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How a McMaster University class ring, lost in 1977 in the Atlantic Ocean off Barbados, made it home

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Hamilton

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In 1977, Morgan Perigo, a graduate of Hamilton’s McMaster University, lost his class ring in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Barbados. Last month, free diver Alex Davis found it buried in the sand.

Professional diver Alex Davis says he got the ring back to Perigo in time for his 83rd birthday

Justin Chandler · CBC News

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A collage showing a man wearing a ring, a closeup of the ring on an older man's hand, and a portrait of the older man with the ring on.

Alex Davis, left, shows off the 1965 McMaster University class ring he found off the coast of Barbados. He managed to return it to its owner, Morgan Perigo in Ontario, right. (Submitted by Alex Davis)

It’s not unusual for McMaster University’s alumni office to hear from someone looking to get in touch with a person who went to the Hamilton school.

But a recent request was “unique” and resulted in an unexpected reunion, director of alumni engagement Karen McQuigge told CBC Hamilton.

In mid-October, a diver in Barbados reached out to say he’d found a McMaster class ring from 1965 that was buried underwater near Miami Beach. The gold ring had the initials “FMP” engraved on it and if possible, the diver, Alex Davis, wanted to return it to its original owner.

McQuigge said her team searched their database and only one name matched the initials: Morgan Perigo, a math major who graduated from the faculty of science in 1965. Fortunately, Perigo kept his contact information up to date with the alumni office. 

“If he hadn’t done that, we probably would not have been able to find him,” McQuigge said.

WATCH | Davis describes finding Perigo’s lost class ring:

#TheMoment a diver returned a ring lost in the ocean for 47 years

Diver Alex Davis recounts the moment he found a long-lost McMaster University ring in the ocean and returned it to its owner, who had thought he’d never see it again.

The alumni office reached out and Perigo responded, saying he’d lost his ring on a family trip to Barbados in 1977, McQuigge said. Perigo told them that while wading in the ocean one day, a wave knocked his son over. When Perigo reached out to grab him, his son pulled on his hand and the ring came off. They searched but couldn’t find it. 

CBC Hamilton couldn’t reach Perigo prior to publication.  

Grad ring was ‘a hell of a find’ 

A person in a T-shirt holds up their hand, showing off a gold ring on their pinky.

Davis shows off the ring he found. He has lived in Barbados since 2011 and in 2013, he opened up a diving company. (Submitted by Alex Davis)

Forty-seven years after Perigo lost the ring, “the stars aligned and the water was clear,” Davis told CBC Hamilton. “Mr. Perigo’s ring was a hell of a find.”

Davis is a free diver and spear fisherman who runs a diving company near the village of Oistins. Since Hurricane Beryl in the summer, the sand around the island has shifted, he said, exposing hidden items. He took up metal detecting to see what he could find.

On Oct. 16, Davis was snorkelling with his detector when it alerted him to something in the sand. Davis dug down at least 15 centimetres and all he found were rocks, but the metal detector kept beeping, so he kept going. After digging roughly another 15 centimetres deep, Davis said, he saw a flash of gold. 

“It catches your eye like nothing else,” he said. “Your heart starts to race.”

Diver tries to return lost valuables

A collage showing two close-ups of a gold class ring with a maroon gem.

Davis shows off Perigo’s gold class ring. (Submitted by Alex Davis)

Davis has shared photos of his finds on social media site Reddit. He’s mostly got coins, fishing weights, bottle caps and rusty nails, but told CBC Hamilton he has found the occasional item of value, including a University of Toronto professor’s phone and wallet. In cases like that, Davis said, he makes the effort to return the lost items.

“I don’t do this just to keep all the gold for myself. I do want people to get their things back,” he said. “Anyone who’s been around the sea, diving or otherwise, you will eventually lose plenty of things that make a donation to the sea gods. … It’s just nice to think that you might get it back some day.”

The class ring is a bulky gold piece with a maroon gem. Despite decades under the sea, it’s in good condition, Davis said. The day he found it, he contacted McMaster and within two days, he was in touch with Perigo.

Davis said he mailed the ring late last month and it arrived at Perigo’s home in Burlington, Ont., the day before Perigo’s 83rd birthday.

“What are the chances?!” Davis wrote in a Friday post on Reddit.

A portrait of a person holding up their hand to show off a gold ring.

Perigo shows off the class ring he was reunited with after 47 years. (Submitted by Alex Davis)

Perigo is now “proudly” wearing his class ring, McQuigge said, adding it’s been “wonderful” for her team to be part of the reunification. 

“It is really nice in this day and age when we don’t always hear all the greatest stories,” she said. “Kudos to Alex because he’s the one who found it and took that initiative.”

Davis said after all the effort, he had a moment of panic when a delivery person left the ring outside Perigo’s residence instead of delivering it by hand. 

“I’m like, ‘Please, please let there not be any porch pirates in Canada,'” Davis recounted.

But Perigo successfully retrieved his sunken treasure. Davis said they spoke briefly on his birthday and Perigo was very appreciative. 

“It’s just good to do the right thing.” 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Justin Chandler is a CBC News reporter in Hamilton. He has a special interest in how public policy affects people, and he loves a quirky human-interest story. Justin covered current affairs in Hamilton and Niagara for TVO, and has worked on a variety of CBC teams and programs, including As It Happens, Day 6 and CBC Music. He co-hosted Radio Free Krypton on Met Radio. You can email story ideas to justin.chandler(at)cbc(dot)ca.

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