April 2008 Columbus Paddle Wheel By: Kathy Concannon,
MAC Lab Educator
In
1991 and 1992, underwater archaeologists investigated a shipwreck
located in 60 feet of water in the Chesapeake Bay near Smith Point,
Virginia. The subsequent study of significant features of the wreck,
including a massive 22 foot paddle wheel, confirmed the identity
of the vessel as the Steam Ship Columbus, which burned
and sank in the early morning hours of November 28, 1850 while carrying
passengers, crew, and cargo.
The Columbus was traveling from Baltimore to Richmond with
16 people on board when, at approximately 3 a.m., a draft through
the steamboat's smokestack caused fire to burst out of the furnace.
The flames spread very rapidly. Only seven of the passengers survived.
They climbed into the only lifeboat that was not cut off by the
flames and then watched through binoculars as the Columbus
continued to burn and drift. At 11 a.m., it finally disappeared
from view (Irion and Beard 1995).

At the time of the Columbus' sinking, steamboats were already
having an impact on America's economy. Unlike sailing vessels, steamboats
were largely unaffected by currents and winds. Commerce had begun
to rely on the dependable shipping schedules that steamboat companies
were able to establish. The Columbus was one of the first
steamboats to navigate the Chesapeake Bay and was well known in
the Chesapeake area. Her main purpose was to carry freight between
Baltimore and Norfolk, but she also occasionally carried passengers.
One of the Columbus'
most distinguished passengers was the renowned Native American leader
Black Hawk. Black Hawk, along with other Native Americans, was transported
to Norfolk on the Columbus to view the gunship Delaware,
which had been recently completed at the Norfolk Navy Yard (Emmerson
1949).
Discovering the wreck of the Columbus gave archaeologists a rare opportunity
to study a vessel that operated in the first years of the Steam
Age. The significant features of the wreck that aided in identifying
it as the SS Columbus -- the crosshead engine and enormous
paddle wheel -- had been newly developed after 20 years of improvements
in steam engineering. The Columbus' engine is the only
recovered crosshead engine in the United States. Because of the
limited information about this important early engine type, the
cylinder, crank, and starboard paddle-wheel were recovered from
the wreck
site for conservation and further study. Conservation of the artifacts
was completed in January 1998, after more than six years and 6,000
hours of treatment. Traditional conservation techniques had to be
modified in order to treat the paddle wheel, which is estimated
to weigh 15,000 lbs (International Artifact Conservation 1998).
In January 1998, the artifacts were returned to Maryland and now
reside at the Maryland Archaeological Conservation Laboratory.
References:
Emmerson, John C., Jr.
1949 The Steamboat Comes to Norfolk Harbor. Edwards
Brothers, Ann Arbor.
International Artifact Conservation and Research Laboratory, Inc.
1998 Conservation Treatment Report, Paddle-wheel
Steamboat COLUMBUS, Engine Components and Miscellaneous Artifacts.
Belle
Chasse, Louisiana. Report on file at the Maryland Archaeological
Conservation Laboratory.
Irion, Jack B. and David V. Beard
1995 Data Recovery on the Wreck of the Steamship
Columbus, 18ST625, St. Mary's County, Maryland. Report Prepared
for U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers, Baltimore, Maryland.
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