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Tag: Shipwreck

  • Pants pulled from 1857

    Pants pulled from 1857

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    Pulled from a sunken trunk at an 1857 shipwreck off the coast of North Carolina, work pants that auction officials describe as the oldest known pair of jeans in the world have sold for $114,000.

    The white, heavy-duty miner’s pants with a five-button fly were among 270 Gold Rush-era artifacts that sold for a total of nearly $1 million in Reno last weekend, according to Holabird Western American Collections.

    In this undated photo provided by Holabird Western Americana Collections are miner’s work pants with a five-button fly, recovered from the 1857 sinking of the S.S. Central America, that may have been made by or for Levi Strauss during the California Gold Rush-era. 

    / AP


    There’s disagreement about whether the pricey pants have any ties to the father of modern-day blue jeans, Levi Strauss, as they predate by 16 years the first pair officially manufactured by his San Francisco-based Levi Strauss & Co. in 1873. Some say historical evidence suggests there are links to Strauss, who was a wealthy wholesaler of dry goods at the time, and the pants could be a very early version of what would become the iconic jeans.

    But the company’s historian and archive director, Tracey Panek, says any claims about their origin are “speculation.”

    “The pants are not Levi’s nor do I believe they are miner’s work pants,” she wrote in an email to The Associated Press.

    Regardless of their origin, there’s no denying the pants were made before the S.S. Central America sank in a hurricane on Sept. 12, 1857, packed with passengers who began their journey in San Francisco and were on their way to New York via Panama. And there’s no indication older work pants dating to the Gold Rush-era exist.

    “Those miner’s jeans are like the first flag on the moon, a historic moment in history,” said Dwight Manley, managing partner of the California Gold Marketing Group, which owns the artifacts and put them up for auction.

     Other auction items that had been entombed for more than a century in the ship’s wreckage 7,200 feet below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean included the purser’s keys to the treasure room where tons of Gold Rush coins and assayers ingots were stored. It sold for $103,200.

              Tens of millions of dollars worth of gold has been sold since shipwreck recovery began in 1988. But last Saturday marked the first time any artifacts hit the auction block. Another auction is planned in February.

    “There has never been anything like the scope of these recovered artifacts, which represented a time capsule of daily life during the Gold Rush,” said Fred Holabird, president of the auction company.

    The lid of a Wells Fargo & Co. treasure box believed to be the oldest of its kind went for $99,600. An 1849 Colt pocket pistol sold for $30,000. A $20 gold coin minted in San Francisco in 1856 and later stamped with a Sacramento drug store ad brought $43,200.

    Most of the passengers aboard the S.S. Central America — known as the “Ship of Gold” — left San Francisco on another ship – the S.S. Sonora – and sailed to Panama, where they crossed the isthmus by train before boarding the doomed ship. Of those on board when the S.S. Central America went down, 425 died and 153 were saved.

    The unique mix of artifacts from high society San Franciscans to blue-collar workers piqued the interest of historians and collectors alike.

    Bob Evans, the chief scientist for every underwater recovery mission, said many of the items might seem ordinary, but they offer an extraordinary glimpse into the daily life of the passengers and crew, from gold-field workers to high-society San Franciscans.

    “This was a largely forgotten moment in American history because a few short years after that, the Civil War broke out,” Evans told CBS News in 2018. 

    1857 Shipwreck Auction-Gold Rush
    In this photo provided by the California Gold Marketing Group is the trunk belonging to S.S. Central America passengers Ansel and Adeline Easton that was discovered on the Atlantic Ocean seabed in 1990.

    California Gold Marketing Group via AP


    The pants came from the trunk of an Oregon man, John Dement, who served in the Mexican-American War.

    “At the end of the day, nobody can say these are or are not Levi’s with 100% certainty,” Manley said. But “these are the only known Gold Rush jean … not present in any collection in the world.”

    Holabird, considered a Gold Rush-era expert in his over 50 years as a scientist and historian, agreed: “So far, no museum has come forward with another.”

    Panek said Levi Strauss & Co. and Jacob Davis, a Reno tailor, received a U.S. Patent in May 1873 for “An Improvement in Fastening Pocket-Openings.” Months later, she said, the company began manufacturing the famous riveted pants – “Levi’s 501 jeans, the first modern blue jean.”

    She said before the auction that the shipwreck pants have no company branding – no “patches, buttons or even rivets, the innovation patented in 1873.”

    Panek added in emails to AP this week that the pants “are not typical of miner’s work pants in our archives.” She cited the color, “unusual fly design with extra side buttonholes” and the non-denim fabric that’s lighter weight “than cloth used for its earliest riveted clothing.”

    Holabird said he told Panek while she examined the pants in Reno last week there was no way to compare them historically or scientifically to those made in 1873.

