“Holy grail of shipwrecks” threatened by waves, vandals on Fla. beach

FAN Editor

SOUTH PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Preservationists say they are racing against time as they try to save a shipwreck that washed up on a Florida beach. The Florida Times-Union reports that the wreck appeared late Tuesday on a St. Johns County beach.

The state has given the St. Augustine Lighthouse and Maritime Museum permission to move the wreckage away from waves that have been battering it. But that has proven to be a difficult job.

Two pieces of heavy equipment arrived at the site Thursday to try to lift the wreck, but they each got stuck in the thick sand themselves.

A museum crew has driven stakes into the sand around the 48-foot partial hull and lashed down the wreckage to try to keep the ocean from dragging it back, said spokeswoman Tonya Creamer.

shipwreck.jpg

A 48-foot section of an old sailing ship has washed ashore on a Florida beach, thrilling researchers who are rushing to study it before it’s reclaimed by the sea.

WJAX-TV

Creamer said the wreck is owned by the state since it washed up on state property at the Guano Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve.

Marc Anthony, who owns Spanish Main Antiques, told CBS News affiliate WJAX-TV it’s extremely rare for wreckage to wash ashore. 

“To actually see this survive and come ashore. This is very, very rare. This is the holy grail of shipwrecks,” Anthony said. 

Museum officials said the ship likely dates to the early 1800s.

Crews from the lighthouse and maritime museum have been documenting the wreck with photos and videos, from which they can create a 3-D model of what it looked like.

Meanwhile, people have knocked off wooden pegs that the ship’s builders used to join one plank to another, and some have taken pieces of broken timber.

Julia Turner reported the wreck to police Wednesday morning. Since then, a steady stream of onlookers have been crossing the oceanfront property Turner’s parents rented in South Ponte Vedra Beach as a vacation home.

Turner said her husband confronted a man approaching the wreck with a power saw.

“My husband was like, ‘Dude! It’s probably an 18th-, 19th-century ship, there are archaeologists on the way. You can’t touch it,'” said Turner, who lives in Vilano Beach.

© 2018 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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