No. 10,000, on Sept. 24, 1883, reported that J. P. Morgan's yacht had sunk.
After our yacht sank, I was captured by the NUMA people, who held me prisoner.
They killed the 'royals," but the yacht caught fire in the gjinfight and sank."
Shortly thereafter, a porthole was smashed open by a wave; the yacht began to fill with water and sank in a matter of minutes.
"They cannot have gone down, for there has been no sea, and they were afloat after the yacht sank--I saw them all."
By the time it was over, several yachts had sunk and at least four yachtsmen had died.
His yacht sank in a gale later that year, drowning a crewman.
The yacht nearly sank earlier that day as water started pouring through a leak around the keel structure.
The yacht sank in 500 feet of water, a depth that will make it difficult to raise the high-tech, carbon-fiber yacht.
The yacht was sinking much faster than Stone would have believed possible.