Army, Navy divers might raise Providence’s sunken Russian sub
01:00 AM EDT on Thursday, August 23, 2007
By Daniel Barbarisi
Journal Staff Writer
PROVIDENCE — To the staff of the Russian Sub Museum, the sinking of their Soviet-era submarine in Providence Harbor following an April northeaster was a crushing catastrophe.
To the divers of the Army and Navy, it was a dream come true.
The military has announced that it intends to raise the sunken Juliett 484, the Cold War ballistic missile submarine that has been converted to a museum in the Providence River, in order to train its salvage and dive teams in how to get a submarine afloat.
“It’s an invaluable training scenario for us. It’s something that doesn’t happen very often,†said Navy Warrant Officer Peter Sharpe, who heads the contingent of Navy divers in Providence.
But the military’s help extends only to raising the submarine — the sub is filled with water, and the internal damage may be extensive. There’s no guarantee that it can be restored as a museum.
The Russian submarine, designated Juliett 484 by NATO, sank in 30 feet of water two days after an April 17 storm. As museum officials have tried to scrape together support to raise the boat, the strange tale of the sunken submarine has drawn international attention — including a special by a Russian television network — and become the darling of the salvage community, luring the Army and Navy divers and soon, a British dive team as well.
An Army Reserve landing craft, the New Orleans, pulled up to the docks at Collier Point Park last Thursday. Until Sept. 4, 30 Army and Navy divers will be circling, studying, and eventually entering the submarine as part of salvage training operations. They plan to attach cables to steady the sub, so that it isn’t swept away in another storm this winter.
If all goes well, said Navy Lt. Cmdr. Ruth Rayburn, the expectation is that the military will return to raise the sub next year.
“It’s with an eye toward raising it next spring,†Rayburn said.
The opportunity to raise an undamaged missile submarine in such perfect conditions — next to a dock, in shallow water, in a protected bay — has excited the entire salvage community. In addition to the Americans already on-scene, the British are also considering sending their naval salvage team to Providence to work with Juliett 484, Sharpe said.
Sharpe said that this stage of the operation will cost more than $1 million. While the military plans to raise the submarine, budgetary approval is still needed for the next phase of the project, to actually raise the submarine.
The project would part of the U.S. Department of Defense’s Innovative Readiness Training Program, which seeks real-world scenarios to provide training for military personnel.
For the group of mostly retired veterans who manage the submarine museum, the military is seen as a savior. The submarine had insurance, but the salvage policy could only be used if the submarine was declared a total loss and turned over to the insurance company.
“We knew that we did not have the capacity to raise it on our own,†said Frank Lennon, president of the Russian Sub Museum. “We’re extremely grateful to [the Department of Defense] for helping us. They’ll determine the best way to raise it. They want to take a look at it, and they’re going to do some further things to stabilize it. The eventual goal is that we work together to raise it.â€
The submarine is sitting on the harbor bottom, with its conning tower at a 48-degree angle pointing toward East Providence. The submarine is filled with water, and may be rusting badly. Until it can be raised and drained, there is no way to tell how much a full restoration would cost.
“We do not expect structural damage, but we expect serious deterioration,†Lennon said. “Where it goes from there is anybody’s guess.â€
The bottom of Providence Harbor is only the latest stop for Juliett 484. Commissioned in 1965, it served in the Soviet Baltic and Northern fleets until its decommissioning in 1994. Then it was sold and moved to Helsinki, Finland, to become a restaurant. When that venture failed, it was sold to a group in St. Petersburg, Fla., where it became a museum. In 2001, the submarine was used in the filming of the Cold War thriller K-19: The Widowmaker, starring Harrison Ford. It opened as a museum in August 2002.
The salvage efforts have been hampered by a lack of information about the submarine itself. The submarine’s design schematics are classified, and despite pleas from the Providence museum and from former Juliett 484 crew members now in Russia, the Russian government has not opted to declassify them.
“Classified documents take on a life of their own,†Lennon said. “It’s very easy to classify something and very difficult to declassify it. We’ve probably still got stuff from the Spanish-American War that’s classified.â€
Some help has come from reverse-engineering data developed when the sub was drydocked in preparation for K-19: The Widowmaker. But for more exact specifications, they sought out the only surviving sister ship of Juliett 484, now on display in Germany.
In early August, the submarine museum’s general manager, William E. Sheridan, accompanied a group of Navy salvage and dive experts to the German town of Peenemunde to visit Juliett 484’s sister ship, a Soviet submarine designated U-461.
“They were aware of what happened to us and they offered to take us around and be our guides,†Sheridan said.
They spent three days going over every inch of the submarine.
“When the divers are in there they have to know — what’s this, what’s that, how do I get around it,†Sheridan said. “The only way we could get them accurate measurements so they could get their engineering data was to physically measure the interior parts of the boat.â€
There has been a keen interest in the boat in Russia, and e-mails and letters from the former Soviet Union have been coming in. In June, Sheridan led a Russian television crew around the submarine site, and they did a five-minute segment on the sinking of Juliett 484 on a Russian newscast.
It’s been particularly gut-wrenching for the ship’s old crew, Lennon said, to hear that their longtime home might forever sit on the bottom of the harbor of an American city few Russians have even heard of.
“That was one of the most difficult things for us, was having to tell these guys that their submarine sank,†Lennon said.
