Public and Professional Presentations

Appendix A: Public Presentation

Lighthouses, Confederate Earthworks and Plantation Shipwrecks: An Investigation of Coastal Heritage Sites at Risk or Overlooked in Hanover and Brunswick Counties, NC

Speaker: Dr. Lynn Harris of East Carolina University.

There will be two presentations on Thursday, December 3rd, 2016.  The first will take place at 11am at the Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum in Hatteras.  The second (duplicate) presentation will take place at 6pm at the UNC Coastal Studies Institute in Wanchese. In addition, the programs held at the UNC Coastal Studies Institute will be streamed live at http://csi.northcarolina.edu/ustream.

This event is part of the 2015 series Our Underwater Heritage: Maritime Archaeology Projects in Coastal NC.  The series highlights a diversity of topics in local underwater archaeology, from the reconstruction of pivotal battles, iconic shipwrecks, and critical industries of yesteryear, to the challenges involved in the study and preservation of our maritime history. The result of a collaboration between the UNC Coastal Studies Institute (Maritime Heritage Program), East Carolina University (Program in Maritime Studies, Department of History), and the Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum (NC Department of Cultural Resources), the program of presentations will see scholars from East Carolina University, the National Park Service, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and Florida’s Bureau of Archaeological Research travel to the area each month from January to May and September to December to give presentations regarding ongoing or recently completed maritime archaeological investigations. The program is made possible with the assistance of a grant from the Outer Banks Community Foundation.

Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum, 59200 Museum Drive, Hatteras, NC

UNC Coastal Studies Institute, 850 Hwy 345, Wanchese, NC

 

Our Underwater Heritage Lecture Series at UNC Coastal Studies Institute http://www.coastalstudiesinstitute.org/

 

Event Description:

The UNC Coastal Studies Institute will host the ninth presentation in the “Our Underwater Heritage” Lecture series on December 3, 2016 at 6 p.m. at the UNC CSI campus site on Roanoke Island.   The lecture series, held monthly, features presentations from maritime archaeologists and graduate students on a variety of maritime archaeology projects in coastal North Carolina.  This month’s program, entitled, “Lighthouses, Confederate Earthworks and Plantation Shipwrecks: An Investigation of Coastal Heritage Sites at Risk or Overlooked in Hanover and Brunswick Counties, NC” will be presented by Dr. Lynn Harris, Associate Professor of Maritime Archaeology in the Program in Maritime Studies at East Carolina University.

An interdisciplinary team from East Carolina University is investigating a set of diverse maritime cultural sites in the Wilmington area that represent either a preservation risk or a potential resource to be showcased for heritage tourism.  The project represents a partnership with private, state and federal stakeholders. Case studies include a historic lighthouse, boathouse, wharves, coastal confederate earthworks, plantation and Civil War shipwrecks, fish houses, and Native American riverine sites. Several of the sites are structurally unstable or located along eroding river banks or dynamic shores lines.  Other sites might add a venue to existing tourism operations in the area and serve as centerpieces for revised or neglected historical narratives about the port city and surrounding areas. The fieldwork operations include exploring a variety of technologies to rapidly document and analyze site data including laser scanners, drones for aerial photography, remote sensing, and Geographic Information Systems (GIS).

This lecture series was made possible through the assistance of a grant from the Outer Banks Community Foundation (OBCF).   The “Our Underwater Heritage” Lecture series is s a year-long maritime heritage-themed speaker series on the Outer Banks.  The program will celebrate the rich maritime heritage of northeastern North Carolina, with particular attention given to the wealth of shipwrecks found in our estuarine, coastal and offshore waters.

The result of a collaboration between the UNC Coastal Studies Institute (Maritime Heritage Program), East Carolina University (Program in Maritime Studies, Department of History), and the Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum (NC Department of Cultural Resources) the program of presentations will see scholars from East Carolina University, the National Park Service, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and Florida’s Bureau of Archaeological Research travel to the area each month from January to May and September to December to give presentations regarding ongoing or recently completed maritime archaeological investigations.

