Archaeologists with the Army Corps of Engineers are searching for what may be the sole photograph of Civil War-era ironclad CSS Georgia as they salvage its remains from the Savannah River. So far, the ...
SAVANNAH, Ga. – The armored skeleton of a Confederate warship that spent 150 years at the bottom of the Savanah River in Georgia is being raised to the surface one 5-ton chunk at a time. Navy divers ...
SAVANNAH, Ga. – John Potter says he was browsing for antiques at a yard sale in south Georgia when he came across an old picture frame containing an enigmatic image -- the dark silhouette of a person ...
SAVANNAH, GA (WTOC) - The Army Corps of Engineers have been trying to find the original copies of pictures believed to be that of the CSS Georgia, but it turns out, they're fake. The ironclad that was ...
SAVANNAH, Ga. - Recovering the CSS Georgia ironclad scuttled on the Savannah River floor marks the beginning of the construction phase of the Savannah Harbor Expansion Project. Col. Thomas Tickner, ...
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 ...
U.S. Navy divers successfully recovered a 64-square foot section of the Savannah-built Civil War ironclad warship CSS Georgia from the bottom of the Savannah River Tuesday evening. The removal and ...
U.S. Navy divers and specially trained handlers removed the first cannon from the Savannah River during the current phase of the recovery of the CSS Georgia ironclad on July 15, according to ...
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. - Navy explosive ordnance disposal technicians perform some of the most harrowing, dangerous work in order to keep others from harm's way, and they do so in every environment.They're ...
The CSS Georgia continues to surprise archaeologists. Case in point, this 9,000-pound Dahlgren rifled cannon that archaeologists thought was a different type of cannon before raising it to the surface ...
After 150 years at the bottom of the Savannah River, the armored skeleton of the Confederate warship CSS Georgia is being raised to the surface one 5-ton chunk at a time. Navy divers who began working ...
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