MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail
Sign in to Windows Live ID Web Search:   
go to MSNGroups 
Free Forum Hosting
 
Important Announcement Important Announcement
The MSN Groups service will close in February 2009. You can move your group to Multiply, MSN’s partner for online groups. Learn More
The HeatherMyst[email protected] 
  
What's New
  
  Welcome To Our New Home!  
  Our Simple Rules  
  January Newsletter  
  SAY HELLO 2009  
  Say Hello! 2008  
  Please Vote For Us  
  And Post it Here  
  THE DAILY CLICK  
  ~*Prayers*~  
  CANDLE SHRINE  
  TOPIC OF THE MONTH  
  Welcomes  
  Who I Am  
  Birthdays  
  ~*Messages*~  
  Pictures  
  Buddhism  
  Christian  
  Druids  
  Hinduism  
  Jewish  
  Native American  
  Paganism  
  Shamanism  
  Unitarian  
  Wicca  
  Witchcraft  
  British Customs  
  Witch Trials  
  Affirmation  
  Angel & Guides  
  Archeology  
  BOOK OF SHADOWS  
  Book Of Shadows  
  Altar/Tools  
  Amulets&Charms  
  Apothecary  
  Auras & Chakras  
  Candle Magick  
  Chants-Mantras  
  CleanseConsecrat  
  Correspondences  
  Craft Basics 101  
  Crystals /Stones  
  DIVINATION  
  Elemental Magick  
  Gods/Goddess  
  ProtectionSpells  
  Rituals  
  Smudging  
  Spells  
  Symbols  
  Types of Magick  
  Witchy Crafts  
  CELESTIAL  
  Astrology/Zodiac  
  Moon/Lunar info  
  The Planets  
  The Sun  
  Daily OM  
  Higher Awareness  
  Empaths/Empathy  
  Famous Witches  
  Famous Women  
  Feng Shui  
  GREENWITCH  
  Apothecary  
  Flowers/Plants  
  Gardening  
  GreenWitch 101  
  Herbs  
  House Plants  
  Incense-Oils  
  Magickal Herbs  
  Organic/Natural  
  Tips & Tricks  
  Trees & TheEarth  
  The Environment  
  Earth News  
  HEALTH & BEAUTY  
  Aromatherapy  
  Beauty Tips  
  Death and Dying  
  Health/Healing  
  Good 4 U? NOPE!  
  Meditation  
  Phoenix Circle  
  Reiki  
  Weight&Exercise  
  Yoga  
  KITCHEN WITCH  
  RECIPE BOX  
  VEGANS&VEGETARIANS  
  FoodFacts&Info-v  
  KRITTER KORNER  
  MYTHS & LEGENDS  
  Poems & Stories  
  Quotes  
  Guy Finley  
  New Kids  
  From T/ Universe  
  THE SABBATS  
  OTHER HOLIDAYS  
  Stone Circles  
  Readers  
  Request Reading  
    
    
  Links  
  Definitions  
  *~*Fun Pages*~*  
  Games  
  Giveaway o/t Day  
  Computer Tips  
  Hints & Tips  
  Jokes  
  Links2FunThings!  
  Movies  
  Music-Lyric&Info  
  Quizzes  
  Snags For All  
  ?~*WWO*~?  
  ~Life's Blueprint~  
  
  
  Tools  
 
Archeology : Navy still owns cannons found from 1846 wreck
Choose another message board
 
     
Reply
 Message 1 of 1 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameNatural_Wytch�?/nobr>  (Original Message)Sent: 3/8/2008 4:32 AM

Navy still owns cannons found from 1846 wreck


By Joseph B. Frazier - The Associated Press
Posted : Tuesday Mar 4, 2008 9:32:13 EST

PORTLAND, Ore. �?When beachcombers found two small cannons that likely came from the 1846 wreck of the Navy schooner Shark on the north Oregon coast, the state assumed it had some priceless artifacts. And for now, it does.

But the Navy reminded Oregon that if the cannons were Navy property back then, they’re Navy property now �?162 years notwithstanding.

There is no immediate sign the Navy will come get its guns, which are fairly rare. The shipwreck itself closed out a little-known chapter of naval history.

The Shark, an 86-foot-long schooner, sank outbound from the Columbia River, one of the world’s riskier river crossings.

One of its cannons was found in 1898. It is the namesake for Cannon Beach and is in the town’s history museum.

Chris Havel, of the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department, acknowledged that the Navy owns the guns.

“Federal law says part of a warship, no matter how old, belongs to the federal government,�?Havel said. “There is no conflict [of ownership].�?/P>

Nehalem Bay State Park interpretive ranger Shelley Parker said she is unaware of any attempt by the Navy to get the first one back. The other two are at the park undergoing early steps in preservation and restoration.

Robert Neyland, who heads the Navy’s Underwater Archaeological Branch at the Naval Historical Center in Washington, D.C., says the wreck of the Shark ended a brief but fascinating era in naval history.

The Shark and a few fast-sailing schooners like it were built in the 1820s to suppress slave traders and pirates. Most had short lives, and the Shark was the last of the lot.

“If the cannon turns out to be from the USS Shark, I foresee that the Navy and the state of Oregon would work together to preserve these guns and see that they are properly displayed and interpreted,�?Neyland said.

He said his office has considered looking for the Shark and ships of its class.

“It is an interesting period of naval history of which not much is known,�?he said. “The guns are pretty rare. If either one still has a firing mechanism, that would be extremely rare.�?/P>

The Navy’s interest now, he said, is seeing that the guns are properly handled and conserved.

“Any such guns are in high demand by museums,�?he said.

The Shark spent a month in the Fort Vancouver area near today’s Vancouver, Wash., with orders to “obtain correct information of that country and to cheer our citizens in that region by the presence of the American flag.�?Ownership of the region was still unresolved with Great Britain.

The crew survived after the Shark hit a sandbar.

Parker said the ship carried ten of the small but punchy “carronade�?cannons like the three found so far, and two larger “Long Tom�?guns.

The Shark was built in 1821, the first of seven Navy vessels to carry the name. One was a captured Confederate blockade runner, later renamed.

There were frequent shipwrecks along that part of the coast, but the guns found were of the type carried by the Shark, and archaeologists are assuming, absent other evidence, that’s where these came from.

Parker said the guns were discovered on exposed beach bedrock Feb. 16 and Feb. 19 after winter storms and low tides had removed sand.

She said it was remarkable they were recognized, since they had become heavily encrusted and resembled the surrounding rock.

Neyland said Oregon is correctly keeping the concretions, or encrustations, intact until an expert can remove them, and keeping the cannons covered in changing baths of water. He said the concretions can contain valuable archaeological matter.

He said they ultimately must be kept indoors and that the Navy would have a say about whether they went on loan to other museums.

Mike Petrone, of Tualatin, and his daughter, Miranda, found the first cannon. Sharisse Repp, also of Tualatin, found the second one.

State agencies are working with the Navy to determine the guns�?futures. Not many people are in the cannon restoration trade. But the Conversation Research Lab at Texas A&M has restored 22 over the past 10 years.

Lab manager Jim Jobling said the two new Arch Cape finds could undergo an 18-month stretch in an electrified bath of sodium hydroxide to leach out the salts.

They then would be boiled in de-ionized water, coated with tannic acid to give them their original black color, then coated to protect the finish.



First  Previous  No Replies  Next  Last