HMS Fowey (1744)

HMS Fowey (1744)

HMS "Fowey" was a fifth rate frigate of the Royal Navy, launched on 14 August 1744 in Hull, England. She spent only four years in commission before she struck a reef and sank in what is known today as Legare Anchorage in Biscayne National Park, off the coast of Florida. She was armed with six, nine, and eighteen pounder guns and crewed with over 200 men.

History

She was initially built to carry 20 guns, and was commanded from her commissioning until 1747 by Captain Policarpus Taylor, who would later rise to the rank of Rear Admiral. "Fowey" was first active in the English Channel and the waters off Gibraltar. Her first engagement was with the French ship "Mentor", whilst escorting merchants from Jamaica to Great Britain. She captured the "Mentor" and took her as a prize. In 1745, she was rearmed to carry 44 guns, and later that year engaged the French ship "Griffon", which was wrecked in the ensuing battle.

Later, in 1746 "Fowey" escorted troop transports to the recently captured Fortress of Louisbourg on Cape Breton in Nova Scotia. For most of her career "Fowey" was assigned to a split duty station cruising the coast of North America from South Carolina to Boston during the summer and operating out of Port Antonio, Jamaica and the Caribbean in the winter. On November 2, 1747 Policarpus Taylor was reassigned to HMS "Warwick", and was replaced by Captain Francis William Drake.

In June of 1748, "Fowey" captured a Spanish ship, the "St. Judea". While escorting this prize and two British colonial merchant vessels to her summer duty station off Virginia, "Fowey" ran onto a reef and sank on 26 June. The English crew crowded onto the merchant vessels and navigated the hostile waters of Spanish Florida to Charleston. The crew of the "St. Judea" were given their parole and sailed for Havana.

Discovery and Litigation

Two hundred and twenty-seven years would pass before the remains of the "Fowey" would be identified in 1975 by archaeologist George Fischer of the National Park Service. Four years later in 1979 a sport diver from Miami requested title in Admiralty Court to a "wrecked and abandoned sailing vessel with Legare Anchorage in Biscayne National Park." At this time the Abandoned Shipwreck Act was a decade in the future. [ [http://www.nps.gov/archeology/submerged/intro.htm Abandoned Shipwreck Act] ] The United States intervened in the lawsuit as the defendant seeking title, arguing that the shipwreck was public property in a National Park and, as such should be preserved as a part of the Nation's patrimony. In 1983, the United States won the case. The court decision constituted a landmark in United States historic shipwreck preservation case law. It stated that the remains of HMS "Fowey" were an archaeological site, not a ship in terms of Admiralty salvage; that the site was in no peril and did not need rescuing by the salvor; and that the site is public property and a part of the United States' heritage which ought to be managed in the best interests of the public rather than privately salvaged and sold for profit.

tudy

In the twenty five years since the wreck was identified, HMS "Fowey" has been broadly studied in the surviving documentary records of the United States, Canada, and Great Britain and has been the subject of three National Park Service field projects. The largest and best documented of these was conducted in 1983. Evidence of the wreck's function as a Royal Naval vessel include iron ballast blocks and guns, and copper gunpowder barrel hoops marked with the Broad Arrow denoting ownership by the crown. Its cultural affiliation is further denoted by the presence of English-made pewter, glass, and ceramic tablewares.

References

*Skowronek, Russell K. 2002. "HMS Fowey". Encyclopedia of Historical Archaeology, Charles E. Orser, editor. Routledge, London.
* [http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~bldr/fowey.html A history of HMS Fowey] .

External links

* [http://www.anthro.fsu.edu/research/uw/research/ships/fowey/fowey.html The Excavation of HMS Fowey]

Further reading

*Skowronek, Russell K. and George R. Fischer (2009) "HMS Fowey Lost and Found: Being the Discovery, Excavation, and Identification of a British Man-of-War Lost off the Cape of Florida in 1748". University Press of Florida, Gainesville.
*Skowronek, R.K., R. E. Johnson, R. H. Vernon and G. R. Fischer (1987) [http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1095-9270.1987.tb00606.x "The Legare Anchorage Shipwreck Site-Grave of HMS Fowey"] . International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 16(4):313-324.
*May, W.E. (1958) "The Wreck of HMS Fowey". Mariner's Mirror 44(1):320-324.
*Skowronek, R.K. (1984) "Archaeological Testing and Evaluation of the Legare Anchorage Shipwreck Site, Biscayne National Park, Summer 1983". Southeast Archeological Center, National Park Service, Tallahassee, FL.
*Skowronek, R.K. (1985) "Sport Divers and Archaeology: The Case of the Legare Anchorage Ship Site". Archaeology Magazine 38(3):22-27.
*Skowronek, R.K. (1997) "Hurricane Uncovers 18th-Century Wreck". Naval History 11(1):14.


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