The Thunderbolt
The Thunderbolt was intentionally sunk on March 6, 1986, as
part of the Florida Keys Artificial Reef Association project. She
now lies intact and upright on a sand bottom in 120 feet of water
four miles south of Marathon and Key Colony Beach.
The Thunderbolt was built, along with 15 sister ships, by
Marietta Manufacturing Company at Point Pleasant, West Virginia,
under contract to the U.S. Army during World War II. The
Thunderbolt, then named Randolph, was launched on
June 2, 1942. These ships were built to plant and tend defensive
coastal minefields for the Army's Coast Artillery Corps. However, in
1949 this function and the Randolph were transferred to the Navy.
While in the Navy, this vessel was never commissioned and remained
in the Naval Reserve Fleet, first in South Carolina and then in
Florida. Caribbean Enterprises of Miami purchased the vessel in 1961
and later Florida Power and Light bought her for research on the
electrical energy in lightning strikes hence her new name;
Thunderbolt. Eventually Florida Power and Light donated the
vessel to the Florida Keys Artificial Reef Association.
The ship's hull is 189 feet long with a forecastle, which served as
the cable handling area, and has a cruiser stern. Prior to being
sunk the ship was stripped of all but a few major pieces of
equipment. The most prominent remaining features are a horizontal
cable handling reel which lies at 80 feet and is centered on the
after-end of the forecastle deck, and the remains of the ship's
superstructure including the observation deck located at 75 feet.
The aft-end of the superstructure has been cut away, exposing the
interior of the hull at the engineering space. The rudder and
propellers, which lie at 120 feet, also remain to complement the
stern section of the hull.