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British warship of Revolution resurfaces

The wreck of the British warship that Paul Revere slipped by on his legendary journey to Lexington in 1775 has resurfaced in the shifting sands of Cape Cod, and federal park officials are seizing the moment by having the wreck "digitally preserved," using three-dimensional imaging technology.

"We know the wreck is going to disappear again under the sand, and it may not resurface again in our lifetimes," said William P. Burke, the historian at the Cape Cod National Seashore, noting that the last time any part of the HMS Somerset III had been sighted was 37 years ago.

"Somewhere down the road, if someone's researching the Somerset, or the effects of ocean currents on shipwrecks, or anything like that, they will have this record," he said. "We're in the forever business. We're looking at tomorrow, but we're also looking ahead indefinitely."

The Somerset fought in the American Revolution and had a crew of more than 400. In 1775, Paul Revere slipped through Boston Harbor past the ship before beginning his ride to warn the colonials the British were on the move. In his poem "Paul Revere's Ride," Henry Wadsworth Longfellow called it "a phantom ship, with each mast and spar/Across the moon like a prison bar." The ship sank on Nov. 2, 1778 off the Cape.

After erosion from recent storms, about a dozen of the Somerset's timbers were found poking through the wet sand at low tide in the national seashore in Provincetown. Park officials called on Harry R. Feldman Inc., a land surveying company from Boston, to make the three-dimensional rendering....
Read entire article at Boston Globe