Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Captain Kidd shipwreck becomes a Museum of the Sea

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Captain Kidd shipwreck becomes a Museum of the Sea

    Past Horizons Archaeology News
    May 8 2011



    Captain Kidd shipwreck becomes a Museum of the Sea


    Sunday, May 8, 2011

    Nearly three years after the discovery of the shipwrecked Quedagh
    Merchant, abandoned by the notorious Captain William Kidd, the
    underwater site will be dedicated as a `Living Museum of the Sea' by
    Indiana University archaeologist Charles Beeker, and the government of
    the Dominican Republic.

    The dedication as an official underwater museum will take place off
    the shore of Catalina Island in the Dominican Republic on May 23, the
    310th anniversary of Kidd's execution in London for his alleged
    `crimes of piracy.'


    Living museum of the sea
    Underwater plaques will help guide divers around the shipwreck site as
    well as relics and rare corals at two other shipwreck sites.

    The US Agency for International Development awarded Indiana University
    $200,000 to turn the Captain Kidd shipwreck site and two nearby
    existing underwater preserves into no-take, no-anchor Living Museums
    of the Sea. The ultimate aim is to protect history, protect corals,
    and preserve biodiversity in the surrounding reef systems.


    Diver completing coral restoration of endangered elkhorn coral
    (Acropora palmata). Courtesy of Indiana University.
    The underwater science team led by Beeker, has been working to
    preserve, analyse and document the Kidd shipwreck since its discovery
    in 2007. This unique museum, resting in less than 10 feet of water
    and a mere 70 feet from shore, will give divers the opportunity to see
    the 17th century ship remains, including several anchors, along with
    dozens of cannons, which now rest on the ocean's floor and serve as
    home to coral and sea creatures. Above water, terrestrial museums will
    benefit from artefacts that are on loan to Indiana University by the
    Dominican Republic government for the purpose of study and research.


    `As this ongoing multidisciplinary research continues,' Beeker said,
    `interest in the project has grown and new partnerships are
    developing, including the Peace Corps assigning their volunteers to
    the project, and the Consorcio Dominicano de Competitividad Turistica
    promoting the project as a sustainable tourism destination.'

    As the interest in eco-tourism and unique vacation destinations
    continues to grow, this Living Museum of the Sea is predicted to be a
    sought-after destination for those seeking underwater adventures
    combined with significant 17th century maritime history representative
    of the golden age of piracy in the Caribbean.

    Pirate or privateer
    There is still of course a debate on the status of Captain Kidd
    himself. In the 16th and 17th centuries, privateers enjoyed a
    successful trade around the world on warships that were privately
    owned, but had government approval and backing to attack enemy ships.
    The privateer would then share any booty with the government.

    William Kidd was born in Dundee, Scotland, in 1654, the son of John
    Kidd a seaman, and his wife Bessie Butchart.

    During the war between England and France in the 1690ēs, Kidd became a
    successful privateer in charge of the vessel Blessed William,
    defending trade routes with the West Indies. He was then commissioned
    by the English government to take charge of an expedition against
    pirates in the Indian Ocean. Kidd's public mission was to clear the
    sea there of pirates, but it was probably understood by his backers
    that he would also take every opportunity to capture any enemy ships
    that had valuable cargo.


    In February 1698, almost a year after he had been expected to return
    from his mission, Kidd finally struck lucky in heavy seas off the
    Indian coast, north of Cochin, with the Quedagh Merchant, a 500 ton
    Armenian merchant ship laden with gold, jewels, silver, silks, sugar
    and guns. Kidd considered this prize, together with previous smaller
    prizes, as ample compensation for his late return, and reward enough
    for his backers. The prize though was a legal nightmare. Owned by
    Indians, carrying a Persian cargo, crewed by Moors, and with an
    English Captain named Wright they all sailed together, allegedly under
    a French pass. Kidd decided that this was a legitimate target and took
    her.

    However, by this time, tales of his supposed piratical exploits were
    causing serious embarrassment back in London, and he was arrested soon
    after returning to New York, after leaving the Quedagh Merchant at
    Catalina Island.

    `Despite his defence of being a privateer, Kidd was tried in London
    and hung in 1701
    '
    Despite his defence of being a privateer, Kidd was tried in London and
    hung in 1701. The papers that might have proved his innocence
    disappeared and his logbook was burned. His corpse was displayed in an
    iron cage on the dock at the Thames Estuary for several years as a
    warning to other would-be pirates.

    A remarkable discovery

    Diver at one of the shipwreck cannons. Courtesy of Indiana University.
    Beeker said it was remarkable that the wreck had remained undiscovered
    all these years given its location, just 70 feet off the coast of
    Catalina Island in the Dominican Republic.

    Anthropologist Geoffrey Conrad, director of IU Bloomington's Mathers
    Museum of World Cultures, said the men Kidd entrusted with his ship
    reportedly looted it, and then set it ablaze and adrift down the Rio
    Dulce. Conrad said the location of the wreckage and the formation and
    size of the canons, which had been used as ballast, are consistent
    with historical records of the ship. They also found pieces of several
    anchors under the cannons.

    `All the evidence that we find underwater is consistent with what we
    know from historical documentation, which is extensive,' Conrad said.
    `Through rigorous archaeological investigations, we have conclusively
    proven that this is the Captain Kidd shipwreck.'

    Beeker, who has been conducting research in the Dominican Republic for
    nearly 20 years, was asked to examine the shipwreck in 2007 while on
    another research mission involving the search for the lost ships of
    Christopher Columbus.

    http://www.pasthorizons.com/index.php/archives/05/2011/captain-kidd-shipwreck-becomes-a-museum-of-the-sea




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X