    1857 Shipwreck Auction-Gold Rush
    This undated drawing made available by the Library of Congress shows the U.S. Mail ship S.S. Central America.

    AP


    Everything had changed – the materials, product availability, manufacturing techniques and market distribution – between 1857 and the time Strauss came out with a rivet-enforced pocket, Holabird said. He said Panek didn’t disagree with him.

    Levi Strauss & Co. has long maintained that up until 1873, the company was strictly a wholesaler and did no manufacturing of clothing.

    Holabird believes the pants were made by a subcontractor for Strauss. He decided to “follow the money – follow the gold” and discovered Strauss’ had a market reach and sales “on a level never seen before.”

    “Strauss was the largest single merchant to ship gold out of California in the 1857-1858 period,” Holabird said.

    The list of the $1.6 million cargo that left San Francisco on the S.S. Sonora in August 1857 for Panama was topped by Wells Fargo’s $260,300 in gold. Five other big banks were next, followed by Levi Strauss with $76,441. Levi Strauss had at least 14 similar shipments averaging $91,033 each from 1856-58, Holabird said.

    “Strauss is selling to every decent-sized dry goods store in the California gold regions, probably hundreds of them – from Shasta to Sonora and beyond,” Holabird said. “This guy was an absolute marketing genius, unforeseen.”

    “In short, his huge sales create a cause to be manufactured. He would have to contract with producers for an entire production run.”

    Recovery from the shipwreck site of what has been described as “America’s greatest treasure” occurred in several stages between 1988 through 1991 and again in 2014, but it was sullied by scandal in recent years.

    Tommy Thompson, a deep-sea explorer who found the shipwreck in 1988, has been in federal prison for six years because he refuses to answer questions about the whereabouts of 500 gold coins. He also evaded investors who funded his venture and was a fugitive for two years.

    tommythompsonap16121887543.jpg
    In this November 1989 file photo, Tommy Thompson holds a $50 pioneer gold piece retrieved earlier in 1989 from the wreck of the gold ship Central America

    AP


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  • Mississippi River’s low water level reveals shipwreck, apparently a ferry

    Mississippi River’s low water level reveals shipwreck, apparently a ferry

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    Baton Rouge — A shipwreck has emerged along the banks of the Mississippi River in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, as water levels plummet,- threatening to reach record lows in some areas.

    The ship, which archaeologists believe to be a ferry that sunk in the late 1800s to early 1900s, was spotted by a Baton Rouge resident walking along the shore earlier this month. The discovery is the latest to surface from ebbing waters caused by drought. During the summer, receding waters in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area revealed several skeletal remains, countless desiccated fish, a graveyard of forgotten boats and even a sunken World War II-era craft that once surveyed the lake.

    Shipwreck Louisiana
    The remains of a ship on the banks of the Mississippi River in Baton Rouge, La., on Oct. 17, 2022, after recently being revealed due to the low water level. The ship, which archaeologists believe to be a ferry that sunk in the late 1800s to early 1900s, was spotted by a Baton Rouge resident walking along the shore earlier this month.

    Sara Cline / AP


    “Eventually the river will come back up and (the ship) will go back underwater,” said Chip McGimsey, the Louisiana state archeologist, who has been surveying the wreck during the past two weeks. “That’s part of the reason for making the big effort to document it this time – cause she may not be there the next time.”

    McGimsey believes that the ship may be the Brookhill Ferry, which likely carried people and horse-drawn wagons from one-side of the river to the other – before major bridges spanned the mighty Mississippi. Newspaper archives indicate that the ship sank in 1915 during a major storm.

    But this is not the first time the low water levels have revealed the ship. McGimsey said that tiny parts of the vessel were exposed in 1990s.

    Shipwreck Louisiana
    The remains of a ship sit on the banks of the Mississippi River in Baton Rouge, La., on Oct. 17, 2022, after recently being revealed due to the low water level. The ship, which archaeologists believe to be a ferry that went down in the late 1800s to early 1900s, was spotted by a Baton Rouge resident walking along the shore earlier this month.

    Sara Cline / AP


    “At that time the vessel was completely full of mud and there was mud all around it so only the very tip tops of the sides were visible, so (archaeologists) really didn’t see much other. They had to move a lot of dirt just to get some narrow windows in to see bits and pieces,” McGimsey said.

    Today one-third of the boat, measuring 95-feet long, is visible on the muddy shoreline near downtown Baton Rouge.

    McGimsey expects more discoveries as water levels continue to fall, having already received calls about two more possible shipwrecks.

