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SS Sapona
Sapona's port side, August 2009
History
Owner
  • Carl Fisher (–1924)
  • Bruce Bethel (1924–1926)
BuilderLiberty Ship Building Company
LaunchedJanuary 1920
FateGrounded 1926
NotesWreck: 25°39′02″N 79°17′36″W / 25.65063°N 79.29337°W / 25.65063; -79.29337
General characteristics
TypeCargo ship
Tonnage
Length86 m (282 ft)
Beam14.02 m (46.0 ft)
Draft8.61 m (28.2 ft)
Installed powerTriple-expansion steam 1,520 indicated horsepower (1,130 kW)
Speed10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph)
The starboard side, as it looked in June, 2010

SS Sapona was a concrete-hulled cargo steamer that ran aground near Bimini during a hurricane in 1926. The wreck of the ship is easily visible above the water, and is both a navigational landmark for boaters and a popular dive site. It is also a good place to see tropical fish attracted to it as an artificial reef.

History

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Sapona was built by the Liberty Ship Building Company of Wilmington, North Carolina, US, founded by Max Shoolman of Boston, Massachusetts, as part of a fleet of concrete ships authorized by Woodrow Wilson during World War I, because steel was in short supply. Like many others in the fleet, the ship was completed after the end of the war, and Sapona was sold for scrap to Carl Fisher, one of the developers of Miami Beach. It was initially used as a casino and later for oil storage. The 1936 book Miami Millions claims that Mr. Fisher took it out to sea and sank it, but it was in fact purchased in 1924 by Bruce Bethel.

Bethel moved the ship to Bimini, using it as a warehouse for alcohol during the era of Prohibition. Bethel also intended to use the ship as a floating nightclub, although this plan never came to fruition. In 1926 the ship ran aground in a hurricane and broke apart.

During World War II, the wreck was used for target practice by the U.S. Army Air Corps and U.S. Navy. Flight 19 vanished while returning from a bombing run to Sapona and the nearby Hens and Chickens shoals.

The wreck lies in about 15 feet (4.6 m) of water, the stern broken off and partially submerged by hurricanes that struck in 2004. Little concrete is left on the hull because of the effects of bombing and weathering.

SS Sapona.
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The wreck itself and the surrounding area is a popular site for scuba divers and snorkelers.

The ship was used as a backdrop in the 1977 horror film Shock Waves. It was also figured as a key setting in Ian Fleming's novel Thunderball.

References

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Grokipedia

from Grokipedia
The SS Sapona was a concrete-hulled cargo steamer built in 1920 by the Liberty Ship Building Company in Wilmington, North Carolina, as one of twelve vessels in the United States Emergency Fleet program initiated during World War I to address critical steel shortages for shipbuilding.[1] Intended originally as a troop transport but completed after the armistice, the 282-foot (86 m) vessel was sold into private hands and repurposed multiple times, serving briefly as a floating casino, an oil storage barge, and a warehouse for illicit liquor during the Prohibition era.[2] In September 1926, while moored off Bimini as a rum warehouse, Sapona broke free during the Great Miami Hurricane and ran aground on a coral reef off South Bimini, Bahamas, which damaged her hull and rendered her a total loss.[1][3] Following the grounding, the wreck of Sapona—which sits partially above water in about 15 feet of depth, roughly three miles southeast of Bennett's Harbour—underwent further deterioration from natural erosion and human activity.[4] During World War II, the U.S. military utilized the exposed structure as a stationary target for aerial bombing and strafing practice by Navy and Air Force pilots, continuing until 1945; this included a session by the infamous Flight 19 squadron on December 5, just before their disappearance in the Bermuda Triangle.[1] Today, the remnants of Sapona form a vibrant artificial reef teeming with marine life, including tropical fish, rays, and sharks, making it one of the Bahamas' most accessible and iconic dive sites for snorkelers and scuba enthusiasts.[4] The site's visibility from the surface and shallow waters have also drawn historians, filmmakers, and tourists interested in its Prohibition-era lore and wartime legacy.[2]

