Photo courtesy: Rolex
Retired Navy Capt. Don Walsh, a renowned explorer who traveled to the ocean’s deepest point with an experimental Rolex strapped to the bathyscaphe, passed away Sunday. He was 92.
Walsh, a native of Berkeley, Calif., enlisted in the Navy in 1948 and worked as an aircrewman before he attended the U.S. Naval Academy. He became a submarine officer, commanding USS Bashaw (SSKS-241), and later became the Navy’s first deep submersible pilot.
Walsh was a Navy lieutenant on Jan. 23, 1960, and in command of the bathyscaphe Trieste when he and Swiss oceanographer Jacques Piccard dove deep into the Mariana Trench, the deepest known depression on the Earth's surface. An experimental Rolex Oyster watch, the Deep Sea Special, was attached to the outside of the Trieste.
Rolex gifted Walsh, in 2010, an engraved Submariner “Hulk” 116610LV for the 50th anniversary of the historic dive. The caseback engraving read: “Don Walsh. Deepest Dive. 1960-2010. In Appreciation.” Walsh said in a Rolex video he was very proud of the watch. “It never leaves my sight,” he said.