Guest speaker Gary Gentile

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D1v1n

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Location
Richmond, Virginia, United States
# of dives
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Come join the Richmond Dive Club on June 12th, our guest speaker will be Gary Gentile. He will be discussing the USS Monitor: A Civil War Legacy.

Gary Gentile started his diving career in 1970, and began avid wreck diving the following year. Shipwrecks fascinated him, deep diving lured him. By 1974 he was diving the Andrea Doria. Since then he has made more than 170 dives to this famous wreck. By now he has made thousands of decompression dives.

During the past two decades he has been intimately involved with shipwreck research, and has compiled an extensive library of photographs, drawings, plans, and original source materials. He has conducted surveys on numerous wrecks, some of which have been drawn in the form of large-sized prints suitable for framing. Over the years he has rescued from the ravages of the sea many thousands of artifacts, making him a leading authority in recovery techniques.

This combination slide and video presentation is a visual extravaganza for people of all ages, divers and armchair explorers alike. Sunk in clear Gulf Stream water off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, the Civil War ironclad Monitor lies on a white sandy bottom in an area where the visibility often exceeds 100 feet. The wreck abounds with colorful fish and tropical marine encrustation. But what appears with such serenity is in actuality a dynamic process in motion, the forces of nature in collision, the best and the worst of man's character in opposition.

The Monitor's saga is long and ongoing. At the Battle of Hampton Roads she fought the CSS Virginia to a standstill: the first clash of ironclads, and a battle that spelled the end of wooden, sail-powered navies. Her loss in a December gale changed her from a machine of war to a monument depicting the futility of war. Now she fights her battles against the corrosive nature of the sea, and stands as an example of how freedom can be lost to bureaucracy if one refuses to fight for one's rights.

Gary's position with respect to the Monitor National Marine Sanctuary is unique. Alone and at his own expense, he waged a five-year legal battle against the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which refused American citizens the right to see the wreck site with their own eyes. His battle culminated in a widely publicized hearing in 1989 in which he emerged with a triumphant victory for divers across the nation, for NOAA was forced to concede that people have the right to look at the Monitor despite NOAA's wishes to the contrary.

He has visited the wreck site regularly since 1990, capturing the wreck on film and videotape as it disintegrates before our very eyes--as all shipwrecks do. This presentation combines the best of both media, and allows the author to examine the wreck in detail so the viewer can have a better understanding of the site and of the changes that occur on it. Here is history at its best, and history in the making.
 
For our meeting on June 12th, our guest speaker will be Gary Gentile. He will do a Monitor slide/video presentation Socializing begins at 6:00 p.m. and the meeting starts at 7:00 p.m. the meeting has been moved from our usual location at La Siesta to the Holiday Inn Select Koger South Conference Center on Midlothian Turnpike. For directions visit http://www.ichotelsgroup.com/h/d/sl/1/en/hotel/ricko/transportation
 
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