Shipwreck History

For hundreds of years, the great ports of the
Delaware and Chesapeake Bays brought to the Delmarva Peninsula
one of the highest concentrations of shipping in the early
Americas. Today, through the use of proper archeology and
recovery, you can experience Delmarva's forgotten maritime
history. If the Delmarva coast could talk, its stories would be
of pirates and privateers, of merchantmen and galleons, of the
men who sailed their ships and the wreckers that waited for
them on desolate shores.
In its own way, our coast does talk to us,
but only to those willing to listen. From time to time after
northeasters, such as the ones that caused these tragedies, it teases us with
bits and pieces of its grand
history.It tells its story
not in words, but rather in the artifacts that it gives
up on its
shores.
Each time a ship
sinks, time stands still. All of those artifacts aboard
are frozen together in time. That means that by studying
them, we can learn how people lived and worked centuries
ago. By studying the past, we can better cope with the
present; by educating about the past. we open doors to
the future.
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