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Blackbeard's Anchor Found Off The Coast Of North Carolina

Blackbeards Anchor

By MARTHA WAGGONER   05/27/11 08:57 PM ET   AP

MOREHEAD CITY, N.C. -- Archaeologists recovered the first anchor from what's believed to be the wreck of the pirate Blackbeard's flagship off the North Carolina coast Friday, a move that might change plans about how to save the rest of the almost 300-year-old artifacts from the central part of the ship.

Divers had planned to recover the second-largest artifact on what's believed to be the Queen Anne's Revenge but discovered it was too well-attached to other items in the ballast pile, said project director Mark Wilde-Ramsing. Instead they pulled up another anchor that is the third-largest artifact and likely was the typical anchor for the ship.

Apparently, pirates had everyday anchors and special anchors just most people have everyday dishes and good china.

"That's a big ship to be putting that out to stop it," Wilde-Ramsing said admiringly as a pulley system of straps and men holding ropes moved the anchor from a boat to the back of truck. It's the first large anchor that divers have retrieved; they earlier brought up a small, grapnel anchor.

The anchor is 11 feet, 4 inches long with arms that are 7 feet, 7 inches across. It was covered with concretion – a mixture of shells, sand and other debris attracted by the leaching wrought iron – and a few sea squirts. Its weight was estimated at 2,500 to 3,000 pounds.

The anchor's size is typical for a ship the size of the Queen Anne's Revenge, while the two other anchors probably were used in emergencies, such as storms, Wilde-Ramsing said.

Archaeologists had planned to remove the second-largest anchor, which is 13 feet long with arms that are 8 feet across, from the top of the ballast pile. But it was too well-attached, so instead the divers went in from the side to retrieve the everyday anchor. That means that future dives may involve going in from the side of the shipwreck rather than the top, he said.

Divers will work four days next week, when they'll decide how to proceed.

State officials hope the anchor and other artifacts will attract tourists. The largest exhibit of artifacts from the shipwreck, which was discovered in 1996, will be shown starting June 11 at the N.C. Maritime Museum in Beaufort. Wilde-Ramsing has said the team hopes to recover all the artifacts by the end of 2013.

And the timing of the recovery of the anchor couldn't be better for North Carolina officials, trying to increase tourism interest in the shipwreck. The Disney film "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides" starring Johnny Depp was released earlier this month and features both Blackbeard and the Queen Anne's Revenge.

The only remaining parts of the ship – the wooden hull structure, ribs and a plank – are at the bottom of the pile, protected by ballast that kept the ship upright. Six cannon and three other anchors are also in the pile.

Wendy Welsh, field conservator and QAR lab manager, and archaeologist Chris Southerly dived in the Atlantic to hook up the anchor for its lift to the ocean surface. "It lifted great," said Welsh, who has worked with the project for nine years. "I didn't think I'd see this day so soon."

Southerly compared the retrieval to the child's game of Pick-Up-Sticks, where players toss plastic sticks on a hard surface and then remove them one at a time without disturbing the ones underneath. "It's really satisfying that I've had privilege of seeing it," he said.

In 1717, Blackbeard captured a French slave ship and renamed it Queen Anne's Revenge. Blackbeard, whose real name was widely believed to be Edward Teach or Thatch, settled in Bath and received a governor's pardon. Volunteers with the Royal Navy killed him in Ocracoke Inlet in November 1718, five months after the ship thought to be Queen Anne's Revenge sank.

The Queen Anne's Revenge shipwreck site, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Sites, has already yielded more than 250,000 artifacts.

___

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10:51 AM on 07/24/2011
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03:13 AM on 05/30/2011
i have a little Questions for that Anchor...

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jwald1
Badges? I don't need no stinking badges!
01:38 AM on 05/30/2011
are those dates right? he took the ship in 1717 and was killed in 1718, 5 months after the ship sank? so he would have had it less than a year?
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Dunkleberger Karl
Historian,Humanitarian,Hedonist.
11:39 AM on 05/30/2011
more than a year!
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The Platzner Post
11:55 PM on 05/29/2011
Quite a find!!!
10:50 PM on 05/29/2011
Saying that Blackbeard is featured in "Pirates 4" is like saying you're the smartest kid in Special Ed.- it really doesn't count. Sure, you hear mention of Edward Teach, Blackbeard, and the Queen Anne's Revenge, but, as the movie credits always say, "any similarity between persons living or dead, is purely coincidental".
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Tinki - bot
Be excellent to each other!
08:51 PM on 05/29/2011
Historical accuracy or lack thereof aside, this sort of discovery is always fascinating and sure does stoke ye olde imagination!

