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Siege of Charleston expedition to find Hunley and survey
for other Civil Warships. June, 1981.
We came back with a more extensive search program in
'81, concentrating on covering a sixteen square mile
grid between the remains of the Housatonic and Breech
Inlet. During this project, Alan Albright, chief state
archaeologist with the U. of South Carolina, generously
loaned an outboard boat, equipment and the services
of two damned fine men, Ralph Wilbanks and Rodney Warren,
who proved indispensable.
The research had gone on nonstop during the year. I
was determined to locate as many Civil War shipwrecks
as possible. The plan was to conduct two ongoing projects;
the search for the Hunley and a survey for nearly ten
other ships that sank in Charleston during the Civil
War.
While the small boat mowed the lawn over the Hunley
grid, our large boat, skippered by Harold Stauber, carried
the divers and dredging equipment and used its free
time looking for other sites. (The list of ships and
their locations, if found, are included at the end of
this section along with the paper presented to the 13th
Conference on Underwater Archaeology by Bob Browning
and Wilson West, who worked tirelessly during the project.)
Nearly everybody associated with NUMA showed up for
this search, including our President, Admiral Bill Thompson.
Schob, Gronquist, Shea, the Goodwins, Dirk and Barbara,
the mini-ranger people from Motorola, Bill Hatcher and
Dave Graham and Bill O'Donnell, all returned. Erick
Schonstedt came and set up his fine gradiometer. Everyone
stayed at a house we rented on Sullivan's Island.
After studying our data from the previous year, we
came up with a few new tactics. For one, we put the
mini-ranger transponder on the boat and left the operators
on shore. They sat in a comfortable van on the beach
and simply directed the helmsman of the University's
boat by radio. This proved very efficient and a hell
of a lot more comfortable.
Another revelation I discovered when we hit on the
Keokuk and Weehawken was the longitude meridians on
pre-nineteen century nautical charts run 400 yards west
of present day charts. A difference probably due to
today's more accurate timekeeping. This becomes apparent
if you compare 52 degrees north. It used to pass through
Cummings Point. Now, even allowing for decades of erosion,
it passes to the east in the channel waters.
No doubt the reason many of the wrecks around Charleston
had not been found was because of this quarter mile
discrepancy.
Relying on the mini-ranger, we painstaking blocked
off a grid over the Keokuk's position and found nothing.
This failure to find any sign of the ironclad seemed
unacceptable. I had overlaid and traced the eastern
shore of Morris Island, measuring the erosion over 140
years. The light house that once stood on land now rose
out of the water 400 yards from shore. And yet, judging
the distance of our search area from the lighthouse
by eye, it struck me that the beach seemed too far away
from where Boutelle marked the Keokuk.
I instructed the mini-ranger operators on shore to
take us directly over the supposed site on a course
due west toward the island. Then, when I gave the word,
we would turn and begin another grid search.
One hundred yards, two hundred. The guys in the van
kept asking me when we were going to turn. Three hundred.
The lighthouse loomed nearer. Finally, at three hundred
and sixty yards I gave the order to swing around on
a reverse course. Then the Schonstedt gradiometer sang.
We struck the Keokuk in the turn.
We then moved to the Weehawken's marked position and
applied the same maneuver and found her three hundred
and twenty yards to the west of where Boutelle said
she rested.
Applying the same data, we also homed in on the Stonewall
Jackson, Norseman, Ruby, and the Raccoon, which Boutelle
mislabeled the Georgiana.
If you should find yourself in Charleston and wish
to research the naval actions and later disposition
of sunken ships, be sure to read Benjamin Maillefert's
diaries in the Charleston city archive in the Fireproof
Building. He salvaged most all the wrecks in the area
and provides fascinating insight on the operations.
It was one his references that showed me the wreck marked
as the Georgiana was actually the blockade runner Raccoon.
Though we failed to find the Hunley again, we hardly
left Charleston empty handed. A good time was had by
all and we made a number of interesting discoveries.
Finds are recorded below in nautical positions in case
later expeditions do not use mini-ranger coordinates.
KEOKUK
About three quarters of a mile east and slightly north
of the old lighthouse. Four feet under silt, lying north
and south.
