Public Works Employees Reunite Aggie with Lost Ring
You wouldn’t think a typical drainage ditch would be a place to find lost treasure, but City of College Station maintenance crews through the years have found tons of valuable stuff in those muddy trenches: jewelry, wallets, purses, car keys, credit cards and even wads of cash are frequently uncovered by mowers and other equipment.
It was a mud-caked Aggie ring embossed with the year 2004.
Bookman summoned his co-workers, T.J. Pemberton and Ben Dickerson, and they found the name Nicholas McClure etched inside. Knowing that Aggies treasure nothing more than their class rings, the trio embarked on a valiant quest to locate Mr. McClure and reunite him with his lost treasure. They were also curious to find out how it came to rest in such an obscure place.
“I knew if I lost my ring, I’d sure want it back,” said Pemberton, a city worker since 2010.
Dickerson posted the story on the Texags.com internet forum, asking if anyone happened to know McClure. A short time later, a member of the Midland A&M Club responded that, yes, McClure was from Midland and he knew how to reach him. Just five hours after they found the ring, Dickerson was chatting with a pleasantly-surprised McClure on his cell phone.
McClure told Dickerson he lost the ring in 2003, just a few weeks after he got it. He recalled that he was out on a Corps of Cadets exercise of some kind and that the ring somehow slipped off his finger or out of his pocket. The heartbroken cadet never expected to see the precious piece of jewelry again. The years passed and after McClure served his country in the Middle East, he returned to the oil business in Midland.
Sometime Thursday, a small, ordinary-looking package will be delivered by courier to the anxious war veteran in West Texas. Inside, he’ll find his beloved Aggie ring, maybe not as shiny as it once was, but glimmering nonetheless.
