(NC Office of State Archaeology) |
Eventually, the finder tired of keeping it at home. A friend on Friday donated the “old piece of wood” -- which may have an exciting past -- to the state.
Experts are speculating it may have been used to fashion the hull of a Civil War blockade runner. There is no way to know for sure; it's possible the timber dates to the 20th century.
Assistant state archaeologist Stephen Atkinson, who wrote about the donation in a Facebook
post, tells the Picket the timber could be from a small coastal fishing and trading schooner. Such vessels were used to run the Union blockade on Southern ports.
Swift blockade runners carried a mix of war materiel and
goods to the port in exchange for exported cotton and other items.
The ships carried items to and from Europe, largely via the Bahamas and Bermuda.
The ships carried items to and from Europe, largely via the Bahamas and Bermuda.
Enterprising owners took the risk of running the gauntlet of
U.S. Navy ships trying to keep them away from vital ports, including Wilmington,
which is about 15 miles north of Kure Beach. But most of the runs succeeded and it was a lucrative business.
Wilmington was ideally situated for blockade-running. Located 28 miles
up the Cape Fear River, it was free from enemy bombardment as long as the forts
at the mouth of the river remained in Confederate hands.
In his post, first reported by the Charlotte Observer, Atkinson detailed
an initial analysis of the timber.
(NC Office of State Archaeology) |
“The sporadic
and numerous trunnel holes show that the vessel may have been planked and
replanked numerous times, suggesting a long working life. Finally, the wild and
tight grain appears to be live oak, which lends to the resiliency of the timber
throughout time, regardless of the huge knot in it, and also could indicate
local construction. All of this fits the bill of a coastal trading schooner,
used in North Carolina for a lengthy span of time for activities from fishing
to running blockades in the Civil War.”
(NC Office of State Archaeology) |
Assistant
state archaeologist Nathan Henry told the Picket such schooners were called “corn
crackers” and were used to haul farm produce to Wilmington.
“During the Civil War, small schooners were occasionally used for coasting voyages to the Bahamas to acquire salt for sale in the blockaded states," Henry said. "There are numerous accounts in the ORN of schooners being caught, or nearly caught in route by the blockaders. Invariably when the Navy visited the smaller towns adjacent the inlets, small schooners were discovered.” (ORN is an abbreviation for "Official Records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion.")
Interestingly, few blockade runners were owned by Southern entrepreneurs.
“During the Civil War, small schooners were occasionally used for coasting voyages to the Bahamas to acquire salt for sale in the blockaded states," Henry said. "There are numerous accounts in the ORN of schooners being caught, or nearly caught in route by the blockaders. Invariably when the Navy visited the smaller towns adjacent the inlets, small schooners were discovered.” (ORN is an abbreviation for "Official Records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion.")
Interestingly, few blockade runners were owned by Southern entrepreneurs.
The trade “was monopolized by English and Scottish merchants who had ships and
capital to invest in this hazardous but lucrative trade,” according to NCPedia.com. “British firms dispatched both luxury items and war matériel to
the West Indies in regular merchant ships for transfer to blockade-runners,
which would arrive in port loaded with cotton.”
In mid-1863, the Confederacy ordered captains to carry 50
percent in war goods, such as uniforms, rifles, artillery and munitions.
The Cape Fear Shipwreck District contains the remains of 21 Civil War-era ships, 15 of which
were steam-powered blockade runners, according to the state. Among the wrecks
is the Agnes E. Fry, site of dives
and research in recent years.
Wreck of the Agnes E. Fry (NCDNCR) |
The other five wrecks are four Union military vessels and one
Confederate ship.
“Nowhere in the world is there a comparable
concentration of vessel remains,” says the Office of State Archaeology.
(NC Office of State Archaeology) |
“The majority of the blockade runners were lost when they
were stranded along the beach or on inlet shoals and sank in shallow waters.
Upon wrecking, a vessel became the focus of furious attempts to save it and its
cargo,” according to the Office of State Archaeology.
“The Federals had the
decided advantage in efforts to recover the total vessel since they could
approach from the sea with tugboats. The Confederates concentrated on a wreck's
cargo, which was not only more important to their specific needs but could be
unloaded with ease onto the beaches which they controlled.”
Officials say the remains of these vessels help tell the
story of the transition from sail to steam and from wood to iron.
(January 2021: I asked Stephen Atkinson, assistant state archaeologist, for an update.
His reply: “Seeing as the timber was/is in stable condition and an
isolated/out-of-context donation, no further research is being pursued at this
time as our office has since shifted to other emerging finds and donations.”)
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