News
August 16, 2008
Innerviews: Commercial diver has river water in his blood
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Listen to audio excerpts from the interview

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Something about the river tugs at him. The mystique captivated Eric Gardner even as a small boy living along the Kanawha on Campbells Creek. At 43, he bleeds river water.

1 of 8 Photos
In the pilot house of the towboat Lucedale, Eric Gardner enjoys a bird’s-eye view of the Kanawha River as he works on a construction project at the new Marmet Locks.
The river is his life, and his living. He works on water - and under it. He operates cranes and towboats as a construction supervisor for Madison Coal & Supply. He's also a professional commercial diver, the name behind Gardner Marine Diving Services.

He doesn't call it a job. It's his hobby. Considering his lifelong romance with the river, it's a marriage made in heaven.

"I was born on Campbells Creek. We moved to Belle when I was 3. I always called it the suburbs of Belle and Witcher Creek, a little street called Orchard Avenue, right along the river.

"My dad worked for Union Concrete, but he passed away. I turned 4 in March, and he passed away in May. That was '69. My mother raised all four of us.

"I was always intrigued with the boats going by the river and all the things pertaining to the waterways. There was a construction outfit at the end of my street, T.G. Kenney & Sons, and also Harry and Dickie White's outfit. I'd sneak up there during the summertime and watch them doing things with the cranes and boats. They let me walk around on the boats sometimes.

"I saw one gentleman up there diving one day. I was probably 8 or 9 years old. That intrigued me, just knowing that when he disappeared, everyone was just standing over top wondering what he was doing down there.

"Every day, we did something on the river. In the winter, we were always out in the johnboat fishing and trapping. In the summer, 30 or 40 kids were always at my house swimming. We had a gang every day. I'd look forward to getting off football practice and coming to the house and jumping in the river.

"When I graduated from high school in '83, I was going to West Virginia Tech and play football. They asked me to walk on. I decided against it. I'd been playing football since I was small, and I was kind of burned out and Mother didn't really have the money to help me through. I decided I wanted go to work on the river, to be part of the river.

"The first company I went to work for, I was around towboats and cranes. The two gentlemen who owned that understood that I liked diving. As the company owners would get more work, they would ask me to perform some of the commercial diving. One of the older gentlemen, Rufus Duncan, took an interest in me because he knew I was interested. I'm thankful I met him at the age I did.

"I'd been scuba diving since I was 14. I was friends with some divers from the fire department, and I learned a lot from them. I love it, especially the commercial diving, where I am able to do a task and make things work.

"It relaxes me. It's peaceful down there, a whole different world. I can hear the towboats going by. I've always told people I could hear the turtles mating. You've got to experience it.

"I worked for them a few years then went to Myrtle Beach. I thought maybe I could get into diving down there. I ended up working at a nightclub, bouncing. My brother and I ran a hotel there for six or eight months, then I decided to come back home.

"I worked for a diving company full time for a few years then went to work for Nelson and Charlie Jones at Madison Coal. I worked for them part time in 1987 doing dredging work on some cranes. In '89, they hired me full-time, and I've been there ever since. They let me do my work the way I think it should be done, and it's worked out for both of us.

"I'm a construction supervisor, a licensed crane operator and a master towboat license holder, and I do commercial diving. I contract through Amherst. I enjoy every bit of it. Everybody says I work too much. It's not work to me. It's a hobby. I put 110 percent into it.

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Posted By: river love (11:13pm 08-24-2008)
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ERIC LOVES THE RIVER AND DIVING. HE LOVES TO VISIT HIS MOTHER AT THE NURSING HOME IN OHIO, ON THE RIVER.

Posted By: the (10:59pm 08-19-2008)
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Eric is the man a hereo to his trade and a mentor for his fellow divers!

Posted By: Slick Willy (11:31am 08-18-2008)
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River water in his blood? This sounds like a serious medical condition that should not be taken lightly, regardless of the man's occupation. Surely, the water contains pcb, lead and a variety of other carcinogenic elements. The community should band together and get this hard-working man the medical attention he deserves as a God-fearing American.

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