Showing posts with label florida beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label florida beach. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

The Ponte Vedra Beach Sunken Ship has been Identified

T’was a nor’easter that did in the valiant old schooner that wrecked in 1947 on Mickler’s Landing in Ponte Vedra Beach.

Archaeologists now have confirmed the recently revisited wreck is the Bermuda-based Deliverance, a two-masted “motor vessel” whose 80 feet of iron and timber remains last revealed itself during a New Year’s low tide.
Starting with a local history book and archives in Jacksonville Beach, then a list of 10 area shipwrecks and ultimately the Internet archives of a Singapore newspaper, the Lighthouse Archaeological Maritime Program uncovered the name of the 67-year-old wreck that had reappeared on the beach in January.
“It was pretty cool, actually,” said Chuck Meide, director of the St. Augustine Lighthouse and Museum-based program. “You feel like an armchair archaeologist because we figured it out after we were back from the field. Everything else was done from the chair with a computer in front of us. Doing research has changed over the years.”
The eroded hulls of wrecked ships resurface from time to time along Ponte Vedra’s coastline during heavy storms. About five iron ribs of this one showed up in 2008, and Meide’s staff checked the wreck. It resurfaced New Year’s Day with 42 ribs uncovered for the archaeologists to study.
At the time Meide said it could be a wreck illustrated in Karen Harvey’s book, “St. Johns County: A Pictorial History.” That photograph showed a two-masted schooner beached near Mickler’s Landing with its hull parallel to the shore. So did an image they found from the archives of the Beaches Museum and History Park, with notes saying it was a “Bermuda boat wrecked on the beach.”
Archaeologists checked their list of ships wrecked in the area 1866 to 1974. The Deliverance fit. It was British-flagged, logical since Bermuda is a British colony. And Deliverance is a popular ship’s name on Bermuda.
Staff archaeologist Brendan Burke found the final evidence in a small story in the online archives of an English-language newspaper in Singapore. It confirmed the Deliverance was a motorized sailing ship that sailed between Jacksonville and Bermuda. The story said the boat sank Dec. 13, 1947, despite the efforts of Capt. Wilson King and his crew, one of whom swam to shore for help.
“There it was in black and white,” he said. “It was run ashore in a fierce storm and appeared to be in danger of breaking up. ... That was the smoking gun for this case.”
The next step is tracking down the age of the Deliverance, Meide said. In the meantime, the team will soon continue research on a 1782 British ship that was part of the evacuation of troops from Charleston and rests less than a mile off St. Augustine. Cannons, muskets and other artifacts have already been recovered and are being conserved at the museum for future exhibit display.

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Shipwreck exposed on Ponte Vedra Beach.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. -- Carol Caruso likes to walk on Ponte Vedra Beach, but she hadn't been out in a few weeks. When she walked along the shore Tuesday, she saw something big. With her hands held out wide, she said, "This is what I found at low tide!" It appears to be the skeleton of a ship, right where the waves hit the beach. "I've been looking at it for two years," Caruso explained but she's never seen so much of it coming out of the sand. "Generally it's just that point, literally that point sticking up and that's it. So I thought this had to be something special," she beamed. The ribs of the ship appear to be jutting out from the beach above the waves. Caruso estimates the shipwreck is about 75 feet long. Archaeologists with the Lighthouse Archaeological Maritime Program (or L.A.M.P.) in St. Augustine have been out to the site before, studying it. However, after seeing pictures of the ship Wednesday, archaeologist Brenden Burke said he and the L.A.M.P. team have never seen so much of the ship exposed. Burke explained that parts of the ship have been revealed three times in the last six years. Caruso remembers only seeing portions of the ship "at low tide and only during the fall and winter. During the summer, it was totally covered." When the shipwreck is covered by sand and waves, the job is a bit more tricky for marine archaeologists. Burke believes it's a steel frame vessel, but they don't know what ship it is. Caruso gazed at the ship, "It is a mystery! I'd love to know how long it's been here." After seeing photos from Caruso and from First Coast News, Burke said a crew from L.A.M.P. will be out to study the relic soon. Maybe they'll uncover a clue to help solve the mystery of the ship that is no longer completely covered by the sand.