01:00 AM EDT on Thursday, August 23, 2007
By Daniel Barbarisi
Journal Staff Writer
PROVIDENCE — To the staff of the Russian Sub Museum, the sinking of their Soviet-era submarine in Providence Harbor following an April northeaster was a crushing catastrophe.
To the divers of the Army and Navy, it was a dream come true.
The military has announced that it intends to raise the sunken Juliett 484, the Cold War ballistic missile submarine that has been converted to a museum in the Providence River, in order to train its salvage and dive teams in how to get a submarine afloat.
“It’s an invaluable training scenario for us. It’s something that doesn’t happen very often,†said Navy Warrant Officer Peter Sharpe, who heads the contingent of Navy divers in Providence.
But the military’s help extends only to raising the submarine — the sub is filled with water, and the internal damage may be extensive. There’s no guarantee that it can be restored as a museum.
The Russian submarine, designated Juliett 484 by NATO, sank in 30 feet of water two days after an April 17 storm. As museum officials have tried to scrape together support to raise the boat, the strange tale of the sunken submarine has drawn international attention — including a special by a Russian television network — and become the darling of the salvage community, luring the Army and Navy divers and soon, a British dive team as well.
An Army Reserve landing craft, the New Orleans, pulled up to the docks at Collier Point Park last Thursday. Until Sept. 4, 30 Army and Navy divers will be circling, studying, and eventually entering the submarine as part of salvage training operations. They plan to attach cables to steady the sub, so that it isn’t swept away in another storm this winter.
If all goes well, said Navy Lt. Cmdr. Ruth Rayburn, the expectation is that the military will return to raise the sub next year.
“It’s with an eye toward raising it next spring,†Rayburn said.
The opportunity to raise an undamaged missile submarine in such perfect conditions — next to a dock, in shallow water, in a protected bay — has excited the entire salvage community. In addition to the Americans already on-scene, the British are also considering sending their naval salvage team to Providence to work with Juliett 484, Sharpe said.
Sharpe said that this stage of the operation will cost more than $1 million. While the military plans to raise the submarine, budgetary approval is still needed for the next phase of the project, to actually raise the submarine.
The project would part of the U.S. Department of Defense’s Innovative Readiness Training Program, which seeks real-world scenarios to provide training for military personnel.
For the group of mostly retired veterans who manage the submarine museum, the military is seen as a savior. The submarine had insurance, but the salvage policy could only be used if the submarine was declared a total loss and turned over to the insurance company.
“We knew that we did not have the capacity to raise it on our own,†said Frank Lennon, president of the Russian Sub Museum. “We’re extremely grateful to [the Department of Defense] for helping us. They’ll determine the best way to raise it. They want to take a look at it, and they’re going to do some further things to stabilize it. The eventual goal is that we work together to raise it.â€
The submarine is sitting on the harbor bottom, with its conning tower at a 48-degree angle pointing toward East Providence. The submarine is filled with water, and may be rusting badly. Until it can be raised and drained, there is no way to tell how much a full restoration would cost.
“We do not expect structural damage, but we expect serious deterioration,†Lennon said. “Where it goes from there is anybody’s guess.â€
The bottom of Providence Harbor is only the latest stop for Juliett 484. Commissioned in 1965, it served in the Soviet Baltic and Northern fleets until its decommissioning in 1994. Then it was sold and moved to Helsinki, Finland, to become a restaurant. When that venture failed, it was sold to a group in St. Petersburg, Fla., where it became a museum. In 2001, the submarine was used in the filming of the Cold War thriller K-19: The Widowmaker, starring Harrison Ford. It opened as a museum in August 2002.
The salvage efforts have been hampered by a lack of information about the submarine itself. The submarine’s design schematics are classified, and despite pleas from the Providence museum and from former Juliett 484 crew members now in Russia, the Russian government has not opted to declassify them.
“Classified documents take on a life of their own,†Lennon said. “It’s very easy to classify something and very difficult to declassify it. We’ve probably still got stuff from the Spanish-American War that’s classified.â€
Some help has come from reverse-engineering data developed when the sub was drydocked in preparation for K-19: The Widowmaker. But for more exact specifications, they sought out the only surviving sister ship of Juliett 484, now on display in Germany.
In early August, the submarine museum’s general manager, William E. Sheridan, accompanied a group of Navy salvage and dive experts to the German town of Peenemunde to visit Juliett 484’s sister ship, a Soviet submarine designated U-461.
“They were aware of what happened to us and they offered to take us around and be our guides,†Sheridan said.
They spent three days going over every inch of the submarine.
“When the divers are in there they have to know — what’s this, what’s that, how do I get around it,†Sheridan said. “The only way we could get them accurate measurements so they could get their engineering data was to physically measure the interior parts of the boat.â€
There has been a keen interest in the boat in Russia, and e-mails and letters from the former Soviet Union have been coming in. In June, Sheridan led a Russian television crew around the submarine site, and they did a five-minute segment on the sinking of Juliett 484 on a Russian newscast.
It’s been particularly gut-wrenching for the ship’s old crew, Lennon said, to hear that their longtime home might forever sit on the bottom of the harbor of an American city few Russians have even heard of.
“That was one of the most difficult things for us, was having to tell these guys that their submarine sank,†Lennon said.
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