Design and Construction

Development Background

During World War I, the United States faced severe steel shortages in its shipbuilding industry, exacerbated by the demands of wartime production and the need to rapidly expand the merchant marine fleet to support Allied efforts. This scarcity prompted the exploration of alternative construction materials, with reinforced concrete emerging as a viable option due to its abundance and potential for mass production. The U.S. Bureau of Standards initiated tests in April 1917 to assess concrete's suitability for shipbuilding, building on earlier small-scale experiments with concrete vessels, such as river barges and experimental hulls in Europe and the U.S. that demonstrated structural integrity in limited applications.[5] In response, the Emergency Fleet Corporation (EFC), established under the United States Shipping Board in 1917, created a Department of Concrete Ship Construction on December 27, 1917, to oversee the initiative. President Woodrow Wilson authorized the program on April 12, 1918, approving a $50 million emergency fund to establish five "agency yards" for building ocean-going concrete ships, aiming to produce vessels quickly without competing for scarce steel resources. Concrete was selected for its cost-effectiveness—requiring less specialized labor and materials like cement, which were readily available—and its proven durability in prior smaller-scale successes, allowing for faster construction times compared to traditional methods.[5][6] The SS Sapona was conceived as part of this effort, designed as a 3,500 deadweight ton cargo steamer (EFC Hull 1562, Design 1070) for general cargo duties to bolster wartime logistics. She was constructed by the Liberty Ship Building Company in Wilmington, North Carolina, and launched on October 11, 1919. However, the Armistice on November 11, 1918, rendered many projects obsolete before completion, leading to scaled-back contracts and the cancellation of numerous hulls by January 1919; only 12 concrete ships, including Sapona, were ultimately finished.[5]

Technical Specifications

The SS Sapona measured 86 meters (282 feet) in length overall, with a beam of 14.02 meters (46 feet) and a draft of 8.61 meters (28 feet 3 inches).[1] These dimensions positioned her as a mid-sized cargo vessel within the U.S. Emergency Fleet's experimental concrete ship program. Propulsion was provided by a triple-expansion steam engine rated at 1,520 indicated horsepower, which allowed for a service speed of up to 10 knots.[1] This configuration, typical of early 20th-century steamers, emphasized reliability over high performance for transatlantic or coastal freight routes. The hull was built using reinforced concrete, incorporating steel rebar for tensile strength, and was engineered for a deadweight tonnage of 3,500 tons.[5] Gross registered tonnage stood at 2,795 tons, with net tonnage of 1,993 tons.[1] Among key design features were multiple watertight compartments to enhance flood resistance, extensive concrete decking for load distribution, and stability adaptations that leveraged the material's inherent weight to minimize ballast requirements while reducing vibration and yawing at sea.[7] Compared to steel hulls, this approach provided superior corrosion resistance, addressing wartime steel shortages that prompted the shift to concrete.[7]

Operational History

World War I Era

The SS Sapona was constructed by the Liberty Ship Building Company in Wilmington, North Carolina, as part of the U.S. Emergency Fleet program's effort to bolster wartime shipping capacity amid steel shortages. Work on the vessel began in early 1919, but it was not launched until January 1920, several months after the Armistice ended World War I on November 11, 1918.[1][8] Initially owned by the U.S. Shipping Board, the Sapona entered limited service for cargo transport, completing only a few voyages before the postwar glut of vessels rendered further operations uneconomical. By September 1920, it was laid up at Claremont, Virginia, joining dozens of other concrete ships mothballed due to surplus shipping capacity and the abrupt halt in military demand.[8][9] Efforts to repurpose the Sapona for civilian use involved preliminary evaluations and trials for general cargo hauling, but these were curtaled by the inherent drawbacks of its concrete hull, including reduced speed—limited to around 10 knots—and poor maneuverability compared to steel counterparts, which diminished its viability for active trade routes.[9][10] In 1923, Miami Beach developer Carl G. Fisher acquired the laid-up vessel for $5,000 and had it towed from Virginia to Florida waters near his properties, envisioning its use in local development initiatives such as potential storage or auxiliary facilities for his ambitious coastal projects.[8]

