Share This Episode
Our American Stories Lee Habeeb Logo

My Family Spent 4 Months Playing Battleship in a Cornfield

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb
The Truth Network Radio
August 13, 2024 3:03 am

My Family Spent 4 Months Playing Battleship in a Cornfield

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb

00:00 / 00:00
On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 4367 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


August 13, 2024 3:03 am

A group of blue-collar workers embark on a modern-day treasure hunt to uncover the Steamboat Arabia, a sunken steamboat in a Missouri farm field. The story of their adventure and the incredible history they uncovered is a testament to the rich American heritage and the power of perseverance.

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:

Is getting gas at Exxon burning a hole in your wallet? What if I told you you can easily earn cash back while you fill up? Introducing Drop, the app that turns every fill-up into a reward. With Drop, you'll earn points to get free gift cards every time you fill up your tank. Download Drop and use code DROP66 to instantly receive $5 in points to jump-start your savings journey. Don't miss out on turning your gas expenses into something rewarding.

Here's a little secret. Most smartphone deals aren't that exciting. To be honest, they're barely worth mentioning. But then there's AT&T and their best deals. Those are quite exciting. They're the kind of deals that are really worth talking about. Like their deal on the new Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6. With this amazing deal, you can trade in your eligible smartphone for a new Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6, any year, any condition. The deal's so good, it will have you shouting from the rooftops. So get yourself down to street level and learn how to snag the new Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 on AT&T.

And maybe grab a ladder on the way home. AT&T. Connecting changes everything. Requires trade-in of Galaxy S Note or Z Series smartphone. Limited time offer, 256 gigabytes for $0. Additional fees, terms, and restrictions apply.

See att.com slash Samsung or visit an AT&T store for details. You can listen to post reports wherever you get your podcasts. Go find it now and hit follow. This is Lee Habib and this is Our American Stories, the show where America is the star and the American people.

To search for the Our American Stories podcast, go to the iHeartRadio app to Apple Podcast or wherever you get your podcast. Up next, a story about a modern day treasure hunt that involves whiskey and in an interesting place, the fields of Parkville, Missouri. Here to tell the story of the hunt is Matt Hawley of the Steamboat Arabia Museum in Kansas City, Missouri.

Take it away, Matt. Believe it or not, there's not a lot of people looking for steamboats. It takes a certain blend of crazy to go after steamboats and the Hollies have just that right blend. My dad, David, he, my uncle, Greg, and my grandfather, Bob, they worked in HVAC. So they fixed air conditioners, refrigerators, AC units for people in the Kansas City metro area.

Just a blue collar family. And one day my dad took a service call to fix an air conditioner. He met a unique guy. We would probably look at him and say he's kind of a conspiracy theorist. My dad walked into this guy's house and passed a room and saw pictures of Bigfoot on a wall, UFOs on the other, and tables with maps just everywhere, just scribblings, notes, kind of just all over the place. And my dad, he wasn't really interested in Bigfoot or the UFOs, but he's looking at these maps all over the tables. And he just said, you know, what are all these little dots that you've indicated? And the guy says, well, these are all steamboats that have sunk in the Missouri River. And if someone goes down and if they find a boat and they sell everything they find, they will be rich beyond rich. And my dad thought that was a pretty cool idea.

That sounded more fun than fixing another furnace or air conditioner. So my dad fixed the guy's unit, gets in his truck, and calls up my grandpa and my uncle on their little CB radios and says, guys, meet me at Jerry's. I got a story for you. So they all go to a fast food restaurant named Hi-Boy. It was owned by a guy named Jerry Mackie. Now Jerry Mackie and my grandfather were good friends. They learned to fly helicopters together. They went on treasure hunts together in their own rights in Colorado.

They'd go through all the abandoned, you know, gold mines. So everyone meets at Hi-Boy and Jerry comes out from the kitchen and sits down in the booth with the guys. And my dad kind of recounts the story of his morning.

And they all were pretty excited about that. They said, Dave, if you go find a boat, if you find one that you like, we'll go dig it. So my dad researched for years, learned the story of steamboats. In the Missouri River, there's roughly 400 sunken steamboats. Now, back in the heyday of steamboats, the Missouri River was notoriously wide and shallow, which made it very easy for the river to shift its course one way or the other. Of the 400 boats that went down, 75% went down because of tree snags. So boats would hit these submerged trees and they would sink very quickly. And around the turn of the century, the Army Corps of Engineers realized that we have a problem. Like all these boats are still sinking and the river is still pretty untamed.

So they started dredging the river, getting rid of snags, and they made the river consistently narrow, more narrow and deeper, which took the Missouri River, which is very wide and made it considerably more narrow than what we see today. So now all these steamboats are no longer in the river itself. They're all in farm fields.

