Friday, November 5, 2021

Archaeologists find even more old cannons in the Savannah River. They hope to solve the mystery of their origin and history

Will Wilson and Jeffrey Pardee during Oct. 12 dive (USACE Savannah)
The Savannah River is proving to be a graveyard for military cannons.

Following the February discovery in Savannah, Ga., of three artillery pieces that may date to the mid-1700s, archaeologists last month came across more artifacts.

“We were able to confirm two additional cannon that we knew about before. We found what we believe to be another cannon -- a very small cannon. We found what may be the muzzle of another cannon,” Will Wilson, an archaeologist with Commonwealth Heritage Group, said in a video posted last week by the Savannah district of the US Army Corps of Engineers.

Corps district spokesman Billy Birdwell expects the artifacts recovery near Old Fort Jackson to conclude in the next couple weeks.

“Once the recovery efforts are completed, the cannons will be analyzed to determine more information, such as type, age, and use. All cannons are believed to predate the Civil War era,” Birdwell told the Picket in an email.


The Picket recently posted
 an article about sonar survey and dives that have occurred since the February discovery.

The most recent were on the remains of Confederate “cribs,” or obstructions, placed in the river to prevent a Federal attack during the Civil War.

So what’s the story with the cannons found this year? Were they carried on warships or dumped into the water at some point?

Some theorize the three pieces found in February may have been carried by the HMS Rose, a British warship that took part in the siege of Savannah during the Revolutionary War.

The Rose was scuttled so as to block the channel from French ships that might come to the aid of colonists trying to retake the city.

That find was in the general vicinity of where the Rebel ironclad CSS Georgia was scuttled in December 1864 during the Civil War. Most of the ironclad’s wreckage was removed a few years back as part of the Corps’ deepening of the Savannah harbor.

More than a half dozen CSS Georgia artillery pieces have been pulled up over the years, but there could be a few more still in the river. And it’s possible some of the cannons were used at Fort Jacksonwhich was constructed in the early 1800s, or elsewhere and later discarded. The CSS Georgia served as a floating battery near Fort Jackson.

The Corps and contractors will try to determine the cannons’ provenance.

Asked whether the cannons explored last month could have been carried by the CSS Georgia or another period warship, Birdwell wrote, “While I understand this is technically possible, we haven’t done anywhere near enough research to say yes or no or anything more than ‘eh, maybe. Maybe not.’”

During their dives in mid-October, archaeologists also found part of an anchor and a bar shot, a type of munition designed to destroy ship rigging. They were commonly used during the Revolutionary War. (Above, James Duff with bar shot, photo: USACE Savannah)

The video briefly describes diving in the Savannah River. Crews using sonar and other technology guide divers to potential artifacts 45 to 50 feet below. Visibility near the bottom can often be nil.

A CSS Georgia Dahlgren gun found in 2015 (USACE)
“You are basically like an astronaut,” said Commonwealth archaeologist Andy Derlikowski. “You have your hard hat on … It’s a lot of just running around the sea floor until you physically encounter something on the bottom to identify.”

Birdwell said discussions are continuing on the final disposition of the cannons and other recently recovered items.

The artifacts will be placed in temporary conservation while they are being analyzed, and decisions are still pending on potential conservation efforts,” he said.

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