It's hard to keep the inner child contained at times..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gx5000
Life's too short, be happy..
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Steamboater
Forget hope. Agitate.
08:40 PM on 05/29/2011
Pirates weren't entirely a man's preserve. (Can't get a line to skip to start another paragraph. ???) After having a child with his housemaid, and an ensuing scandal, William Cormac separated from his wife and took his daughter, Anne, and her mother to South Carolina. He worked as a trader, eventually buying a plantation. Anne's mother died, and Cormac had his hands full with a daughter who was, by most accounts, uncontrollable. Stories have her stabbing a servant and defending herself against an attempted rape. When Anne married James Bonny, a sailor, her father disowned her. The couple went to the Bahamas, where he worked as an informant turning in pirates for a bounty. When the governor of the Bahamas offered amnesty to any pirate who abandoned piracy, John Rackam, "Calico Jack," took advantage of the offer. Sources differ as to whether Anne was already a pirate before this time, and whether she'd met Rackam and become his mistress already. She may have given birth to a child who died soon after its birth. Anne and Rackam could not talk her husband into a divorce, so Anne Bonny and Rackam ran away in 1719, and turned (in his case, returned) to piracy. Anne Bonny wore mostly men's clothing while on board ship. She befriended another pirate in the crew: Mary Read, who wore men's clothing. By some accounts, Mary revealed her gender when Anne tried to seduce her; they became lovers anyway. Because he'd returned to piracy after the amnesty, Rackam won the special attention of the Bahamian governor, who issued a proclamation naming Rackam, Bonny, and Read as "Pirates and Enemies to the Crown of Great Britain." Eventually, the ship and its crew were captured. Rackam, Mary, and Anne were supposedly the only three in the crew who resisted the capture. They were tried for piracy in Jamaica. Two weeks after Rackam and the other men in the crew were hanged for piracy, Bonny and Read stood trial, and were sentenced to be hanged. But both claimed pregnancy, which stalled their execution. Read died in prison the next month. There are two quite different stories of Anne's fate. In one, she simply disappears, and her fate is not known. In the other, Bonny's father bribed officials to help her escape; she is said to have returned to South Carolina, where she married Joseph Burleigh the next year, and had five children with him. In this version of her story, she died at 81 and was buried in York County, Virginia. Her story was told in a book by Charles Johnson (most likely a pseudonym for Daniel Defoe), first published in 1724. http://womenshistory.about.com/od/femalepirates/p/anne_bonny.htm
09:30 PM on 05/29/2011
Interesting post!
10:07 PM on 05/29/2011
I love her story and wish they would make a movie about her! Anne has always been my favorite pirate :) Thanks for sharing!!!
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Steamboater
Forget hope. Agitate.
08:26 PM on 05/29/2011
What's the big deal. You want to see the remnants and results of piracy, just check in with the republicans. They've looted and robbed us blind.
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
01:08 PM on 06/01/2011
And most of those pirates are still alive and bragging about it.
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NevadaLiberal
You're looking parched there, Marco.
07:46 PM on 05/29/2011
[Blackbeard's Anchor Found Off The Coast Of North Carolina]

Was Johnny Depp's career tied to it?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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07:40 PM on 05/29/2011
This is rubbish. There isn't even the remotest evidence that this ship A: belonged to Blackbeard, and B: Was the Queen Ann's Revenge.

This looks a lot like PR for the film.
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RoryBellows
My micro-bio is now available as an ebook.
07:27 PM on 05/29/2011
As a more erudite pirate would say: "This causes my fallen trees to tremble."
llyd wlsh
chem, nuke, bio hazard
05:29 PM on 05/29/2011
AAARRrrrrgggghhhhh, shiver me timbers