1,500 Live Ammunition Shells Found Under NY Bridge

Updated: Sunday, 24 Oct 2010, 11:31 AM MDT
Published : Sunday, 24 Oct 2010, 11:31 AM MDT

(NewsCore) - Commercial divers were confident Sunday that they uncovered what the Navy missed more than 50 years ago during a frantic search that made national headlines in the U.S.: roughly 1,500 live shells that went overboard into New York's Verrazano Narrows and Gravesend Bay.

A four-person crew was last week searching for artifacts in the murky waters off New York Harbor's former Fort Lafayette -- an island near Bay Ridge destroyed in 1960 to pave the way for the Verrazano Bridge.

Initially, the team planned to photograph a few small shells they found last year. But this time around, diver Gene Ritter was blown away by what he saw on the sea floor.

Scattered under only 20 feet (six meters) of water were eight WWII-era copper artillery shells -- including one five feet long -- designed to shoot down airplanes and about 1,500 large caliber machine gun shells designed to explode on contact.

"What a find," shouted Ritter as he climbed aboard the vessel. "They're all over the place. Hundreds of them."

He believes the ammunition came from the stockpile of 14,470 live rounds that splashed into the bay during a military accident March 4, 1954. The aircraft carrier USS Bennington, moored off the fort, had unloaded the firepower onto a barge that broke free during a storm, overturned and drifted six miles to the Rockaways, littering the muddy sea floor with live ammunition along the way.

The discovery raised serious safety concerns about whether New York City authorities should dredge in Gravesend Bay, a mile south of the Bennington accident site, to build a waste transfer station, said Assemblyman William Colton (D-Brooklyn).

The Navy disavowed knowledge of the shells' origins or responsibility for removing them, and a spokesman said the divers should call local authorities.

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