But you can't just start walking in farm fields. You need to know what you're looking for. So my dad started trying to figure out where these boats are, came across the story of the Arabia. And the story of the Arabia was general goods in the 1850s. Sank just a few miles outside of Kansas City. It went down on September 5th, 1856, and it was the perfect steamboat to go for.

Sank quickly, quickly enough that all the cargo was taken down with the boat, but all 150 passengers were able to get off the boat safely. We didn't want to have to deal with the, you know, people who didn't survive. So the Arabia, perfect. So we figured out who owned the land. The landowner was an old Wyandotte County judge, Judge Norman Sorter. And so my dad, these guys go knock on the judge's door and they say, Judge Sorter, we're not crazy, but we think there's a steamboat buried in your cornfield. And the judge kind of looks at him for a second and he says, Oh, y'all are talking about the Arabia. Come here.

I'll show you where it is. The judge knew all about the boat. His great grandfather had purchased the land from the Wyandotte Indians. And they had told him that a great white ship is buried under your land. And the Arabia was kind of famous because when it sank in 1856, it was reportedly carrying 400 barrels of Kentucky's finest bourbon. And when that boat sank, everyone was writing stories about the Arabia and the whiskey barrels. What happened to them? Are they still on the boat?

Who's going to get them? And there were several attempts to get the Arabia's whiskey. So when we showed up, you know, the judge, he was like, all right, yeah, it's another group of you guys. Come here.

He took us in the field, pretty much showed us. He said, it's somewhere right about here. And so my dad walked the field with a device called a proton magnetometer. We call it a fancy metal detector, but he was able to use this magnetometer to pick up the large iron boilers on board the Arabia. So we were able to pinpoint its location in about two and a half hours of actually walking the field.

So pretty quick. We talked to the judge and we structured a deal and he said, if you all want to waste your time and your money, you go right ahead, but you will never get down to that boat. We know where it is. The problem is 10 feet below surface. There's an aquifer, basically an underground river running through this field.

And everyone who's tried to get to this boat, they've hit the water and they've not been able to de-water the field enough to get down to the boat, which is 45 feet beneath the surface. So we said, well, we'd like to give it a shot. So he said, you guys go right ahead. And you're listening to Matt Hawley tell the story of these crazy men trying to dig up the Steamboat Arabia. And it took crazy men to endeavor to do that, as you just heard. And why, when we come back, what happens next? Do they dig it up?

Don't they? The story of Steamboat Arabia with Matt Hawley continues here on Our American Stories. Folks, if you love the great American stories we tell and love America like we do, we're asking you to become a part of the Our American Stories family. If you agree that America is a good and great country, please make a donation. A monthly gift of $17.76 is fast becoming a favorite option for supporters. Go to OurAmericanStories.com now, and go to the donate button and help us keep the great American Stories coming.

That's OurAmericanStories.com. Is your body trying to tell you something? Maybe you feel more tired in the morning. Maybe your focus isn't as sharp as it used to be. Maybe you're having trouble sleeping or feeling bloated.

These things can happen little by little but can affect your quality of life over time. That's where Symbiotica can help. Symbiotica is a supplement brand made with the highest quality ingredients available, specially formulated to help you combat those issues that may arise. These supplements are free of seed oils, preservatives, and shady additives.

And best of all, they taste delicious. The time to boost your energy levels, improve your focus and mood, sleep better, enjoy better skin, and much more is right now. All thanks to Symbiotica. Visit Symbiotica.com and place your order today. Don't forget to use the code IHART to get 20% off and free shipping on your subscription order at Symbiotica.com. C-Y-M-B-I-O-T-I-K-A dot com.

Symbiotica.com. The following is a high five moment from HighfiveCasino.com. Welcome to Burger Yiffy. Would you like a high apple pie today? Yes. Yes.

Yeah. I won. Woohoo. So that's a yes on the apple pie? I just went big time playing high five casino on my phone. Real cash prizes, free daily rewards, over 1200 games. So yes or no on the apple pie? I won again. I'll take that as a yes. Drive around.

Have you had your high five moment today? Only at HighfiveCasino.com. HighfiveCasino is a social casino. No purchase necessary. We're prohibited. Play responsibly. Conditions apply. See website for details.

HighfiveCasino. Hey, I'm Christina Quinn, the host of Try This from The Washington Post. Each Try This audio course gets you closer to solving some of the biggest everyday challenges we face as humans. Things like how to sleep better, how to have more meaningful relationships, and how to enjoy cooking more. We're releasing new courses all the time, where you can learn to be a better functioning human without the time commitment.

