Texarkana Gazette

Mystery shipwreck slowly gives up clues

- By Matt Soergel

ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. — In the late 1700s, this already old city was a remote outpost, an isolated frontier town stuck a good bit south of the middle of nowhere. So when a merchant ship appeared on the horizon, it must have been a welcome site for the city’s inhabitant­s — though they probably learned not to get too excited until it actually made it into town.

A fair number of incoming ships got stuck on the sandbars outside St. Augustine’s notoriousl­y difficult inlet, where they were broken up by waves and their cargo sent to the bottom.

That was the fate of a mysterious merchant vessel that for more than two centuries was hidden under the sand, all its valuable goods made useless, so close and yet far from the people who needed them. Such wrecks happened so often, accounts from the time say, that it got almost routine for those living ashore.

But what do you think the St. Augustinia­ns would have given for some of the peaches that were on board that ship? Marine archaeolog­ists exploring the wreck have found, among the cargo, a number of peach pits, remarkably well preserved — a clue that gives them at least some idea about the ship’s history.

Peaches: That probably means it originated in, or at least stopped at, Charleston or Savannah to pick up some of that region’s sweet fruit before making its fateful trip to St. Augustine.

Beyond that, there’s still a lot to learn about the Anniversar­y Wreck, so named because a crew from the St. Augustine Lighthouse Archaeolog­ical Maritime Program (LAMP) found it in 2015, the 450th anniversar­y of the city’s founding.

Divers, sometimes working in pitchblack conditions, have been bringing up small amounts of cargo since then, which has been painstakin­gly cleaned and then preserved in LAMP’s lab.

The findings have given up a couple of solid clues about the mystery ship.

One comes from a small piece of a Wedgwood plate, a certain style made in England beginning in 1765, making it the oldest merchant shipwreck found in this part of Florida, said Chuck Meide, LAMP’s director of maritime research.

Another clue comes from the nature of the cargo itself: big piles of the same items, found together, as if stacked under the ocean floor.

Cauldrons, barrels of iron hardware, brass tacks, pewter plates, cut stone blocks, bricks and tiles, shoe buckles, padlocks, doorknobs, clothing irons and pottery.

From that it’s clear the ship was a merchant vessel. “It’s just the sheer bulk, and everything is clumped together,” said Starr Cox, LAMP’s director of archeologi­cal preservati­on. “This is like stuff you would buy in bulk.”

Meide said the Anniversar­y Wreck gives a tangible look at what life was like in the late 18th century for those in the remote coastal city, where much of what they needed could only be brought by sea from far away.

“It gives us a great insight into consumer behavior here in St. Augustine — what it was like to be someone living in St. Augustine at this time period, through what they bought,” he said. “In the future, someone will probably want to look through Amazon records and see what people were buying. This is kind of like that. This is like finding a Walmart truck wrecked and preserved, hundreds of years in the future. This is the nitty-gritty. This is the stuff we know was coming into St. Augustine. This, presumably, was the stuff people asked for and wanted, and that merchants knew they could sell.”

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? ■ Starr Cox, director of archaeolog­ical conservati­on at the St. Augustine Lighthouse Archaeolog­ical Maritime Progam, holds a chunk of encrusted artifacts from the Anniversar­y Wreck. X-rays reveal the chunk contains a padlock, a keg key, tacks and other items.
Tribune News Service ■ Starr Cox, director of archaeolog­ical conservati­on at the St. Augustine Lighthouse Archaeolog­ical Maritime Progam, holds a chunk of encrusted artifacts from the Anniversar­y Wreck. X-rays reveal the chunk contains a padlock, a keg key, tacks and other items.

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