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Ocean deposits rudder from 1800s on beach

Associated Press
Published November 3, 2005


ST. AUGUSTINE - A 12-foot rudder from a ship that sank more than a century ago has been removed from Vilano Beach and taken to a nearby research center for study and display.

The rudder, believed to have come from a 130- to 160-foot-long sailing ship, washed ashore a few weeks ago.

On Tuesday, the half-ton artifact was removed from a sand dune and taken to the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve.

John Morris III, executive director of Southern Archaeological Services, wants to find out more about the ship the rudder may have come from.

"I will go back and look at all the notes I have accumulated ... (on) vessels close to this size and date," said Morris, who estimated the rudder was from a sinking in the mid to late 1800s.

Morris wants to try to find the rest of the wreck with sonar and a magnetometer in the spring.

The rudder, its lower half sheathed in weathered copper, appeared in the surf in early October.

Morris, who has worked the last decade investigating wrecks off St. Augustine, alerted the state and St. Johns County after examining it on Oct. 20.

Florida archaeological officials gave permission to move the rudder to the preserve.

"I didn't want this to end up as a coffee table," Morris said.

[Last modified November 3, 2005, 01:06:17]


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