They need help IDing boat

hemidoc

Petty Officer 3rd Class
Joined
Jul 14, 2008
Messages
86
From the AJC(dot)com
When the waves from Hurricane Ike receded, they left behind a mystery ? a ragged shipwreck that archeologists say could be a two-masted Civil War schooner that ran aground in 1862 or another ship from some 70 years later.

The wreck, about six miles from Fort Morgan, had already been partially uncovered when Hurricane Camille cleared away sand in 1969.

AP Photo/Press-Register, Guy Busby

People look over the wreck of a wooden ship uncovered by Hurricane Ike on a beach on Fort Morgan Road in Fort Morgan, Ala.NATION/WORLD

Researchers at the time identified it as the Monticello, a battleship that partially burned when it crashed trying to get past the U.S. Navy and into Mobile Bay during the Civil War.

After examining photos of the wreck post-Ike, Museum of Mobile marine archaeologist Shea McLean agreed it is likely the Monticello, which ran aground in 1862 after sailing from Havana, according to Navy records.

?Based on what we know of ships lost in that area and what I?ve seen, the Monticello is by far the most likely candidate,? McLean said. ?You can never be 100 percent certain unless you find the bell with ?Monticello? on it, but this definitely fits.?

Other clues indicate it could be an early 20th century schooner that ran aground on the Alabama coast in 1933.

The wrecked ship is 136.9 feet long and 25 feet wide, according to Mike Bailey, site curator at Fort Morgan, who examined it this week. The Monticello was listed in shipping records as 136 feet long, McLean told the Press-Register of Mobile.

But Bailey said a 2000 report by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers determined the remains were the schooner Rachel, built at Moss Point, Miss., in 1919 and wrecked near Fort Morgan in 1933.

He said the wreckage appears to have components, such as steel cables, that would point to the Rachel rather than an 1860s schooner.

Glenn Forest, another archaeologist who examined the wreck, said a full identification would require an excavation.

?It?s a valuable artifact,? he said. ?They need to get this thing inside before it falls apart or another storm comes along and sends it through those houses there like a bowling ball.?

Meanwhile, curious beach-goers have been drawn to the remains of the wooden hull filled with rusted iron fittings. Fort Morgan was used as Union forces attacked in 1864 during the Battle of Mobile Bay.

?It?s interesting, I can tell you that,? said Terri Williams. ?I?ve lived down here most of my life and I?ve never seen anything like this, and it?s been right here.?
 

SunTrackerPB21

Seaman Apprentice
Joined
Aug 15, 2008
Messages
41
Re: They need help IDing boat

>>The wreck, about six miles from Fort Morgan <<

I think that was the Fort depicted in the final "CHARGE" in the award winning movie, GLORY
 

JB

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
Mar 25, 2001
Messages
45,907
Re: They need help IDing boat

I will take a look at my records of blockade runners and see what I can learn about the ship. The early "runners" were mostly fast schooners so your ship would fit that time period. The later runners were purpose-built for speed and stealth. They were almost all steam powered with auxilary sails.

Interesting coincidence. In 1862 my great grandfather commanded the Union gunboat, Monticello, in the blockade of the NC coast around Wilmington.
 
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