The USS Cyclops: The Navy’s Greatest Unsolved Mystery
Did you know that the single largest loss of life in U.S. Navy history not caused by combat happened in 1918—and that it remains unsolved to this day?
The USS Cyclops was a massive naval cargo ship, a collier, designed to carry coal and other heavy materials to support the growing power of the United States Navy. She was 542 feet long, 65 feet wide, and capable of carrying over 10,000 tons of cargo. Launched in 1910 and named after the one-eyed giants of Greek mythology, the ship served dutifully in the Atlantic, moving supplies from one port to another.
But what happened in the early months of 1918 would make the Cyclops not only a historical footnote, but an enduring maritime mystery.
In January of that year, the ship left Norfolk, Virginia, bound for Rio de Janeiro. She arrived without incident and spent the next several weeks loading a special wartime cargo: manganese ore, a dense, heavy mineral essential in steel production. With World War I raging in Europe, the U.S. needed as much manganese as it could get.
After completing her mission in Brazil, the Cyclops left Rio in mid-February with 306 people aboard—sailors, officers, and civilian passengers—plus her full load of ore. She made a scheduled stop in the port of Salvador, then another unexpected one in Barbados. The ship’s captain, George Worley, reportedly claimed the ship was experiencing engine trouble. Yet, strange as it sounds, there was no official record of any repairs being made there.
On March 4, 1918, the USS Cyclops departed Barbados, sailing north through the Caribbean Sea, bound for Baltimore. She was never seen again.
No distress signals were sent. No wreckage was ever recovered. No bodies were found. One day, the ship simply vanished—into silence.
In the wake of her disappearance, the U.S. Navy launched one of the largest search efforts in its history. Patrol boats, cruisers, and commercial ships scoured the sea. Coastal towns were contacted. Ports were checked. Yet no trace ever turned up. It was as if the Cyclops had simply ceased to exist.
Theories began to swirl almost immediately. Was she sunk by a German U-boat? There were rumors of U-boat activity in the region, but Germany later denied involvement, and no U-boat ever claimed the sinking. Was there a structural failure? Some experts believe that the ship may have been overloaded—her cargo of manganese ore was heavier and denser than coal, and Cyclops had a history of engine trouble and hull stress. It’s possible that a sudden squall or rogue wave caused the already-burdened ship to capsize.
Still others speculated about sabotage. Captain Worley was a peculiar figure. He was born Johann Frederick Wichmann in Germany and only later became a U.S. citizen. Some questioned his loyalty during wartime. Reports from crew members described him as erratic and even tyrannical, wearing civilian clothes instead of a naval uniform, and berating his men in front of passengers. Could there have been a mutiny? A sabotage from within?
Perhaps the strangest element of the story is what happened years later: two of Cyclops’ sister ships, the USS Proteus and the USS Nereus—identical vessels also carrying heavy cargo—vanished under similar conditions during World War II, in nearly the same region of the Atlantic. These coincidences added fuel to growing whispers about the Bermuda Triangle.
The Bermuda Triangle, that now-infamous stretch of ocean bounded by Miami, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico, had already seen numerous unexplained incidents. Planes vanishing from radar. Ships discovered adrift with no crew. Cyclops became a central legend in the growing lore of the Triangle—used by authors, conspiracy theorists, and even television specials as proof that something unnatural haunts that part of the ocean.
Of course, the more rational explanation is simple: the North Atlantic, and especially the area around