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A Sampling of North Carolina's
Archaeological Sites 
The
Cape Fear Shipwreck District
Volume 1, Number 1
of the FNCA Newsletter reported that the Underwater Archaeology
Unit at Kure Beach was working on a National Register of Historic
Places nomination of Civil War period vessels off the coast of Brunswick,
New Hanover and Pender counties. Their efforts have resulted in
the Cape Fear Civil War Shipwreck District, which was listed in
the National Register on December 23, 1985. The district consists
of the wrecks of 21 Civil War vessels. Fifteen wrecks are steampowered
blockade runners. They represent each key step in the evolution
of the classic Civil War blockade runner. Furthermore, these 15
wrecks represent nearly 20% of all steam blockade runners lost during
the Civil War. The wreck of a British bark attempting to run the
blockade is also a part of this group. No where in the world is
there a comparable concentration of vessel remains.
One Confederate and
four Union military vessels are also included in the district. Although
not nearly as significant in terms of percentage of overall Civil
War naval losses, this group represents a good crosssection of ships
used in conjunction with blockade running activities. Two bar tenders,
an ex-blockade runner and an ironclad are part of the military wreck
assemblage.
Beginning in 1861,
Union ships blockaded southern ports to prevent the delivery of
military supplies from abroad. Since the South was so heavily dependent
upon foreign goods, it was soon apparent that some means of successfully
penetrating this blockade was essential. Large sailing ships were
too slow and the quicker schooners could not carry enough cargo
to make up for the risks involved in blockade running. What was
needed was a vessel that combined the qualities of speed, low freeboard,
large cargo capacities and shallow draft. The answer to these specific
needs was found in the paddle wheel steamers, which make up the
majority of vessels included in the district.
Although Wilmington
was not the most important port at the beginning of the Civil War,
after the fall of Charleston to Union troops in 1863, virtually
all major blockade running was focused on Wilmington. From this
time until the fall of Fort Fisher in January, 1865, Wilmington
was to have no rivals in the South as a center of trade and maritime
activity.
The majority of the
blockade runners were lost when they were stranded along the beach
or on inlet shoals and sank in shallow waters. Upon wrecking, a
vessel became the focus of furious attempts to save it and its cargo.
The Federals had the decided advantage in efforts to recover the
total vessel since they could approach from the sea with tugboats.
The Confederates concentrated on a wreck's cargo, which was not
only more important to their specific needs but could be unloaded
with ease onto the beaches which they controlled.
The physical remains
of these vessels embody important details concerning the transitions
in naval architecture and technology from sail to steam and from
wood to iron. Artifacts from these wrecks can shed light on military
and civilian activities during the Civil War and serve as tangible
reminders to highlight historical awareness.
The Cape Fear Civil
War Shipwreck District preserves a physical record of an important
part of United States history. The shipwrecks within it provide
the means to more fully understand the Civil War period through
the development and utilization of their historical, archaeological
and educational notential.
by: Dolores A. Hall, NC Office of State Archaeology
Reprinted by permission from the NEWSLETTER of
the Friends of North Carolina Archaeology, Inc., Spring 1986, Volume
2, Number 2. © North Carolina Archaeological Society 1986
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