Editor's note: This is the first in a series of occasional articles inspired by readers' curiosity. What do you wonder about the Baltimore area that you'd like us to investigate? Tell us at baltimoresun.com/ask.
If you ask Baltimore Police Sgt. Kurt Roepcke how the city feels about the Inner Harbor, he says most residents tend to look at the water like it's lava.
After years overseeing the Baltimore Police Department's dive team, Roepcke knows the waterway, snaking around the Fort McHenry National Monument and into downtown, can confound expectations. On some clear days, he might even describe it as phenomenal.
Several hundred years ago, Europeans settled the region in part because of the sparkling natural harbor that was ideal for fisheries and shipping. But decades of sewage overflows and industrial waste dumping have given the harbor a persistent — and deserved — reputation for being foul.
Still, experts in Baltimore's scientific, conservation and public safety spheres say there are surprises and life in the water. The often-opaque Inner Harbor teems with wildlife alongside sunken history and humanity's polluted footprint.
In the first installment in a series inspired by readers' curiosity, The Baltimore Sun took a look at what's in the harbor water and interviewed people who've ventured the approximately 30 feet to the bottom.
What we leave behind
The harbor floor predominantly consists of silky dirt — or silt — that gets swept around depending on the currents, Roepcke said.
Along the western wall in front of Ripley's Believe It or Not, trash and piles of sediment accumulate. In front of Fort McHenry, the floor of the harbor entrance is smooth and hard, he said. The shifting soils can mean the depths of the harbor can vary.
Plenty of wildlife swims through the currents and crawls along the floor.
"There's lots of fish, lots of crabs," Roepcke said. "I haven't seen any snakes, but we see jellyfish and rockfish."
And there's more resting on the harbor floor than just the living.
As head of the police underwater recovery team, Roepcke's job is to know what's down there. Sometimes that work means searching for bodies and weapons, or maintaining national security by checking ships and tunnels for explosives. Other times it means retrieving electric scooters, abandoned water crafts and old vehicles from the water.
At low tide, two sunken boats, one of which Roepcke believes is a 1940s banana boat, still pierce the water's surface in front of Fells Point's Union Wharf Apartments. Somewhere along the waterfront off the 1700 block of S. Clinton St. rests a vintage Cadillac. The police diving team has even found old cannonballs near Fort McHenry, he said.
Police aren't the only ones to pull treasures from the water.
As the city was prepping for the construction of the Fort McHenry Tunnel in 1980, an archaeological survey was conducted in a portion of the harbor near the national monument. The archaeologist conducting the survey told The Sun at the time he found at least four ships scuttled in a cove, junked grenades that were thrown into the harbor after the Civil War, beer bottles dating to World War I and an American Indian stone knife.
The indigenous tools may have been dug up during the dredging of the harbor as there was no evidence of any collection of similar artifacts in the area, The Sun reported at the time.
The Sun described the findings as "Nothing of any great historical significance, but an interesting potpourri of artifacts from Baltimore's past."