Showing posts with label pat croce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pat croce. Show all posts

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Pat Croce's Rum Barrel to host Hurricane Sandy benefit, Key West is Jersey Strong

KEY WEST, Fla. (November 8, 2012) -- Local businesses have come out en masse to pitch in for Key West is Jersey Strong--a benefit for those affected by Hurricane Sandy in the New Jersey shore areas.

Created by four former NJ shore residents who now live in Key West, the Boardwalk-themed event will kick off at 6 p.m. at the Rum Barrel on Tuesday, November 13, with live music, dozens of raffle prizes, and a "boardwalk fare" style menu. Just follow the "Welcome to the Jersey Shore" sign up to the Quarterdeck...

Reuters photo of storm damage along the beach in Sea
Bright, NJ, from International Business Times
"It's so hard to watch from thousands of miles away as our friends and families go through this," said organizer Brooke Joensen. "Key West is such an amazing town and we're all doing what we can from afar."

All proceeds will go directly to helping the neediest families through the Toms River Police Foundation (TRPF), a NJ non-profit previously formed to aid the community.

Along with the Rum Barrel regular menu, food and drink specials include boardwalk favorites like crab cakes, cheesesteaks, pork rolls, fried Oreos and funnel cakes served up to live music from six local bands. Prizes for the 50/50 and door raffles and silent and regular auction include a helmet, football and jersey signed by the Philadelphia Eagles team as well as dozens of items from local businesses.

Performances include:
  • 6:00-6:45 p.m.: The Prime Movers
  • 7:00-7:45 p.m. Chris Thomas and Skipper
  • 8:00-8:45 p.m. Muse Gurus
  • 9:00-9:45 p.m. The Lofis
  • 10:00-10:45 p.m. Caffeine Carl and Rusty Lemmon
  • 11:00-11:45 p.m. Jeff Clark, Osker Deko and Tony Baltimore

"My family and I faced clean-up after Sandy, too, so we know her effects all too well," said Pat Croce, Rum Barrel owner. "Help us help those who've lost everything but the shirts on their backs, who still don't have power, especially in this weather."

Monetary donations can be made by check payable to "Toms River Police Foundation Inc." For more information on the event, visit www.keywestisjerseystrong.org or contact Rob Phillip at 732-503-9863 or Brooke Joensen at 609-309-3232.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Rum Barrel owner Pat Croce hides treasures aboard soon-to-be-sunk USCG Cutter Mohawk

Divers tasked with finding stash on Mohawk Veterans Memorial Reef

KEY WEST, Fla. (June 20, 2012) -- Rum Barrel owner Pat Croce pillaged his own Pirate Museum for 17th century booty, raided Rum Barrel's Pyrate Rum stash and snuck aboard the soon-to-be-sunk U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Mohawk to hide the treasures for some lucky diver's discovery.

The 165-foot World War II cutter will be deployed one last time on July 2 in full fighting trim with replica guns, depth charges and a lifeboat on deck, roughly 28 nautical miles west of Redfish Pass off Sanibel Island on Florida's southwest coast--an unusually decked-out burial at sea. "Mighty Mo's" final duty is as the Mohawk Veterans Memorial Reef, honoring veterans and creating a world-class fishing and diving experience in Lee County, home to over 40,000 veterans.
Antique bottle with 17th century Port Royal
shot and hand-drawn map hidden aboard
USCG Cutter Mohawk

"It's not every day you see a ship of this caliber sunk with so much effort and attention to detail, and we wanted to ramp up the excitement by making it a true adventure for divers," Croce said.

Croce pirated authentic 17th century shot recovered from the former pirate stronghold of Port Royal, Jamaica, as well as an antique rum bottle from his St. Augustine Pirate & Treasure Museum, which he moved from Key West to St. Augustine, Fla., in 2010. With a case of Pyrate Rum stolen from the Rum Barrel stash also up for grabs, the first intrepid diver to find the treasures can also claim dinner and drinks for two at The Rum Barrel and passes to The Pirate Museum via reef organizers.

The effort to sink the Mohawk and create the artificial reef is led by Reefmakers shipwrecker Joe Weatherby, who also sank the U.S.S. Vandenberg off of Key West in 2009, and Mike Campbell, executive director of Lee Reefs, a nonprofit foundation that works to enhance the marine environment and protect natural reef ecosystems. It came after time and salt water took their toll on the old ship and the cost of keeping her afloat proved too much for the Miami-Dade Maritime Museum, led by Captain Bill Verge.

"We want veterans who served on the Mohawk to feel honored," Weatherby said. "It's the right thing to do for American history, for the environment and the economy, and its means the Mohawk's legacy will live on in every diver's experience."

The quality of the reef itself, the diving experience, one-of-a-kind photo opportunities and marine wildlife interaction are central to its creation, Weatherby added.

The Mohawk will lie in 90 feet of water with a 35-foot clearance over top. Most divers will be able to explore the replica guns, a huge smokestack, crow's nest, bridge, deckhouse and massive propeller, while trained and equipped divers can descend the smoke stack into the Mohawk's enormous engine room where the giant engine's inner parts and reduction gear will be uncovered. Who will find Croce's treasures, that's anyone's guess.


ABOUT THE MOHAWK
USCG Cutter Mohawk.
Photo credit: U.S. Coast Guard
Built in Wilmington, Del., in 1934 as an ice breaker, she was called to serve during WWII as part of the Greenland Patrol, protecting vital allied shipping throughout the war. The Mohawk fought in 14 U-Boat engagements and rescued hundreds of allied sailors torpedoed from the frozen North Atlantic. She is credited as the last ship to radio the weather to General Dwight Eisenhower before he green-lighted the D-Day invasion. After the war, the Mohawk was converted from steam power to diesel and functioned as a lightship, University of Delaware research vessel and Delaware Bay Pilot Boat. She languished in a New York scrap yard before being rescued 15 years ago by the Miami-Dade Maritime Museum, towed to Miami and converted to a museum. Six years ago, the museum was moved to Key West, Fla. But keeping her afloat proved too costly for the group, led by Captain Bill Verge, and the decision was made to reef her. As an artificial reef honoring veterans and providing Southwest Florida's newest diving and fishing attraction, the Mohawk should last 70 to 100 years.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Finding the HMS Oxford

Captain Henry Morgan
This week's guest blog post is by Pat Croce, owner of The Rum Barrel and founder of the St. Augustine Pirate & Treasure Museum.

Four years ago today, I was in Haiti pursuing an elusive dream that we now hope is within our reach.

This week, Bob Cembrola and I spoke once again about our mutual interest in finding and salvaging the remains of Captain Henry Morgan's flagship, the 34-gun HMS Oxford, off of Haitian waters.

(Bob is not only a good friend of mine and a dynamite marine archaeologist, he's also the curator and an adjunct professor at the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island.)

It's been more than seven years since we began our pursuit to recover Morgan's Oxford and we continue to believe that we're getting closer--despite kidnappings, civil wars, devastating earthquakes, government-imposed moratoriums, and palace coups.

Read the rest on Pat Croce's blog!