When, years later I was president of the Bermuda National Trust, I made an official visit to Colonial Williamsburg to arrange an archeological project in Bermuda. The younger archeologists warned me about the hot tempered Archiologist Emerntitos, a man at the top of his field. I sat beside the intimidating old man at a dinner. Overcome with shyness I asked him if by chance he knew of my aunt and uncle. "Are you kidding," he barked, "Jane and Barney Crile of Treasure Diving Holidays!" So Williamsburg came to Bermuda on a number of "digs" in our historic buildings, and assisted us in putting together the Trust's dynamic program of Bermuda's cultural history. Thanks, Jane and Barney!
A note on Barney Crile probably forgotten: In 1947 some statehood for Puerto Rico extremists broke into the public galleries of the United States House of Representatives and shot five Congressmen. At the time Cleveland was snowed in in a huge blizzard. Fire trucks were called out to clear the runways so a plane could rush Barney to Washington to direct the operations that saved the lives of the Congressmen! And that's just one reason why the signature building of the Cleveland Clinic (now Cleveland's largest employer) is named the Crile Building!
Some family we are!
blog: Dennis Sherwin
Greg McIntosh, who was a young member of the diving group adds the following notes: (Actually the leotards were to keep is from getting sunburned. Each child had a different "face" on his or her rear so that Barney and Jane could instantly identify one from the other). About the rubber bag the camera was in: It was actually a modified bag used by anesthesiologists in the operating room. It is fitted between the tanks of various gasses and the mask over the patent's mouth and nose. Clinic machinists created the lens fitting for the front of the camera and fashioned a clamp to secure the open sam at the rear - used for inserting and withdrawing the camera from this improvised underwater case with it's specially made glass cap.