Texarkana Gazette

Revolution­ary find

19 cannons in Georgia river likely sunk in 1779

- RUSS BYNUM

SAVANNAH, Ga. — A warehouse along the Savannah River is holding historical treasures that evidence suggests remained lost for more than 240 years — a cache of 19 cannons that researcher­s suspect came from British ships scuttled to the river bottom during the American Revolution.

The mud- and rust-encrusted guns were discovered by accident. A dredge scooping sediment from the riverbed last year as part of a $973 million deepening of Savannah’s busy shipping channel surfaced with one the cannons clasped in its metal jaws. The crew soon dug up two more.

Archaeolog­ists guessed they were possibly leftover relics from a sunken Confederat­e gunship excavated a few years earlier in the same area, said Andrea Farmer, an archaeolog­ist for the Army Corps of Engineers. But experts for the U.S. Navy found they didn’t match any known cannons used in the Civil War. Further research indicates they’re likely almost a century older and sank during the buildup to the Revolution­ary War’s bloody siege of Savannah in 1779.

In a time frame of just over a year, 19 cannons were hoisted from the same area of the river a few miles downstream from Savannah, where Georgia was founded as the last of Britain’s 13 American colonies in 1733.

“They’re in remarkably good shape,” Farmer said. “Many were buried in clay and covered by silt and debris that kind of protected them.”

Now officials with the U.S. and British government­s, as well as the state of Georgia, are working together on an agreement to preserve the newly found guns before putting them on display. Commodore Philip Nash of the British Royal Navy, a military attache based in Washington, viewed the artifacts submerged in metal tubs of water during a visit Thursday.

“Some of these pieces are in amazing condition and I’m sure could tell some stories,” Nash said.

The cannons are being kept in water to prevent further deteriorat­ion until experts can carefully clean them. Meanwhile, researcher­s are looking for more definitive proof linking the cannons to British ships from the American Revolution.

Farmer said researcher­s are very confident of the connection. Savannah had been under British occupation for about a year by the fall of 1779, when colonists planned an attack to retake the city with help from French and Haitian allies.

When French ships carrying troops were spotted off the Georgia coast, the British hurried to scuttle at least six ships in the Savannah River downstream from the city to block the French vessels. The land battle that followed was one of the bloodiest of the war. British forces killed nearly 300 colonial fighters and their allies, while wounding hundreds more.

Farmer said researcher­s suspect the cannons found in the river came from the British ship HMS Savannah and possibly a second ship scuttled at the same time, the HMS Venus. The longer guns appear to match cannons manufactur­ed in France during the mid-1700s, she said. Researcher­s are looking for ship logs and manifests in hopes of confirming the armaments aboard those ships.

It’s also possible the cannons themselves and other artifacts found at the site — pieces of anchors and a portion of a ship’s bell — once cleaned might bear markings or other clues to which ship they belonged to. The wood from those ships, Farmer said, decayed long ago or got destroyed by prior dredging projects over a series of decades.

The question of who owns the artifacts gets a little murky. They were found in state waters of Georgia during a dredging project headed by the Army Corps, a U.S. government agency. The British government could make an ownership claim if there’s strong evidence the artifacts came from British ships.

Farmer said all of those parties are working on an agreement to preserve the cannons and ultimately have them displayed at the Savannah History Museum, which incorporat­es the battlefiel­d where the bloodiest fighting occurred during the 1779 siege.

“Everybody wants to keep the artifacts in Savannah,” Farmer said, “because that makes the most sense.”

“They’re in remarkably good shape.

Many were buried in clay and covered

by silt and debris that kind of protected

them.”

— Andrea Farmer, an archaeolog­ist for the Army Corps

of Engineers

“Some of these pieces are in amazing

condition and I’m sure could tell some

stories.”

— Commodore

Philip Nash of the British Royal

Navy

 ?? (AP/Russ Bynum) ?? Commodore Philip Nash (left) of the British Royal Navy gets a briefing Thursday from U.S. Army Corps of Engineers archaeolog­ist Andrea Farmer in Savannah, Ga., about 19 cannons recovered from the Savannah River, that experts suspect came from one or more British ships scuttled in the river during the American Revolution in 1779.
(AP/Russ Bynum) Commodore Philip Nash (left) of the British Royal Navy gets a briefing Thursday from U.S. Army Corps of Engineers archaeolog­ist Andrea Farmer in Savannah, Ga., about 19 cannons recovered from the Savannah River, that experts suspect came from one or more British ships scuttled in the river during the American Revolution in 1779.
 ?? ?? A cannon encrusted in rust and mud sits Thursday inside a warehouse operated by the Army Corps of Engineers in Savannah.
A cannon encrusted in rust and mud sits Thursday inside a warehouse operated by the Army Corps of Engineers in Savannah.

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