| PANAMA CITY, Fla. – U.S. Navy Capt. Charles “Black Bart” 
			Bartholomew's legacy is alive and well as witnessed June 15, 2015, 
			when his son, Cris, his wife and his four children toured the Home 
			of Military Diving in Panama City, Florida, during the Year of the 
			Military Diver.
 Bartholomew was a 1961 graduate of the U.S. 
			Naval Academy and the Webb Institute of Naval Architecture. He 
			served as the Navy Experimental Diving Unit (NEDU) commanding 
			officer from 1977-1980 and later as the Director of Ocean 
			Engineering and Supervisor of Salvage (SUPSALV) in Washington, D.C. 
			He died during a dive in Panama City, Florida, in November 1990.
 
 While Bartholomew served at NEDU, the family lived in Panama 
			City Beach, Florida, and Cris Bartholomew fondly remembers living in 
			officer housing, playing in the waters of St. Andrew Bay just steps 
			from his back door, and visiting his father at work. Today, Cris and 
			his family live in Elk Grove, California.
 
			 
		
			| 
			 Cris 
			Bartholomew, son of Capt. Charles “Black Bart” Bartholomew, U.S. 
			Navy, takes a photo of a board June 15, 2015, that features Navy 
			Experimental Diving Unit's (NEDU) deep dive records. One of the 
			featured dive records includes a 1,800 foot NEDU dive that happened 
			in 1979 when his father was the NEDU commanding officer. Capt. 
			Bartholomew served as the commanding officer from 1977-1980 and died 
			during a dive in 1990. Today, a former Navy supply ship turned 
			artificial reef called the “Black Bart” is visited annually by sport 
			divers off the coast of Panama City, Fla. (Photo by Katherine Mapp, 
			NSWC PCD Public Affairs)
 |  “I remember my Dad telling me we were going to have 
					people over and he would give me a gunny sack and tell me to 
					go fill it with oysters from the (St. Andrew) Bay. I 
					remember I was so excited about coming back to Panama City 
					on different orders so that we would have had a bigger, 
					better house right there and I wanted that specific room,” 
					he said, pointing to a neighboring officer's home that also 
					overlooked what is today the “new” Hathaway Bridge.
 While visiting NEDU and the house he once lived in as a 
					child, Cris discovered how some parts of his childhood 
					remained the same, like NEDU where he was able to see his 
					father's legacy on a record breaking deep dive board that 
					still holds true today from 1979. Cris was able to share his 
					father's dive contributions with his children, “Black 
					Bart's” grandchildren. Cris' older son, Charles, was named 
					after his grandfather.
 
 “I remember him telling me I 
					should come down here (to NEDU) because they were breaking a 
					world record and that it would be really neat to see,” said 
					Cris. “I'm glad I did.”
 
 That was one of the record 
					setting deep dives set in 1979 when NEDU divers conducted a 
					dive to a simulated depth of 1,800 feet in the Ocean 
					Simulation Facility, or OSF. The OSF simulates ocean 
					conditions to a maximum pressure equivalent of 2,250 feet 
					seawater (fsw) at any salinity level. The chamber complex 
					consists of a 55,000-gallon wet chamber and five 
					interconnected dry living/working chambers totaling 3,300 
					cubic feet of space. Wet and dry chamber temperatures can be 
					set from 28 to 104 �F. Saturation dives can be performed for 
					more than 30 days of continuous exposure in the OSF.
 
 Throughout Cris' family tour of the Naval Diving and 
					Salvage Training (NDSTC), NEDU, and the Naval Surface 
					Warfare Center (NSWC PCD), active duty and retired divers 
					reached out to shake Cris' hand and to tell him what his 
					father meant to them and the Navy diving community.
 
 “What your dad did for us was amazing. You're royalty to 
					us,” said NEDU Command Master Chief Navy Diver Master Chief 
					Petty Officer (MDV/SG) Louis Deflice. “Your dad was the real 
					deal.”
 
 According to NSWC PCD Diving and Life Support 
					Technical Program Manager Wes Hughson, dive systems, like 
					the Mk-3 light weight dive system, are used today in the 
					U.S. Navy because of Capt. Bartholomew's efforts.
 
 “This is his legacy today,” said Hughson, pointing to the 
					Mk-29 semi-closed circuit surface supplied dive prototype, 
					affectionately referred to as “Eugene.” “Capt. Bartholomew 
					was the one who promoted the use of and pushed for the 
					development of lighter weight dive systems.”
 
 At 
					NDSTC, Cris and his family saw dive systems used by his 
					father and learned that back in the mid-1970s, there were 
					multiple dive schools in the U.S. Navy – today there is only 
					NDSTC.
 
 Capt. Bartholomew had extensive salvage 
					experience in Vietnam and also participated in salvage 
					projects to include the Challenger Space Shuttle, United 
					Airlines Flight 811, Air India and even in the U.S. Navy's 
					effort to support the Exxon Valdez oil spill cleanup effort.
 
 “Man, we love him. His book “Mud, Muscle, and Miracles” 
					was awesome,” said retired U.S. Navy Diver 1st Class Daniel 
					Hilyard. “If he was alive, no doubt, he would've made 
					admiral.”
 
 Non-military divers may also appreciate his 
					dive contributions when they visit Bay County and dive the 
					Black Bart artificial reef that was once a 180-foot supply 
					ship used for offshore diving operations. The reef today is 
					located approximately six miles off the coast of Panama 
					City, Florida and in 80 feet of water in the Gulf of Mexico. 
					Sunk in July 16, 1993, the wreck was dedicated to the former 
					SUPSALV director who was also an avid sport diver – a 
					passion today shared by his son who, along with his wife, 
					Kim, dove the Black Bart during his June 2015 visit to 
					Panama City Beach, Florida.
 By Jacqui Barker, NSWC PCD Public AffairsProvided 
					through DVIDS
 Copyright 2015
 
					
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