Yorkshire Post

Row over Captain Cook ‘shipwreck’

Australian National Maritime Museum says Endeavour has been found: US firm calls for more research

- VICTORIA FINAN SOCIAL AFFAIRS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: victoria.finan@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

IT SET sail on a voyage that still evokes notions of adventure and discovery over 250 years later.

And yesterday Australian maritime archaeolog­ists and historians who have been searching for the wreck of Captain Cook’s ship HMS Endeavour – built and launched in Whitby – said they believe they have discovered it off the coast of America.

They say they have identified the resting place of the vessel just 500 yards off the coast of Rhode Island.

The Australian National Maritime Museum said it is “confident” that the vessel is the Endeavour, which was sunk in 1778 during the American War of Independen­ce.

It follows a 22-year investigat­ion into a number of 18th century wrecks.

The museum’s chief executive, Kevin Sumption, told reporters in Sydney: “We can conclusive­ly confirm that this is indeed the wreck of Cook’s Endeavour.

“This is an important moment. It is arguably one of the most important vessels in our maritime history.”

But just hours after the announceme­nt, researcher­s from a different organisati­on based in Rhode Island questioned the claims, citing them as “premature” and linking them to “Australian emotions and politics.”

The executive director of Rhode Island Marine Archaeolog­y Project (RIMAP), Dr Kathy Abbass, told Guardian Australia: “There are many unanswered questions that could overturn such an identifica­tion [of the shipwreck as being the Endeavour].

“RIMAP recognises the connection between Australian citizens of British descent and the Endeavour.

“RIMAP’s conclusion­s will be driven by proper scientific process and not Australian emotions or politics.” She added RIMAP was the lead organisati­on for the study.

In a statement on the Australian National Maritime Museum website, museum CEO

Mr Sumption announced: “It is with great pride that after a 22year programme of archival and archaeolog­ical fieldwork that, based on a prepondera­nce of evidence approach, I have concluded that an archaeolog­ical

site known as RI 2394, located in Newport Harbour, Rhode Island, USA, comprises the shipwreck of HM

Endeavour.”

Since 1999, maritime archaeolog­ists had been investigat­ing several 18th century ships in the underwater site.

The findings, which are the joint work of the Australian National Maritime Museum, RIMAP and the Silentworl­d Foundation, will now

We can conclusive­ly confirm that this is the wreck of Endeavour. Australian National Maritime Museum chief executive Kevin Sumption.

be published and peer-reviewed by archaeolog­ists from around the globe.

“But for now, there’s a lot confidence that Endeavour has finally been found,” Mr Sumption said.

The ship was deliberate­ly sunk in 1778 in Newport Harbour by British forces.

The sinking came around eight years after its key role in Cook’s first voyage to the Pacific, which saw the captain chartering the New Zealand coast and the east coast of Australia – where it narrowly avoided shipwreck on

the Great Barrier Reef.

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 ?? PICTURES: AP/MARK BAKER/ DANNY LAWSON/PA/HULTON ?? RECREATION: Left and inset below, a replica of the Endeavour in Botany Bay, Sydney, in 2005; above, a replica of the ship in Whitby in 2018 – the original was built in the town; below, Captain James Cook.
PICTURES: AP/MARK BAKER/ DANNY LAWSON/PA/HULTON RECREATION: Left and inset below, a replica of the Endeavour in Botany Bay, Sydney, in 2005; above, a replica of the ship in Whitby in 2018 – the original was built in the town; below, Captain James Cook.

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