The series, titled “Our Underwater Heritage: Maritime Archaeology Projects in Coastal North Carolina”, will highlight a diversity of topics in local underwater archaeology, from the reconstruction of pivotal battles, iconic shipwrecks, and critical industries of yesteryear, to the challenges involved in the study and preservation of our maritime history.

Appendix B. Professional Presentations

North Atlantic Society of Oceanic History, Charleston SC May 15-1, 2017 (National Conference)

http://nasoh.org/conference/

Maritime Heritage at Risk: Shipwrecks, Lighthouses and Deserted Towns

Lynn Harris

Abstract

Shipwrecks and maritime historic landscapes situated near dynamic coastal areas, like barrier islands and river inlets, frequently fall within high risk category erosion, coastal change and present a plethora of cultural resource management challenges. This East Carolina University project examines diverse case studies of representative historic structures and archaeological site types. Researchers from different disciplines are collaboratively adapting and developing several technologies and techniques to facilitate a national need in cultural resource management. Each case study has state or national historic significance, conservation management challenges and serves as an intellectual platform to segue between preservation issues and research questions. Examples presented include William Lawrence (1869), Portsmouth Island deserted village (1900), and Old Baldhead Island light house (1817-1903) and boat house (1915).  Each site presents a complementary vignette of a growing postbellum maritime trade between the Northern and Southern seaboard states.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Appendix C. Student Beneficiaries of Grant Funds for MA and PH.D. Research

 

2015-2017:  Jennifer Jones (PhD in Coastal Resource Management completed)

The Management and Archaeological Challenges of Beached Shipwrecks along the South Eastern Seaboard of the USA.

 

2013-2017 Sorna Khakzad (PhD Coastal Resource Management completed)

Fishing Communities and Cultural Heritage in Brunswick and Hanover County

 

Journal Article

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/1743873X.2017.1391272

 

2015-2017: Lauren Christian (MA Maritime Studies completed)

Adaptive Legacy: The Repurposing of Lighthouses from Navigational Aids to Tourism Icons.

 

Appendix D. Graduate Students Hired for Grant Work

 

Katherine Clevenger (MA Maritime Studies)

 

Tyler Ball (MA Maritime Studies)

 

Mike Letzring (MA Geography)

 

Xavier Farmer (MA Geology)

 

 

Appendix E. National Register and Report links for case study sites

 

SS William Lawrence shipwreck

http://www.nationalregister.sc.gov/beaufort/S10817707064/S10817707064.pdf

https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1008&context=mrd_pubs

http://www.nationalregister.sc.gov/beaufort/S10817707064/index.htm

 

Portsmouth Island Historic District

http://www.hpo.ncdcr.gov/nr/CR0007.pdf

 

Baldhead Island Boathouse

http://www.hpo.ncdcr.gov/nr/BW0258.pdf

 

Baldhead Island Lighthouse

http://www.hpo.ncdcr.gov/nr/BW0001.pdf

 

Ocracoke Historic District

http://www.hpo.ncdcr.gov/nr/Hy0634.pdf

 

South port

http://www.hpo.ncdcr.gov/nr/BW0008.pdf

 

Varnam Town and Holden Beach Map

http://www.nccoast.org/uploads/documents/southeast/Lockwood%20Folly%20Sampling%20locations.pdf

 

NC Fish houses

https://ncseagrant.ncsu.edu/ncseagrant_docs/products/2000s/nc_fishhouse_inventory_2007.pdf

 

https://ncseagrant.ncsu.edu/ncseagrant_docs/products/2010s/fishhouse_inventory_2012.pdf

 

 

Appendix F. 3-D Models Links

Portsmouth Island Life Saving Station

https://sketchfab.com/models/8ce1152a87664e4aaab15a8725ee654e

 

Tom Piggot’s House Portsmouth Island

https://sketchfab.com/models/3212909ed60445f9a0c766ee866c19b3

 

Portsmouth Island Church

https://sketchfab.com/models/c8cdf7e7e84741e6b078bb17f0b6a190

 

Ocracoke Lighthouse

https://sketchfab.com/models/4829cdf8423c4432a2087e13b71d6403

 

Ocracoke Hotel

https://sketchfab.com/models/aac8c87374724a01b9105b31899cd5bc