of life from the tragedy was 425 people including the Caption of the ship.

The California gold rush was in full swing during this time with its peak about 1852. The S. S. Central America was carrying literally tons of freshly minted gold including heavy gold bars and hundreds of ingots and coins.  All went to the oceans bottom.

One hundred and thirty one years later, Thomas Gregory Thompson ( Tommy)  and his crew would discover the sunken ship which was by then called, “ The Ship of Gold”.  Thompson, a “former scientist turned American treasure-hunter “ would lead a team using the Arctic Discoverer ship to find the S. S. Central in September of 1998.

The story goes that in 2000 Thompson had investors who financed the ship’s exploration.  When Thompson sold the recovered gold found at the bottom of the ocean for some $52 million investors claim they never received their return on that investment. They accused Thompson of hiding the money and not being willing to account for the 500 gold coins. It was said by many that he had offshore bank accounts.

In 2013 a district court in Ohio issued an arrest for Thompson for his failure to appear in court. Thompson would be a fugitive until he and a girl friend were found in a Florida hotel and arrested in 2015. By 2018, Thompson agreed to return the missing 500 gold coins from the wreck but said he did not have access to them. He also agreed to answer question about the location of the coins but never did. With the on-going law suit, the investors were awarded over $19 million. In December of 2015 Thompson was jailed and remained there until March 4, 2026 when a judge released him because he “no longer is convinced that further incarceration is likely to coerce compliance”. Thompson served more than 10 years.

At this writing, the Arctic Discoverer  is docked on a pier in the St. Johns River near Jacksonville.  It is clinging at a shipyard in Green Cove Springs.   To look at it  heavily leaning, it has  obviously taken on water on one side in the St. Johns River. This ship’s crew found the most valuable shipwreck  in history now is” bedraggled and forlorn” on the banks of the St. Johns River near Jacksonville.  

This story lives on. There is a reconning for all of us  one day as God is in the details, so stay tuned for the rest of the story.

See you tomorrow,

Sources:  Google AI, Wikipedia, Clay Clerk, Vishi Garig, Ship of Gold, Central America (ship, 1852) at Wiki Commons, Photo-Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, 1857, Capt. Joule Haanstra,  Mariners Museum, Vaughan Publishing, Nannette V. Ramey.

Category: People, Ships | Comments Off on Ship of Gold’s Arctic Discoverer on St. Johns River
January 26

Jacksonville and “The Ship of Gold”

Jacksonville’s involvement with “The Ship of Gold” tells a story of respect, love, fear, betrayal, riches and more. Life magazine called it “the greatest treasure ever found” but did the treasure show the greatest or bring out the poverty in most all connected?   After researching the story and finding the boat in Northeast Florida, the real question is, which is the “Ship of Gold?:  The SS Central America?, The Arctic Discoverer?, or the man who hauled a great bit of the gold away and then disappeared?  I’d say, all three.

Contemporary painting of Central America ship

My grandsons are nine, four and four.  Knowing the ship was so near, it was a must-see, so we, their mother and me, did. Our nearby travels took us less than twenty minutes to see the Arctic Discoverer.  It’s basically, just down the road.  It’s an approximately 65 year old deserted boat along a dock in Green Cove Springs, Florida.  We all totally enjoyed the trip.  With Gary Kinder’s book in hand, we basically knew the story start to finish except for the details of what Thompson will now do.

Arctic Discoverer- Photo- Ramey

Over 30 years ago, the 180 foot ship was called the A.T. Cameron. It was then sold and renamed the Arctic Ranger when an investor seeking to help Thompson’s exploration bought and repurposed it. He brought it to Jacksonville, and Green Cove Springs, had it painted light sky blue and white and for a “nominal” fee, rented it to Thompson for his exploration.  Thompson and his crew  took it to sea to find gold and lots of it.  Along with it, they took a, what many called a “miraculous” 12,000 pound underwater robot named Nemo that could be deployed remotely.  The trip was orchestrated by  a young Tommy Thompson,  an engineer who had a passion and drive to hunt down and find the sunken ship, SS Central America.

Ship of Gold- Photo-Ramey

September 1857 the Central America ship carrying some 600 passengers was returning from the California Gold Rush when it sunk off of the coast of South Carolina due to a hurricane.   Over 20 tons of gold, other treasures and some 400 lives were lost.

Ship Gold- Recovery Limited Photo

In 1985, Tommy Thompson, with his company, Recovery Limited Partnership, set out with a group of 141 investors to discover and find the Central America . The plan was to recover the treasures lost.  He and his team used “Nemo”, the underwater vessel along with other recovery equipment to find and explore the bottom of the sea where it sunk. Using special computer equipment and savvy methods for capturing such , including robotics and far-advance oceanography tricks to the trade, the team not only found the Central America but was able to bring up a great amount of items from the wreckage including luggage, documents, the ship’s bell and millions of dollars of gold coins and gold bars. 

By 1989, the crew discover the shipwreck bringing great attention to this disaster. After this incredible find, over 35 insurance companies sued Thompson saying their policies gave them rights to the gold. Through years of litigation, and continual protection of the shipwreck site, Thompson and his company were rewarded  92 percent of the recovered gold  with the remainder to pay insurance companies.  Within two years, Thompson sold his companies’ portion of the gold to California Gold Group for $52 million

Investors cried foul and said that Thompson never returned their investment money thus there were further lawsuits against Thompson.  High profiled businessmen sued him including The Dispatch Printing Company, directors of the Columbus Exploration group and Donald Fanta, an investor along with nine technicians who helped with the discovery.

The Arctic Discover in 2023- Photo- Ramey

In March of 2012 Thompson filed for bankruptcy but the filing was dismissed. It was then that Tommy Thompson did not show up in the next court session which prompted an arrest order.  Thompson and his girlfriend Alison Anterkeier disappeared and for at least two years their whereabouts were unknown.  According to The Columbus Dispatch, the resident going by the name of Susan Owens was actually Alison, the manager of the motor lodge, Virginia said. She moved there after being a no-show for a court date. This information came out in federal papers in June of 2015.

It was in  January of 2015 also that, Thompson and Anterkeier were found in a Hilton hotel in Boca Raton. Those involved in the case said they had been paying cash for their living expenses.   They were arrested and jailed.  Thompson’s girlfriend, Alison spent a month in jail and then released. 

In 2018, Thompson said he did not know where the gold was.  That same year, the judge ruled that what artifacts were available could be sold and the $19.4 million in damages could go to the plaintiffs. 

Thompson has remained in jail since the arrest and being unwilling to tell where the gold is to this day.  He is being held in a federal detention center in Milan, Michigan according to news organizations . When searching his name under “inmate”,  there is no release date listed.

Did Thompson bury the gold in Boca? Green Cover or even Jacksonville?  If you read the court transcripts you might find out. Some say he’s given hints.  If you find the gold, it would be yet another “great treasure find” pertaining to the “Ship of Gold”. The Arctic Discoverer is at present docked just outside of Duval County city limits.  

See you tomorrow,

Nan

Scripture for the day: “Thou Shalt Not Steal”. Also

Exodus 20:16 — “Thou Shalt Not Bear False Witness Against Thy Neighbor.”

There is probably more to this story that we don’t know.

Sources:  Columbus Dispatch, Ship of Gold, Gary Kinder, Coinworld, Odyssey Marine, Recovery Limited, Wikipedia, Personal visit.1/27/23