The China Wreck
There is a
certain amount of confusion, if not controversy, about
the positive identification of what is commonly
called the China Wreck by local divers. What
is certain is that some 10,000 pieces of
pottery have been plucked from the wreck
site, about a dozen miles off Cape Henlopen.
Hence, its nickname, the China
Wreck.
In all
likelihood, the muddy, coral and salt-encrusted mound 39
feet down is the hulk that was once the proud Principessa
Margherita di Piemonte, out of Naples, Italy.
She was sailing from Plymouth, England to
Philadelphia with her holds stacked securely
with tons of stoneware and pottery. On March
12, 1891, the Principessa foundered
and
wrecked on Hen and Chickens
Shoal.
Discovered by
the NOAA vessels "Rude" and "Heck" in 1972. The ship's
nearly two-ton
anchor has been salvaged, and thousands of neatly packed
ironstone earthenwarehas been recovered. Much of the pottery
is marked and clearly identifiable as
beingfrom British
pottery makers of the late 1800's.
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