Interwar Period Uses

Fisher repurposed the concrete-hulled cargo steamer as an oil storage barge in Biscayne Bay after removing its machinery and trading the engine to a dredging company.[1] Fisher also experimented with it as a floating casino platform, though this venture proved short-lived due to operational limitations of the stationary vessel.[11] These adaptations highlighted the ship's versatility amid post-war surplus, allowing it to serve practical commercial roles in Miami's burgeoning development scene until 1924.[12] In April 1924, Fisher sold the Sapona to Bruce Bethel, a Nassau-based bootlegger, who towed the hull to waters near Bimini in the Bahamas for use during the U.S. Prohibition era (1920–1933).[1] Bethel envisioned transforming it into a floating nightclub and casino, outfitting the interior with entertainment facilities to attract American patrons seeking alcohol beyond the reach of federal enforcement.[11] However, the primary function became that of a stationary warehouse for smuggled rum and whiskey, sourced from Bahamian distilleries and stored in large quantities to supply fast boats running liquor to Florida's coast.[12] Claims linking the vessel directly to figures like Al Capone remain unverified myths, with no historical evidence supporting such involvement.[12] The Sapona's moored position in the often turbulent Bahamian waters presented significant operational challenges, including difficulties in securing the heavy concrete hull against strong currents and storms.[11] To mitigate these issues, Bethel oversaw partial disassembly, further stripping non-essential components to reduce weight and improve manageability as a barge-like structure.[1] These modifications, while aiding short-term stability, underscored the vessel's limitations as a repurposed wartime relic in the illicit economy of the 1920s.[12]

The Wrecking Event

The 1926 Hurricane

The 1926 Miami Hurricane, also known as the Great Miami Hurricane, formed on September 11, 1926, off the west coast of Africa and rapidly intensified into a Category 4 storm by the time it approached the Bahamas and Florida.[13] With sustained winds reaching up to 150 mph (240 km/h), the cyclone brought devastating impacts, including powerful gusts, heavy rainfall, and a significant storm surge that affected South Florida and the northern Bahamas between September 17 and 18.[14] The storm's eye passed just north of Bimini, subjecting the area to hurricane-force winds and massive waves for several hours.[13] The SS Sapona had been stationed near Bimini since 1924 as a concrete-hulled steamer modified into a stationary barge-like floating warehouse for illicit liquor during Prohibition, owned by Bruce Bethel, a former British army captain turned rum runner.[1] Deemed vulnerable in its exposed position as forecasts indicated the storm's approach, the vessel was repositioned in early September 1926 to waters between Bimini and Gun Cay, a decision by Bethel intended to seek shelter from the intensifying hurricane despite the ship's limited seaworthiness for such maneuvers in rough conditions.[8] As the hurricane peaked on September 18, 1926, the Sapona encountered extreme weather with winds exceeding 130 mph and towering seas, driving the vessel onto the eastern reef of South Bimini. The grounding occurred at coordinates 25°39′02″N 79°17′36″W, where the concrete hull struck the coral with tremendous force, causing structural cracking but leaving the main body largely intact in shallow waters initially.[15][11] A crew was aboard, and the ship carried a cargo of illicit liquor.[16] The event marked the end of the Sapona's operational life, as the storm's unrelenting power overwhelmed its reinforced but inflexible design.[1]

Immediate Aftermath and Salvage

Following the grounding of the SS Sapona during the devastating 1926 hurricane, the crew was successfully rescued without any fatalities.[1] The ship's owner, Bruce Bethel, a former British army captain turned rum-runner, immediately initiated salvage efforts to recover valuable components from the wreck. These attempts included the partial removal of engines and other fittings, but the concrete hull proved too immovable and resistant to refloating, leading Bethel to abandon the operation after limited success. The loss of the ship's liquor cargo, much of which was washed away when the stern section broke off during the storm, further diminished any economic incentive for full recovery.[1][17] Legal proceedings swiftly followed, with the SS Sapona declared a total loss later in 1926. Insurance claims were settled accordingly, and as the wreck lay within Bahamian territorial waters, ownership transferred to the Bahamian government, marking the end of private claims on the vessel.[1] In the years immediately after, the wreck began to degrade rapidly due to exposure to the elements. The initial separation of the stern during the hurricane was exacerbated by subsequent storms in the late 1920s, causing further structural collapse, while early looting by locals for scrap metal accelerated the deterioration of accessible metal parts.[1][18]

