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Two wrecks in a historic careenage: The case for identification of the Deadman’s Island and Town Point shipwrecks in Pensacola Bay, Florida
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Two wrecks in a historic careenage: The case for identification of the Deadman’s Island and Town Point shipwrecks in Pensacola Bay, Florida

Andrew Van Slyke, Della Scott-Ireton and Marianne Franklin
International Journal of Nautical Archaeology, Vol.50(1), pp.154-164
2021
Web of Science ID: WOS:000681251600001

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Abstract

The Deadman’s Island (8SR782) and Town Point (8SR983) shipwrecks are unidentified vessel remains that were archaeologically investigated and interpreted as small stripped and abandoned vessels from the British Occupational Period of Pensacola (1763–1781). The wrecks are located in an 18th-century British Royal Navy careenage called Old Navy Cove at the landform known as Deadman’s Island near Gulf Breeze, Florida. Contemporary documents, both reanalysed and rediscovered, may prove the Deadman’s Island Wreck to be HMS Florida, the last survey schooner of Royal Surveyor and Cartographer George Gauld, and the Town Point Wreck Florida’s attendant shallop.

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