Triangle Wrecks

Shipwreck Finance
A salvage vessel moored to the superstructure of the sunken Finance.
Type:
shipwreck, tugboat, schooner barge, barge (?)
Depth:
65 ft

One of these three closely grouped wrecks appears to be the remains of a large unidentified steam-powered ocean-going tugboat. A considerable amount of metal wreckage and a large boiler remain; the engine is nowhere to be found. The hull was probably 100-150 ft long, but the wreck has been dynamited to bits. Hull plates, I-beams, a small pilothouse, and other wreckage lie in twisted heaps strewn in all directions on a coarse sandy bottom. An interesting dive, with plenty to explore and even a few lobsters.

The second one of these wrecks, also known as the "Jack-I", looks like a wooden schooner barge with a cargo of rubble stone. Draped with old ropes and fishing line, this is not nearly as good a dive. The third wreck of the triangle is a broken-down old barge. The scow B.B.-59 is recorded as sunk on this spot on Friday, June 6, 1924, and could well be one of these. Currents in this vicinity are strongly dependent on the tide, and can be vicious. Visibility is often impaired by silty Hudson river and Raritan bay water and is usually poor.

Somewhere around this area should also be the remains of the steamer Finance (below), for which I have never found a precise location.


Finance

Type:
steamer, Panama Railroad Company
Built:
1883, Chester PA USA
Specs:
( 295 x 38 ft ) 2603 gross tons, 155 passengers & crew
Sunk:
Thursday November 26, 1908
collision with freighter Georgic - 4 casualties

The Finance sank in only 15 minutes at a location about 3 (nautical) miles off Sandy Hook, directly under the shipping lane. The Finance sank with $100,000 in gold on board, all of which was salvaged by divers the next day. The wreck was later dynamited level with the seabed.

Shipwreck Finance
Twin sister Advance
Shipwreck Finance
Georgic, 10,077 tons

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Teredo

Teredo navalis

Size: to 5 "

This worm-like creature is actually a bivalve mollusk with a greatly reduced shell, which it uses to bore tunnels into wood. They typically spend their entire lives in a tunnel in a single piece of wood. In addition to feeding off the wood, they can also filter feed like ordinary bivalves.

In the age of wooden ships, teredos and other wood-borers were a tremendous problem. In our area, more wood-boring is done by crustaceans than Teredos.

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