32 41' 44"
79 51' 54"
WEEHAWKEN
Famous monitor, only one to fight and capture another
ironclad: the CSS Atlanta. Seems quite broken up at
least eight feet under silt. Lying on slight angle north
and south.
32 43' 02"
79 51' 11"
PATAPSCO
Sunk by Confederate mine between Forts Sumter and Moultrie.
Sitting upright in scoured channel at forty feet. Easily
dived.
32 45' 12"
79 51' 58"
ACTEON
Heavy mag readings over site were British frigate was
burned and sunk in 1776.Short distance from Patapsco.
32 44' 48"
79 51' 44
RUBY
Confederate blockade runner run aground off Folly Island.
32 40' 57"
79 53' 03"
RACCOON
Confederate blockade runner, sunk west of present day
jetty. Mislabeled on old charts as Georgiana.
32 44' 35"
79 50' 10"
RATTLESNAKE
Confederate blockade runner destroyed few hundred yards
southeast of Breech Inlet.
32 46' 25"
79 48' 13"
STONEWALL JACKSON
Confederate blockade runner run aground and burned.
Now eighteen feet under the beach on Isle of Palms just
south of the dunes at the end of either 24th, 25th,
or 26th streets. Sorry about that. I marked the position
but not the street. My hope is that someday the city
or state will excavate her. One of the luckiest finds
I ever made. By extreme luck I set the gradiometer right
on top of the wreck in the first five minutes as I tried
to adjust the instrument.
32 46' 42"
79 48' 03"
NORSEMAN
Blockade runner run high and dry in 1865. Now about
a hundred yards from the beach.
32 47' 23"
79 46' 10"
HOUSATONIC
The Union sloop-or-war sunk by the Hunley. Has the
sad distinction of being the first warship ever sunk
by a submarine. Her scattered debris lies in the vicinity
of...
32 43' 07"
79 48' 17"
CHARLESTON & CHICORA
Confederate ironclads. Anchored side by side in the
channel, they were blown and sunk when the city fell
to Union troops. I pinpointed their final position,
but a search turned up nothing. The site has been heavily
dredged by the Army Corp of Engineers over the past
century, and as with so many other historic ships they
have been dredged out of existence. They were last recorded
at...
32 47' 29"
79 55' 21"
PALMETTO STATE
Confederate ironclad blown and sunk the same time as
the Charleston and the Chicora. We had a very heavy
strike along side and under the docks between warehouse
#8 and the warehouse next door to the south. This site
should definitely be surveyed. Benjamin Maillefert states
in his diaries that he didnt salvage the Palmetto
State as heavily as he did the other shipwrecks.
32 47' 47"
79 56' 22"
GREAT STONE FLEET
A fleet of whalers, some quite famous, one or two dating
from the Revolutionary War, deliberately scuttled by
Union Navy to block entrance to Charleston Harbor. The
project failed due to worms attacking the exposed hulls
and the weight of the stone ballast pushing the ships
deep into the soft silt. We received many strikes in
the area where they sank, but dives found nothing protruding.
32 39' 55"
79 50' 20"
SWAMP ANGEL
Site of famous cannon that fired on Charleston before
exploding is still discernable on Bass Creek due to
vegetation.
32 43' 10"
79 53' 25"
WEEHAWKEN'S TORPEDO RAFT
During the battle of Charleston between Admiral Dahlgren's
monitor fleet and the Confederate forts, the Weehawken
led the Union squadron into the harbor with a huge wooden
anti-mine raft attached to its bow. The weight and drag
made the monitor completely unmanageable and the raft
was cast adrift. Although it's been sitting in the reeds
along the north bank of Bass Creek all these years,
we were the first to identify it.
32 43' 30"
79 53' 25"
As of November, 1987, I or my NUMA crew have not returned
to Charleston. But someday I may come back with our
side scan sonar to survey the harbor. I've always suspected
the Confederate's floating battery, used against Fort
Sumter in the opening shots of the war, is lying somewhere
northwest of Fort Johnson. And, of course, there is
still the Hunley. It would be a shame not to make another
attempt to find her. Who knows? With any luck NUMA might
be able to add a nice postscript to the story.
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