part of wooden old ship "washes ashore" in South Florida

Au_Dreamers

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part of wooden old ship "washes ashore" in Northeast Florida

https://www.local10.com/news/florid...bly-from-1700s-washes-ashore-on-florida-beach

https://www.wptv.com/news/state/researchers-study-old-wooden-ship-remains-on-florida-beach

"Beach officials are attempting to remove the hull before high tides arrives." Ummmmmmm

Accurate news...."reports the size of the ship is estimated to be 40-feet long.....

"A 48-foot section of an old sailing ship"
 

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stevemc

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Very North East Florida. Punta Vedra Beach. They think they know what vessel it was now. Looks pretty old from some of the close up pictures.
 

stevemc

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I have seen pictures of this same thing in the past. Looks almost the same. Same place.
 

OP
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A

Au_Dreamers

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Thanks Steve. My friend that sent me the info had originally said Dania, FL so I still had South FL in my head.

Locals have probably known about it for a few hundred years.

Guess LAMP will pull a grant to study it!! haha
 

Diver_Down

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Actually, this is a "new" wreck that was washed in. It is theorized that it was encased in the sand at sea and with the recent Nor'Easters (seriously Porpoise Point is nearly gone) and hurricanes that the overburden had been moved and the currents moved it from it's resting place. Likely from the 17-1800s with the construction. One cool feature is the roman numerals that are carved into the wooden ribs. The idea that it was a "part no." in the assembly of the hull. They are trying to move it up the beach and out of the surf zone. I suspect that there will be no funding for any conservation effort and eventually they will bury it up by the dune line if they do manage to move it.

There has been another shipwreck in the same area that is near the dune line. It is uncovered from time to time as a result of beach erosion. It remains entombed there with the idea that covering it with sand is the best conservation.
 

Simon1

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Imagine the shock for beach goers who walk that beach daily to all of a sudden find this. It is amazing that it still is in the condition it is in. Only thing better would be if it was from 1715 :icon_thumleft:
 

huntsman53

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According to the Reporter in the video at the second link, it cannot be moved until they get approval from the State of Florida who he says owns the wreckage. My question is, how did it become property of the State? It was found by a boy and his' mom between the high water and low water lines on the beach and it was not attached to anything per Florida's own definition and was not removed by the boy and his' mom by any means such as blowers, dredges or anything else. Maybe I am overthinking this or there is some info I am not aware of which makes it the property of Florida, so any comments are welcome!
 

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Blak bart

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IMG_0038.jpg
IMG_0037.jpg
Heres a couple pics my buddy sent me. He lives right there.
 

Diver_Down

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Black Bart - I presume your buddy is Marc?

For others that have Facebook and want to view an album detailing the construction and roman numeral markings, search for "Spanish Main Antiques". Marc Anthony is the owner.
 

Blak bart

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Black Bart - I presume your buddy is Marc?

For others that have Facebook and want to view an album detailing the construction and roman numeral markings, search for "Spanish Main Antiques". Marc Anthony is the owner.

I do not no marc but my friend and him are buddy's.
 

ARC

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To answer to your question Huntsman...

It is within "state property"... The water line rule does not apply on "park" property.

This is what I can hear in my mind.
 

huntsman53

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To answer to your question Huntsman...

It is within "state property"... The water line rule does not apply on "park" property.

This is what I can hear in my mind.

So the wreckage landed in a State Park? I checked Google Maps but could not find a State Park noted in that area but we all know how good or bad Google Maps can often be!
 

WaveJunky757

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I would think the Roman Numerals are a dead giveaway to what this vessel might be... of course to someone that knows the research/history. Pretty neat. Side note rant: I find it amusing people getting bent out of shape about what the state does, we should all know by now like AARC said, they do whatever they want whenever they want. Until we all seriously band together and try to make changes, it's just business as usual. Hope everyone has a Good Friday. On my way to detect some OBX beaches, been cut way down.
 

Diver_Down

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So the wreckage landed in a State Park? I checked Google Maps but could not find a State Park noted in that area but we all know how good or bad Google Maps can often be!

It is actually South Ponte Vedra. The "park" is the GTMNERR - Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve. A large tract of land that is managed by the Federal DEP. While where it rests is not in the "park", the state does what it wants.
 

franklin

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According to the Reporter in the video at the second link, it cannot be moved until they get approval from the State of Florida who he says owns the wreckage. My question is, how did it become property of the State? It was found by a boy and his' mom between the high water and low water lines on the beach and it was not attached to anything per Florida's own definition and was not removed by the boy and his' mom by any means such as blowers, dredges or anything else. Maybe I am overthinking this or there is some info I am not aware of which makes it the property of Florida, so any comments are welcome!

Anything historical belongs to the State or to the Federal Government.
 

Salvor6

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Anything historical belongs to the State or to the Federal Government.

Then why is it you can metal detect the beach and keep any historical coins you find?
 

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