    But the unusually low water level in the lower Mississippi River, where there has been below-normal rainfall since late August, has also led to chaos – causing barges to get stuck in mud and sand, leading to waterway restrictions from the Coast Guard and disrupting river travel for shippers, recreational boaters and passengers on a cruise line.

    In Baton Rouge the river rests at about 5-feet (1.5-meters) deep, according to the National Weather Service – its lowest level since 2012.

    Water levels are projected to drop even further in the weeks ahead, dampening the region’s economic activity and potentially threatening jobs.

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  • 22 dead and dozens missing after 2 migrant ships sink off Greece, prompting dramatic rescues on steep cliffs

    22 dead and dozens missing after 2 migrant ships sink off Greece, prompting dramatic rescues on steep cliffs

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    Bodies floated amid splintered wreckage in the water off a Greek island Thursday as the death toll from the sinking of two migrant boats rose to 22, with many still missing.

    The boats went down hundreds of miles apart, in one case prompting a dramatic overnight rescue effort, as residents and firefighters pulled shipwrecked migrants to safety up steep cliffs.

    Greece Migrants Missing
    The remains of a sailboat is seen in the water after it smashed into rocks and sank off the island of Kythira, southern Greece, Thursday, Oct. 6, 2022. 

    Thanassis Stavrakis / AP


    The deadly incidents stoked tension between neighbors Greece and Turkey, which are locked in a heated dispute over migration and maritime boundaries. The shipwreck also comes just weeks after another migrant boat sank off Greece, leaving dozens missing.

    The coast guard on the eastern island of Lesbos said 16 bodies of young African women and one young man were recovered there after a dinghy carrying about 40 people sank. Ten women were rescued, while 13 other migrants were believed to be missing, coast guard officials said.

    The last body to be recovered, of a man, was found by divers from the European Union’s Frontex border agency who helped in the search and rescue operation, the coast guard said.  

    “The women who were rescued were in a full state of panic so we are still trying to work out what happened,” coast guard spokesman Nikos Kokkalas told state television. “The women were all from African countries, aged 20 upward. … There is a search on land as well as at sea and we hope that survivors made it to land.”

    The second rescue effort was launched several hundred miles to the west, off the island of Kythira, where a sailboat struck rocks and sank.

    The bodies of at least four migrants were seen amid floating debris from the sailboat. The deaths would be officially recorded when the bodies were recovered, officials said. They added that 80 people, from Iran, Iraq and Afghanistan, had been rescued while a search continues for as many as 11 still believed to be missing.

    With winds in the area reaching 45 mph overnight on Kythira, survivors clinging to ropes were pulled to safety up steep cliffs as others were buffeted by waves as they waited their turn on tiny areas of rock at the bottom.

    “All the residents here went down to the harbor to try and help,” Martha Stathaki, a local resident told The Associated Press.

    “We could see the boat smashing against the rocks and people climbing up those rocks to try and save themselves. It was an unbelievable sight.”

    Kythira is some 250 miles west of Turkey and on a route often used by smugglers to bypass Greece and head directly to Italy.

    A volatile dispute is taking place between Greece and Turkey over the safety of migrants at sea, with Athens accusing its neighbor of failing to stop smugglers active on its shoreline and even using migrants to apply political pressure on the European Union.

    Most migrants reach Greece travel from nearby Turkey, but smugglers have changed routes – often taking greater risks – in recent months in an effort to avoid heavily patrolled waters around Greek islands near the Turkish coastline.

    “Once again, Turkey’s tolerance of gangs of ruthless traffickers has cost human lives,” Greek Shipping Minister Yannis Plakiotakis said.

    “As long as the Turkish coastguard does not prevent their activities, the traffickers cram unfortunate people, without safety measures, into boats that cannot withstand the weather conditions, putting their lives in mortal danger.”

    Greek Migration Minister Notis Mittarachi tweeted that Turkey must take “immediate action to prevent all irregular departures due to harsh weather conditions.”

    “Already today many lives lost in the Aegean, people are drowning in unseaworthy vessels. EU must act,” he wrote.

    Turkey denies the allegations and has publicly accused Greece of carrying out reckless summary deportations, known as pushbacks.

    Greece is often the country of choice for migrants fleeing Africa and the Middle East to try to reach a better life in the European Union.

    Speaking at the United Nations General Assembly last month, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, accused Greece of “turning the Aegean Sea into a graveyard” and held up photographs of dead migrant children.

    According to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), there have been over 24,000 missing migrants reported in the Mediterranean region since 2014. The group says the Central Mediterranean is the “deadliest known migration route in the world,” with more than 17,000 deaths and disappearances recorded since 2014.

    Last month, Syrian authorities said they recovered 100 bodies from a Lebanese migrant boat that sank off Syria, in one of the deadliest recent shipwrecks in the eastern Mediterranean. 

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