Find our collection of courses by searching Try This wherever you listen to podcasts. Ever wolf down a Big Mac and thought, I need some extra cash? Mm-hmm. Then download the Drop app. Get rewarded for dining out and more. Use code Drop22 for $5 in points.

Download Drop now. Modo.us. Visit Modo.us for the best free play social casino experience wherever you are. Modo offers a huge selection of Vegas style games with free spins, exciting promotions, and always generous jackpots. You can waste your time with the others or you can win at Modo. Register today at Modo.us for your free welcome bonus.

Modo is a social casino. No purchase necessary. Void where prohibited. Play responsibly. Conditions apply.

See website for details. Modo.us. And we continue with our American stories and we return to Matt Hawley and the story of the Steamboat Arabia. When we last left off, Matt's dad and a group of fellow blue collar workers had decided they wanted to dig up buried treasure. Buried treasure in the form of a sunken steamboat called the Arabia. And by the way, sunken on a farm.

Let's continue with a story. So word got out that this group of guys were wanting to dig up a steamboat here in Missouri. And our fifth partner came along, a guy named Dave Luttrell. He owned a construction company here in the area. And Dave Luttrell got a hold of us. He called Jerry on the phone one day and said, you know, I read about y'all story in the newspaper and I own a construction company, but I've always wanted to do one crazy thing before I die. And he said, I heard about you guys.

And I think that's exactly what I want to do. I want to dig up a steamboat with you guys. Is that, can I come on board? And Jerry was, you know, it was a Sunday. Jerry was talking to him on the phone. He's like, actually, I'm on my way out the door to a chief's game. Can I call you later after the game?

We'll talk. Then Dave said, what section do you sit in? Turns out Dave and Jerry were both season ticket holders. They sat in the same section. They're like three rows away from each other. So Dave and Jerry got together at a chief's game some Sunday afternoon, and that's when Dave Luttrell became the fifth partner.

So the guys started in the winter of 1988. You guys ever play the game Battleship? My family, they played Battleship in a cornfield for about three days. And what they would do is they would drill down. If they tapped on the boat, that hole would get an orange surveyor flag and they would move over a few feet.

Repeat the process. If you missed, you get a white flag. So after a few days of doing it, you've got enough orange flags surrounding the boat.

You can make a chalk outline to determine not only where the hotspot is, but how the boat is laying in the field itself. So sure enough, 10 feet down, we hit river water. And so at that point we knew you can't just start digging. You have to get rid of the water. So we set up a series of wells. We bought 12, and each well could pump out a thousand gallons of water a minute. And we thought, oh, surely that'll be enough to get the water table down.

We'll get to the boat, no problem. It ended up taking 20 to get us down to the boat itself, each pumping a thousand gallons of water every 60 seconds. So for the duration of a four and a half month dig, we were pumping 20,000 gallons every 60 seconds.

And that was enough to get you down to the main deck of the Arabia. And once we got into the dig, these guys were walking around, sometimes in waist high water. And they said, if one pump went down, they were all diesel fuel generated. So they said, if one of those things ran out of fuel and just shut off, you could feel the water start to rise back up on your chest.

So we were truly at that tipping point. But no, we pumped down the water, we got down into the boat, and we started pulling up its cargo. Being an 1850s, what we call general store collection, a lot of these things are just the everyday things that people on the frontier needed.

General supplies, food, construction, building materials, things to put in the homes. And these boats are kind of like UPS and FedEx trucks today. They carry some nice things, but not like probably a gold chest of coins and rubies and diamonds. We weren't expecting to find things like that.

We were looking for everyday American history. And the first barrel of things we found, we opened up the top and underneath were these beautiful China dishes, dishes from England. So during the dig, these five guys are all married and all the wives are pretty good sports, letting their boys go out and dig up steamboats.

Again, blue collar guys through and through. So the idea of digging up a steamboat is kind of different. So all the wives are a little nervous when you're spending thousands, hundreds of thousands of dollars to get down just to maybe find something. Is there really something on board this boat? We don't know, but when we got down there and opened up this first barrel and found these dishes right off the bat, that's when all the moms and wives were like, you know what boys, this is a good idea. You keep digging.

I think this is going to be an okay thing. So that set off a four and a half month dig that pulled up things that truly can't be found anywhere else in the world. Nature had preserved the collection so remarkably well, we found food on board that was still edible. Again, Jerry is a restaurant owner and these guys are notorious for eating just about anything. Jerry tried pickles, butter, cheese, salt, pork.

