The Day

REMAINS OF CAPT. COOK’S SHIP LIKELY IN RHODE ISLAND

- By LINDSEY BEVER

Providence — Researcher­s believe they have found the ship that legendary explorer Capt. James Cook used to sail to around the world submerged somewhere in Rhode Island’s Newport Harbor.

The Rhode Island Marine Archaeolog­y Project, which is leading the search effort, said in a statement posted on its website that it is 80 to 100 percent sure that the remains of the HMS Endeavour is one of five sunken wrecks in the harbor.

Kathy Abbass, founder and executive director of the group, said on Tuesday she would not comment further until today, when she has scheduled a news conference in Providence to outline plans to confirm the wreck.

More than 200 years ago, the storied ship of legendary explorer Captain James Cook — the one he used to “discover” Australia’s East Coast — was scuttled by the British navy. Now marine archaeolog­ists believe they’ve found it off Rhode Island in Newport Harbor.

The Rhode Island Marine Archaeolog­y Project is planning to announce today that it has likely located the HMS Endeavour — later known as the Lord Sandwich — one of 13 sunken ships lost when Newport was under siege in 1778, days before the Battle of Rhode Island during the American Revolution.

Marine archaeolog­ists say they are now “closing in on one of the most important shipwrecks in world history” — pinpointin­g its whereabout­s to a cluster of five ships.

“All of the 13 ships lost in Newport during the Revolution are important to American history,” the group said in a statement, “but it will be a national celebratio­n in Australia when RIMAP identifies the Lord Sandwich ex Endeavour.”

Researcher­s with the Rhode Island Marine Archaeolog­y Project, a nonprofit organizati­on that studies maritime history and marine archaeolog­y sites, used historic documents in London to map out and analyze sites where the ship might be found on the sea floor.

Recent data analysis shows that there is an 80 to 100 percent chance the ship is still in the harbor.

“Because the Lord Sandwich was Capt. Cook’s Endeavour,” the group said, “that means RIMAP has found her, too.”

Cook, whom some have called “the greatest explorer in history,” was from a village near Middlesbro­ugh in North Yorkshire, England, according to a historical profile from the BBC.

Cook learned the world’s waters while serving in the Royal Navy, according to the BBC. In the mid-1700s, he was named the commander of the HMS Endeavour and sent on a scientific voyage in the Pacific Ocean.

From 1768 to 1780, he went on three voyages around the world, during which time he encountere­d Australia’s southeaste­rn coast and claimed it for Britain, according to the BBC.

A handwritte­n letter believed to be penned by Cook after his first trip to Australia was discovered in 2002, BBC News reported at the time. It let the Admiralty know he had returned safely from his threeyear voyage to New Zealand, East Australia and Tahiti.

After that first voyage, Cook’s ship was sold to a private individual and renamed the Lord Sandwich.

It was chartered to the British transport service to carry troops during the American Revolution, according to the Rhode Island Marine Archaeolog­y Project.

The Atlantic reported that during a British navy attack in Narraganse­tt Bay, the vessel was scuttled and used as a blockade to stop French ships, which had come to help the Americans, from reaching American lands.

The Rhode Island Marine Archaeolog­y Project said researcher­s are working to confirm a fifth shipwreck site and determine which ship is located where. The group said that the next phase “will require a more intense study of each vessel’s structure and its related artifacts.”

 ?? MARK BAKER, FILE/AP PHOTO ?? In this April 17, 2005, file photo, the replica of the Endeavour lies at anchor after it was removed from a sandbar in Botany Bay, Sydney, Australia.
MARK BAKER, FILE/AP PHOTO In this April 17, 2005, file photo, the replica of the Endeavour lies at anchor after it was removed from a sandbar in Botany Bay, Sydney, Australia.

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