Present-Day Status

As a Shipwreck and Dive Site

The SS Sapona remains partially submerged in approximately 15 feet (4.6 meters) of water off the southern coast of South Bimini, Bahamas, with its bow and midsection upright and protruding above the surface, while the stern detached during the 1926 grounding and lies scattered nearby due to wave action and later storms. Much of the original concrete hull has eroded from natural weathering and human activity, exposing rusted internal structures that form a skeletal frame visible to surface observers. This configuration makes the wreck a prominent navigational landmark for local boaters.[4][11][19] Over nearly a century underwater, the Sapona has evolved into a thriving artificial reef, colonized by tropical fish, corals, lobsters, moray eels, and other marine species that seek shelter in its crevices and hull remnants. The site's shallow depth and clear Bahamian waters enhance its ecological role, supporting biodiversity in the surrounding reef system and attracting sport fishers to the area. This natural integration underscores the wreck's transformation from a derelict vessel to a vital habitat component.[4][20][21] In the 1940s during World War II, U.S. Navy and Army Air Corps pilots utilized the exposed wreck as a live bombing and gunnery target, subjecting it to repeated impacts from machine-gun fire, bombs, and strafing runs that further fragmented the structure and accelerated concrete deterioration. These military exercises ceased following the infamous Flight 19 disappearance in 1945, which occurred during a training mission involving the site. The resulting pockmarks and perforations remain evident today, adding a layer of historical intrigue to the wreck's features.[1][17][22] Since the 1970s, the Sapona has served as a renowned snorkeling and shallow-water dive site, drawing visitors via short boat trips from Bimini—typically 3 to 5 miles offshore—for its accessibility to beginners and non-divers alike. Guided tours, offered by local operators, navigate the wreck's interior and exterior, spotlighting WWII-era damage alongside vibrant marine encounters like schools of sergeant majors and occasional reef sharks.[23][24][25] The wreck's preservation falls under oversight by Bahamian authorities through the Antiquities, Monuments and Museums Act, which monitors environmental impacts from tourism and enforces prohibitions on artifact removal or unauthorized excavation to protect its archaeological and ecological value. These measures ensure the site's integrity as both a historical relic and sustainable marine resource, with periodic assessments addressing erosion and biofouling.[26][27]

Cultural and Historical Significance

It also featured prominently in the 1977 horror film Shock Waves (also known as Death Corps), appearing as the "Ghost Ship" that houses a lair of aquatic Nazi zombies.[28] Myths and legends have long embellished the Sapona's story, fueled by its Prohibition-era role as a floating warehouse for rum and whiskey near Bimini, leading to persistent rumors of buried treasure from the illicit liquor stocks—though these were largely destroyed when the ship's stern broke off during the 1926 hurricane.[1] Alleged connections to Al Capone, including claims of ownership or use as a brothel and casino, circulate widely but have been thoroughly debunked, with no historical evidence linking the gangster to the vessel.[12] Divers often share ghost stories of crew hauntings, enhancing the site's eerie folklore and contributing to its nickname as the "Ghost Ship," despite lacking verified supernatural accounts.[17] Historically, the Sapona exemplifies early 20th-century concrete ship experiments, one of only 12 such vessels completed for the U.S. Emergency Fleet to circumvent World War I steel shortages, and underscores the era's maritime trade challenges, particularly the devastating impacts of natural disasters that rendered such innovative designs vulnerable.[1] Initially posing a navigational hazard after grounding on the Bimini reef, it evolved into a prominent landmark, later serving as a U.S. military bombing target during and after World War II, including practice runs by aircraft like those of the ill-fated Flight 19 in 1945.[12] In modern times, the Sapona is featured in dive guides as an accessible artificial reef teeming with marine life, symbolizing the Bahamas' rich maritime heritage through its ties to World War I innovation, Prohibition smuggling, and World War II remnants.[4] It is documented in historical maritime resources as a preserved artifact of these eras, attracting snorkelers and scuba enthusiasts who explore its intact concrete structure in shallow waters.[29]
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