We actually found bottles of champagne still had carbonation inside them. Not surprisingly, four of the guys were willing to try that one. So again, just an incredibly well-preserved collection and just a story of American history that you can't find anywhere else. Now, when you get together with your buddies and you say, let's go on this adventure together. Of course, the conversation becomes, how are we going to pay for this? What is it going to cost to dig up a steamboat? No one's really done it before.

So what do we think? And they're all, again, blue collar guys. They work with their hands. They have tools and Dave Latrell owns a construction company.

So this guy owns bulldozers. So we're thinking, oh, between all of us, if we each chip in 10,000 a piece, 50,000 total, that's going to be all the money in the world. 50,000 lasted a week and a half of the dig. So we just had to start borrowing from a bank. The dig ended up costing about a million dollars all borrowed at that point. And then of course, we're thinking, well, once we got in the collection, we realized we can't sell these things. The story, the idea originally of selling it, making a bunch of money, that was the driving force at the beginning. But when we found those dishes and we got into the collection, we were finding all these just incredible stories. We said, you can't sell something like this.

You've got to keep the story together. But we just borrowed a million dollars to do it. So how are we going to recoup our money from this in a museum was just the logical choice. So we had to go to the bank and borrow another sum of money, about half a million to build the museum that we currently reside in. So we opened the doors three years to the day that we started the excavation, November 13th, 1988, we started the dig. We opened the doors here at the museum, November 13th, 1991, about 1.5 million in debt.

But we are proud to say we've paid back all loans and we've kept the museum open 100% on ticket sales. We brought up 200 tons of lost cargo and we looked at all this stuff and these guys are saying, you know, we're fast cleaners, you know, so we'll get through everything. We'll have it clean, preserved, on display.

It won't take more than eight or nine years to do. We have been now cleaning the Arabia collection for about 33 years and at this point I think I heard a little while ago we have somewhere I think between 40 and 50 tons still to go and at this rate we think that'll take probably another 10, maybe 12 years of non-stop preservation. The question of what happened to the whiskey or where is the whiskey, I get that every single day and I always kind of laugh at folks and I say sad story, we never found the whiskey. We believe all those barrels had been stored on the main deck of the boat so when it started to sink the river wiped them all downstream. Now I hope, my genuine hope is some good old boy farmer was just downstream fishing that night kind of relaxing doing his thing and he saw one barrel float by and he's like well that's interesting looks up sees 400 more coming down right behind and oh he had one heck of a party that's that's what I hope happened. And a special thanks to Katrina Heine and to Monty Montgomery for gathering that story and producing it and a special thanks to Matt Hawley who is the self-described and glorified museum tour guide and the museum is the Dean Boat Arabia Museum in Kansas City, Missouri. If you're ever in that neck of the woods drop by this is the kind of Americana that we love to tell stories about. We've done a story about the toaster museum, the salt and pepper shaker museum, the neon light museum and of course our lawnmower racing show our tank collector. We have a guy who collected tanks.

I'm talking tanks like real military tanks and my goodness what a story this is. As Matthew mentioned it takes a lot of crazy to want to collect steamboats and my goodness the story of how the Missouri River well it led to a lot of sinking of steamboats was fascinating in and of itself. 400 sunken steamboats and then the Army Corps of Engineers went to work narrowed that river deepened it the next thing you know those sunken steamboats were sunken in farm field and my goodness one and a half million dollars later this little adventure. Well it turned into this museum and how the wives managed to stay on board and how these guys kept their marriages intact. Maybe that's another story. The story of the Steamboat Arabia Museum here on Our American Story.

This is Malcolm Gladwell from Revisionist History. eBay Motors is here for the ride. With some elbow grease, fresh installs and a whole lot of love you transformed a hundred thousand miles and a body full of rust into a drive that's all your own. Brake kits, LED headlights, whatever you need eBay Motors has it and with eBay Guaranteed Fit it's guaranteed to fit your ride the first time every time or your money back.

Plus at these prices you're burning rubber not cash. Keep your ride or die alive at eBayMotors.com eligible items only exclusions apply. Hi Icons it's Paris Hilton. Check out my new single Chasen featuring Meghan Trainor out today. I feel so lucky to collaborate with Meghan and how perfectly she put my experience into words. Listen to Chasen from my new album Infinite Icon on iHeartRadio or wherever you stream music.

Don't forget to visit infiniteicon.com to pre-save my album. Sponsored by 1111 Media. Tired of boring lunches? Picture this you're at Chipotle ordering the same old burrito bowl but wait there's more excitement in store than just guac. Introducing Drop the ultimate rewards app. Just link your card, dine at your favorite restaurants and you'll learn points to get free gift cards from tons of brands. It's like getting paid to eat. Hungry for savings? Download the Drop app now and use code drop44 to kick start your rewards journey with five dollars and points.

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime