Kent mourns loss of ‘Mr. Titanic’

Paul Henry Nargeolet, photo courtesy of Kent Memorial Library
KENT – Around the globe, Paul Henry Nargeolet, one of five men who perished during the ill-fated deep-sea dive in the 22-foot-long Titan submersible headed to the site of the Titanic wreckage, was known as a French maritime explorer, author and expert on all things Titanic.
But to many in the small, tight-knit town of Kent, he was known simply as “PH”, a cherished friend and neighbor who retained close ties to the community, serving on the Kent Memorial Library’s board of trustees, even after moving to Holmes, N.Y. about a year ago.
“It’s such a sad, tragic event to happen,” said Jean Speck, Kent’s First Selectman, on Friday, June 23, a day after U.S. Coast Guard officials announced that the sub had suffered a “catastrophic implosion” and that all five occupants had died.
“It’s one of those gray days. When you live in a tiny town like Kent, and you lose someone, it’s sort of a deeper loss because there are only 3,000 people in our town. The single losses really affect us in a bigger way.”
Speck recalled meeting Nargeolet, 77, several times at library fundraisers “where he was really beloved by the board and the organization. Even before this tragedy started to unfold, I had heard people say that he was a valued member of the board and beyond, just a great energy, and a gentleman.”
Hosted benefits at his Spooner Hill home
On June 23, Kent Memorial Library posted an announcement on its website in memory of its late board member:
“The Library staff and Board is saddened to learn of the tragic death of our friend, PH Nargeolet. PH was an active member of the Kent Library Association Board since 2017, and generously hosted two benefits at his former home on Spooner Hill, presented fascinating programs about his many adventures for the community, and shared his time, stories and kindness with us all. He will be greatly missed. We hold his family, especially his devoted wife, Anne, in our hearts at this difficult time. He was truly a wonderful person.”
Library director Sarah Marshall said Nargeolet, who held several programs about his deep-sea explorations and adventures over the years, was a “very lovely person and the most interesting man I have ever met. He was just a lot of fun, and he stayed in touch. He’s going to be missed.”
The French native, known globally as “Mr. Titanic,” served as director of the Underwater Research Program at Premier Exhibitions, RMS Titanic, the organization which owns the salvage rights to the wrecked cruise ship. Over the years he had made numerous trips to the ocean’s bottom to study the wreckage and on previous OceanGate expeditions on the Titan.
It is dangerous work. “He knew the risks, and so did we. He did it with his eyes wide open,” said Marshall of the adventurer’s passion for trips to the bottom of the sea.
Dove with subs from other countries
According to the Kent Memorial Library’s website, Nargeolet was a former commander who served 25 years in the French Navy. He has also been a ship’s captain, a deep-sea diver, a submersible pilot and underwater demolition and de-mining team commanding officer. He became the captain of the Deep Submergence Group of the Navy, and afterwards joined the French Institute for the Exploitation of the Sea to extract resources like oil or fish.
“PH led several expeditions to the Titanic site and was involved in numerous scientific and technical expeditions around the world. He was in charge of the deep submersible Nautili (20,000 feet) and Cyana (10,000 feet) and all the deep equipment, and the technical research office of the institute.”
The bio notes that “PH also dove with several deep submersibles from other countries,” and he served for eight years as CEO of a company that owned two 3300 feet submersibles, a research vessel and a helicopter.
As director of the Underwater Research Program of RMS Titanic, Inc, Nargeolet was also the technical adviser and consultant for the Five Deeps Expedition, which reach the deepest points of the five oceans with the only manned submersible in the world, diving to 36,000 feet, according to the library’s website.
In the tense week leading up to the June 22 announcement that a debris field from the sub’s wreckage was discovered just 1,600 feet off the bow of the Titanic, the search for the missing vessel had captivated the world as rescue personnel from across the globe rushed to the scene to help before Titan’s oxygen supply ran out.
In Kent, friends and neighbors prayed for a miracle that never came.
David Gallo, an oceanographer and deep-sea explorer and senior adviser for Strategic Initiatives, RMS Titanic, Inc., said there is something poetic, in a way, that his friend spent much of his life on the bottom of the sea following his passion and preserving the legacy of the Titanic, “and now he’s there.”
The entrance to Torrington Transfer Station.
TORRINGTON — Municipalities holding out for a public solid waste solution in the Northwest Corner have new hope.
An amendment to House Bill No. 7287, known as the Implementor Bill, signed by Governor Ned Lamont, has put the $3.25 million sale of the Torrington Transfer Station to USA Waste & Recycling on hold.
The amendment was added after the formation of the Northwest Resource Recovery Authority in Torrington in late May. The text added to the bill reads, “any permit or license relating to the Torrington Transfer Station shall be deemed transferred to the Northwest Resource Recovery Authority, or its designee, and shall continue in full force and effect.”
The change halted the sale to USA, which was unanimously accepted by MIRA Dissolution Authority at its May 14 board meeting, and reopened negotiations with municipal leaders. Torrington is one of two transfer stations in Connecticut, the other being Essex, that are still operated by MIRA-DA. Combined, more than 20 towns currently utilize these facilities.
Members of the Northwest Hills Council of Governments have been working to establish a public option for solid waste management for more than a year. In February 2025, MIRA-DA entered into a term sheet for a regional waste authority to take over the Torrington Transfer Station to be used as a central hub for regional hauling. Those plans were nixed after MIRA-DA’s May decision to privately sell the facility, until the amendment to HB 7287.
The Implementor Bill is “an act concerning the state budget for the biennium ending June 30, 2027,” according to the state website. It was signed by Lamont in early June.
MIRA-DA reviewed the situation at its board meeting Wednesday, June 18. Conversation mostly took place in executive session, but several speakers participated in public comment.
Supporting a public option, Torrington Mayor Elinor Carbone said, “I’m advocating for the local taxpayers for return on the investment that they’ve made over the years through tipping fees.” She continued, “The best way to return that investment is to strongly consider that public option that has been submitted on behalf of the NRRA.”
Selectmen in Cornwall, Falls Village, Goshen, Norfolk, North Canaan, Salisbury and Sharon have all expressed interest in pursuing a public option. Each of these towns continue to haul to Torrington utilizing existing state service agreements, which are due to expire in 2027.
Ed Spinella, attorney representing USA, characterized the Implementor Bill text change as a “rat amendment” that does not affect USA’s proposal. He said he intends to enforce MIRA-DA’s previous acceptance of the sale.
“It’s an enforceable vote and I guarantee you I’m going to make it enforceable,” said Spinella. “We were going to buy the facility regardless of whether or not it had a permit.”
He urged MIRA-DA to produce the necessary paperwork to move forward with the sale.
“I want to sign the documents so we can finish this deal,” said Spinella. “Are you going to be defined by cowering to a rat implementor, rat amendment of the Implementor Bill?”
Following a lengthy executive session June 18 that continued the next day, MIRA-DA recessed without taking action. The meeting was scheduled to continue Monday, June 23, at noon.
In August of 1781, after spending thirty years as an enslaved woman in the household of Colonel John Ashley in Sheffield, Massachusetts, Elizabeth Freeman, also known as Mumbet, was the first enslaved person to sue for her freedom in court. At the time of her trial there were 5,000 enslaved people in the state. MumBet’s legal victory set a precedent for the abolition of slavery in Massachusetts in 1790, the first in the nation. She took the name Elizabeth Freeman.
Local playwrights Lonnie Carter and Linda Rossi will tell her story in a staged reading of “1781” to celebrate Juneteenth, ay 7 p.m. at The Center on Main in Falls Village, Connecticut.Singer Wanda Houston will play MumBet, joined by actors Chantell McCulloch, Tarik Shah, Kim Canning, Sherie Berk, Howard Platt, Gloria Parker and Ruby Cameron Miller. Musical composer Donald Sosin added, “MumBet is an American hero whose story deserves to be known much more widely.”
Houston has shared the stage with stars ranging from Barbra Streisand to Motown great Mary Wells. “I have had the honor of portraying Elizabeth Freeman for three years in “Meet Elizabeth Freeman” by Teresa Miller. Our first reading of “1781” is in celebration of Juneteenth, which is wonderfully symbolic and poignant.” Juneteenth celebrates the end of slavery. Two years after President Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863, word of their freedom finally reached slaves in Texas on June 19, 1865.
Tombstone of Elizabeth Freeman in the “Sedgewick Pie” family burial ground in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Lonnie carter
MumBet, born in 1742 to African enslaved parents, was purchased at age six months by Colonel John Ashley of Sheffield, Massachusetts, for whom she worked until her thirties. Ashley helped write the 1773 Sheffield Declaration which stated, “Mankind in a state of nature are equal, free, and independent of each other, and have a right to the undisturbed enjoyment of their lives, their liberty and property.” Rumor has it that MumBet overheard a reading of the document. After a traumatic household experience, MumBet left the Ashley home in Bartholomew’s Cobble, walked four miles to Sheffield, and asked attorney and abolitionist Theodore Sedgwick to help her gain her freedom.
Houston shared, “I live in Sheffield near where she was enslaved, in a house she would have passed on her walk from Ashley Falls to Sheffield. I am humbled by the fortitude and inner strength it must have taken for this woman to defy norms and take a stand for her own freedom.We Americans must still stand and fight for our rights to live free.”
Elizabeth Freeman spent her years as a free woman working for wages in the Sedgewick household, saving money to buy her own home in Stockbridge, where she was a midwife and healer. She died in 1829 and is buried in “Sedgewick Pie,” the family burial plot in Stockbridge. One of her great-grandchildren, W.E.B. DuBois, born in Great Barrington, was the first African American to earn a Ph.D. from Harvard. DuBois founded the NAACP.
Her tombstone reads: “She was born a slave and remained a slave for nearly thirty years. She could neither read nor write yet in her own sphere she had no superior or equal. She neither wasted time nor property. She never violated a trust nor failed to perform a duty. In every situation of domestic trial, she was the most efficient helper, and the tenderest friend. Good mother, farewell.”
The performance of “1781” will take place Thursday, June 19 at 7 p.m. at The Center on Main (103 Main St., Falls Village).Admission is free, donations gratefully accepted.
The new mural painted by students at Saint John Paul The Great Academy in Torrington, Connecticut.
Thanks to a unique collaboration between The Nutmeg Fudge Company, local artist Gerald Incandela, and Saint John Paul The Great Academy in Torrington, Connecticut a mural — designed and painted entirely by students — now graces the interior of the fudge company.
The Nutmeg Fudge Company owner Kristy Barto was looking to brighten her party space with a mural that celebrated both old and new Torrington. She worked with school board member Susan Cook and Incandela to reach out to the Academy’s art teacher, Rachael Martinelli.
“When Susan and Gerald brought this to me, I immediately saw it as a chance for my students to make something meaningful and lasting,” said Martinelli. “It wasn’t just about painting a wall, it was about teaching kids to serve their community through their art.”
Martinelli introduced the project as an after-school club for grades four through eight. “I wanted students who were truly committed,” she explained. Interest was so high that she had to divide participants into rotating grade-level groups, with occasional full-team days for collaboration. The mural became a long-term endeavor, stretching across a school year and a half.
The painting was created on canvas, a nearly 4’ x 27’ roll, donated by Incandela. The paint came courtesy of school principal Ed Goad. With materials secured, the students dove into research, studying maps, landmarks, and city history to inform their designs. “They worked to capture the spirit of Torrington,” Martinelli said. “But also, to match the whimsy of a candy shop.”
The result is a mural that features a playful “candyland” version of the city, where important buildings and landmarks are sized according to their importance to both the client and the community. “They created this hierarchy of bubbles and buildings, this joyful visual story,” Martinelli said. “It’s full of life.”
Beyond art skills, Martinelli witnessed her students develop qualities often harder to teach: teamwork, communication, resilience. “They learned to scale up sketches, mix large batches of paint for consistency, and adapt their work when it overlapped with someone else’s. They really respected each other’s contributions.”
The project also reflected the Academy’s Catholic STREAM (Science, Technology, Religion, Engineering, Arts, and Math) approach to education. “This was STREAM in action,” Martinelli explained. “They used technology to scale and transfer designs, applied math for proportions and spacing, and worked collaboratively to problem-solve. But they also lived their faith — through service, solidarity, and joy.”
Martinelli believes the mural speaks as much to the process as it does to the final product. “Some of the kids who worked on it have already graduated, but they’re coming back for the unveiling. That says something.”
The unveiling of the mural will take place at The Nutmeg Fudge Company on June 11, from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m., where families, friends, and community members are invited to celebrate the students’ achievement.
Asked what stood out most from the experience, Martinelli said, “For me, the most rewarding part was watching a diverse group of kids work together — different grades, different friend groups — all collaborating with respect, flexibility, and positivity. They created something beautiful, together.”