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A 19th century shipwreck reappears on Little Talbot Island near Jacksonville

 Archaeologists from St. Augustine's Lighthouse Archaeological Maritime Program team work on an 1800s shipwreck on Little Talbot Island.
Lighthouse Archaeological Maritime Program
Archaeologists from St. Augustine's Lighthouse Archaeological Maritime Program team work on an 1800s shipwreck on Little Talbot Island.

Tropical Storms Ian and Nicole uncovered an 1800s shipwreck on the beach where it was first discovered in 1987.

A hunk of wooden hull from the 1800s lies among wave-flattened grasses on a beach of Little Talbot Island, uncovered bit by bit by Tropical Storms Nicole and Ian.

Nearby rests the T-shaped remains of the ship's bow, more of its weathered wooden beams uncovered by a team from the Lighthouse Archaeological Maritime Program.

Wind and waves initially revealed the wreck's pieces in 1987, after decades buried in the sand on the barrier island north of Jacksonville. But after Ian in September and Nicole in November, the battered old hull's ribs reappeared, archaeologist Chuck Meide said.

 Lighthouse Archaeological Maritime Program staff work around one piece of the 18th Century shipwreck recently uncovered on Little Talbot Island.
Lighthouse Archaeological Maritime Program
Lighthouse Archaeological Maritime Program staff work around one piece of the 18th Century shipwreck recently uncovered on Little Talbot Island.

So back they went to the beachfront park off Heckscher Drive, this time trying to find out what this wreck might have been in its sailing days, he said.

"Over the last 30 years, it has been buried and exposed and reburied by storms, and has been moved by major hurricanes," Meide said. "LAMP came out to assess its condition after Hurricane Dorian, Ian and now Nicole. We are hoping to study the wreckage and see if we can narrow down the date range and geographic origins for the ship, and possibly its identity."

The Lighthouse Archaeological Maritime Program is the research arm of the St. Augustine Lighthouse and Museum, seeking and preserving the offshore history of the nation's oldest city. Started in 1996 by archaeologist John Morris and his team, the group's first underwater surveys targeted more than 50 possible wrecks around St. Augustine, founded by Spain in 1565.

 Wave-washed grasses and washed-up tree trunks surround the two parts of the 18th Century shipwreck recently revealed by storms on Little Talbot Island.
Lighthouse Archaeology Maritime Program
Wave-washed grasses and washed-up tree trunks surround the two parts of the 18th Century shipwreck recently revealed by storms on Little Talbot Island.

The team's first major discovery was the British sloop Industry, sunk in 1764 while entering St. Augustine's harbor inlet, then just south of the current lighthouse. They recovered numerous artifacts including a cannon and tools that never made it to St. Augustine's then-British outpost.

Since then, the LAMP team has investigated shipwrecks off the coast of Northeast Florida, from Cape Canaveral to the St. Marys River. Many artifacts recovered from ships found underwater or uncovered on beaches are conserved, then displayed at the lighthouse museum.

The St. Augustine Lighthouse & Museum is open 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. More information is available at staugustinelighthouse.org.

Copyright 2022 WJCT News 89.9. To see more, visit WJCT News 89.9.

Dan Scanlan
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