Experts still have many questions about the sunken CSS Georgia, and they think an original photo not seen in roughly 30 years could help them find answers John Potter says he was browsing for antiques ...
Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The church publishes the ...
A photograph that has posed a Civil War mystery, puzzling historians for three decades, appears to be a long-surviving hoax. The mysterious photograph of what appeared to be a far older photo — ...
SAVANNAH, GA (WTOC) - The public got the chance Wednesday night to see artifacts recovered from CSS Georgia. The Civil War ironclad sunk in the Savannah River in 1864. Since 2015, archaeologists have ...
SAVANNAH, Ga. - As the mechanized stage of recovery began in earnest this week, marine archaeologists working on the CSS Georgia had just started to dig in for the long haul - anticipating tedious, 12 ...
A historical image of the CSS Georgia, a Civil War ironclad warship, is seen in this undated handout obtained by Reuters on May 8, 2012. Reuters/U.S. Army Corps of Engineers A photograph that has been ...
The ironclad CSS Georgia was scuttled by its crew in 1864. Now the civil war wreck is to be raised and preserved to improve access to the port of Savannah The US navy is preparing to send one if its ...
The deepening of the shipping channel in Savannah, Georgia, won’t be dredging up just mud and sand. It will be raising up a link to the past: an ironclad that protected the city during the Civil War ...
She was scuttled rather than left to fall into Union hands during the war Now the ironclad must be moved so a shipping channel can be deepened She didn’t have enough power to maneuver and effectively ...
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