Robert
Church and Daniel Warren
| Company: |
C&C Technologies, Inc. |
| Nominators: |
Richard J. Anuskiewicz, OMM, GOM Region, Marine
Archaeologist, Social Sciences Unit David A. Ball, OMM, GOM Region, Marine
Archaeologist, Social Sciences Unit
Jack B. Irion, OMM, GOM Region, Supervisor, Social Sciences Unit |

Left to Right: MMS Director Johnnie
Burton, Robert Church, Daniel Warren, and
Offshore Minerals Management Associate Director Tom Readinger
The MMS honors marine archaeologists Mr.
Robert Church and Mr. Daniel Warren for their exceptional contribution to the history of
the Gulf of Mexico OCS. They discovered the lost German submarine U-166 in nearly 5,000
feet of water in the Mississippi Canyon area. While serving as consultants to Shell and BP
Oil for their NaKika Pipeline project, they persuaded their clients to expand their remote
sensing survey area. This expanded area included two potentially significant shipwrecks
that had been located in a 1986 survey by Shell. A German U-boat sank one of these wrecks,
the passenger steamer Robert E. Lee, on July 30, 1942. The second target, located less
than a mile away, was unidentifiable from the lowresolution image obtained by this
early deepwater survey.
Since Shell and BP proposed to route the pipeline between the
two sites, Mr. Church and Mr. Warren convinced them to expand their surveys to ensure that
pipeline construction would not adversely affect debris fields surrounding either site.
Using their revolutionary new Autonomous Underwater Vehicle, the Hugin 3000, C&C
Technology acquired sidescan sonar and multibeam data at both sites. While analyzing these
data, Mr. Church and Mr. Warren discovered that the size and configuration of the second
target closely matched that of the only German U-boat lost in the Gulf of Mexico in World
War II, the U-166.
Of the 24 U-boats that preyed on U.S. and allied shipping in
the Gulf of Mexico during World War II, the only one reported lost was the U-166.
Historians long believed that the U-166 was the submarine bombarded south of Houma by the
crew of a U.S. Coast Guard torpedo plane on August 1, 1942. The pilot and radioman of the
aircraft were both decorated after the war. They sank the U-boat some 130 miles west of
where Mr. Church and Mr. Warren had identified their suspicious sonar target.
When the two archaeologists discovered that a second U-boat,
the U-171, was in the Gulf on August 1, 2 days after the Robert E. Lee sank the
discrepancy was resolved. The U-171 was most likely the vessel sighted but not sunk by the
Coast Guard plane. The U-171 had survived the aerial bombardment and had made it safely
out of the Gulf only to sink from a mine in its homeport of Lorient, France. Because of
this research, Mr. Church and Mr. Warren surmised that the Coast Guard had not destroyed
the U-166, but rather sunk by depth charges from the Lees U.S. Navy escort vessel,
the PC-566.
In May 2001, Mr. Church and Mr. Warren reported their
hypothesis to MMS. They subsequently were instrumental in collecting additional remote
sensing data at a much higher resolution that left little doubt that the mysterious target
was, in fact, a German submarine. Within days, BP and Shell sponsored a remotely operated
vehicle investigation of the site to collect video footage of the two wrecks. Mr. Church
and Mr. Warren, along with archaeologists from MMS, successfully identified the sub as the
U-166, a type IXC German U-boat. A news conference, held at the National D-Day Museum in
New Orleans, announced the find. At present, the U-166 discovery is the subject of a
documentary for the History Channel produced by the German television network ZDF. The
network plans to broadcast the documentary in the spring of 2002.
Because of Mr. Church and Mr. Warrens dedication and
diligence, BP and Shell Oil elected to move their proposed pipeline well away from the
sites of the U-166 and the Robert E. Lee. This assisted MMS in fulfilling its obligation
to protect historic resources that may be affected by its actions. Because of Mr. Church
and Mr. Warrens work, MMS received favorable exposure in many worldwide newspaper
reports, industry publications, and an upcoming History Channel documentary. Finally,
their efforts to go beyond what was merely required resulted in a discovery that literally
has re-written the history of the Gulf during World War II. Their work solved an enduring
mystery, provided closure for the families and descendants of the crew of the U-166, and
brought long overdue credit to the wartime action of the men of the PC-566.
For these reasons, Mr. Church and Mr. Warren are most
deserving of the MMS Corporate Leadership Award.
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