Michael Martz -
Herb and Mildred Webb ran their fingertips over the name of their son, Buddy Webb, on a metal plaque commemorating 17 Richmond-area scuba divers who had died 10 years earlier when their boat capsized in a hurricane in Belize.
Then Joshua Pike approached the plaque, which the Richmond Dive Club was about to place on a platform 20 feet below the surface of Lake Rawlings on Saturday to honor the club members who died on the Wave Dancer on Oct. 8, 2001.
Pike touched the names of his parents, Charlie and Cindy, and then that of his cousin, Jimmy Topping. He sat sobbing, consoled by diving club members who have been family to the families of those who died when he was just 15 years old.
"I'm glad I conquered this," said Pike, a Midlothian native who now lives in western Henrico County. "Their passing away at such an early age was extremely hard, but it made me grow up fast."
It touched him, he said, that "everyday people are never forgotten."
The ceremony marked the 10th anniversary of the worst accident in the history of recreational scuba diving, but some 50 people gathered to remember friends and family with joy as well as sorrow.
Herb Webb of Midlothian said of his son, "One thing consoled us - he was with the people he loved and doing absolutely what he loved. If it had to happen, what better way ?"
The three members of the diving club who survived the capsizing - David DeBarger, Mary Lou Hayden and Richard Patterson were among those who attended the ceremony.
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