Wreck Ashore: How Key West Wreckers Built a Fortune Host Michele O'Connor introduces the Fun in Key West podcast and explains Key West's historic wrecking industry, highlighted by Historic Marker #58 near Mallory Square and the Wrecker Memorial by the Memorial Sculpture Garden. She describes wrecking as licensed marine salvage under maritime law—rescuing crews first, salvaging cargo, and settling claims through admiralty court at the Custom House—rather than piracy, noting myths like false lights lack evidence. The Florida Keys' reefs, storms, and limited navigation led to frequent wrecks, with NOAA estimates of hundreds to over 1,000 shipwrecks and an average of one per week in the 1800s; wrecking drove 60–90% of Florida exports by the 1830s and made Key West a leading port and home to Florida's first millionaire. She recommends visiting the Key West Shipwreck Museum tower, the Mel Fisher Museum about the 1622 Atocha found in 1985, and other related sites, and notes lighthouses and navigation improvements ended wrecking's profitability. 00:00 Welcome to Key West 01:26 Wreck Ashore Hook 03:18 Historic Marker 58 06:29 What Wrecking Means 08:04 Why Ships Wrecked Here 10:38 Key West Gets Rich 12:34 Custom House and Courts 15:01 Myths and Methods 18:45 Mel Fisher and Atocha 20:57 Shipwreck Museum Tower 21:42 End of Wrecking Era 22:43 Where to See It Today 24:33 Final Thoughts and Wrap 28:18 Recap and Call to Action