< Back to front page Text size +

Old wreck draws interest on Cape Cod beach

June 23, 2009 06:04 PM

truro_shipwreck_062309.jpg
(Gordon Peabody)

A detail of the wreckage. When was this boat built?

By Martin Finucane, Globe Staff

A ghost of the past has washed up on a Cape Cod beach, the wreckage of a wooden boat of an unknown age, said officials at the Cape Cod National Seashore today.

The wreckage, a section of timbers and planking that is about 40 feet long, washed up south of Ballston Beach in Truro, said Bob Grant, chief ranger at the seashore.

The remains appear to be similar to a wreck that washed up in January 2008 at Newcomb Hollow in Wellfleet and that was sucked back into the sea in April, Grant said. "Whether these are the same or not is not clear," he said.

With the beaches shrouded recently in rain and fog, whoever found the wreck probably had an eerie experience, he said. "You go walking on the beach and then you come across this. That's kind of a cool thing," he said.

Sue Moynihan, chief of interpretation and cultural resources at the national park, said she learned about the wreck Monday from a resident. She said the wreck looks different from the Wellfleet wreck, an unnamed schooner-turned-barge from the late 19th century, but experts believe it might be the same wreck just flipped over.

"I think anytime you see something of that size washed up on the beach -- I think that's exciting," she said.

Sebastian Junger, author of the 1990s bestseller "The Perfect Storm," which is about the modern-day wreck of a Gloucester fishing boat, was one of those who found the wreckage.

He told WOMR-FM in Provincetown it wasn't a typically rounded schooner hull, but it had this "sort of recurve" that reminded him of drawings of Spanish galleons. "It has that bulbous kind of look that Columbus's ships had," he said.

"It's startling when you look at it. … It isn't even close to our era," he told the station.

Gordon Peabody, a Truro resident who surveyed the wreck with Junger and then notified park service officials last week, said the wreck was "an intriguing mystery." He said he didn't think it was the Newcomb Hollow wreck.

He also said the wreckage was only part of a larger vessel.

"When I looked at it, I have to tell you that my heart stopped for a minute," he said, citing, among other things, the unusual curve of the hull.

E-mail this article

Invalid email address
Invalid email address

Sending your article

Your article has been sent.

Sounding Off

Columnist Adrian Walker found gifts true to the season: surprise $100,000 grants for the Pine Street Inn and the Greater Boston Food Bank.
Adrian Walker
TALK TO US
breakingnews@globe.com | Twitter | 617-929-3100

Editor's Choice

State tax revenue on rebound

State tax revenue on rebound

Revenues appear to be bouncing back, a long-awaited glimmer of good news for Governor Patrick and other state officials.
Pitbull left for dead recovering

Pitbull left for dead recovering

A severely wounded dog, believed to be a bait dog used to test other dogs' fighting instincts, recovers after being left for dead.
MORE

From Today's Globe

MORE BLOGS

White Coat notes
Overweight men with prostate cancer have a higher risk of dying Men who are overweight when they have locally advanced prostate...
Articles of Faith
Questions on Communion and swine flu The big news of the week on the Boston religious...
A report on people from Boston who are making an impact in the world, and on people from abroad doing noteworthy things here.
Mass. academics active in Copenhagen Harvard and Tufts are among the Boston-area universities seeking to...
Obama calls climate deal 'unprecedented' but admits it falls short var w = 539;var h = 353;var playerId =...
archives

LOCAL BLOGS

BOSTON AREA

Universal Hub

A collection of writing from hundreds of Boston-area bloggers.

The Chinatown Blog

Stories and events related to Boston's Chinatown and the Asian American community in Massachusetts

CommonWealth Magazine

Politics, ideas, and civic life in Massachusetts

Red Mass Group

News and commentary about Massachusetts and beyond

Blue Mass Group

Politics in Massachusetts and around the nation

Boston 1775

History, analysis, and unabashed gossip about the start of the American Revolution.
COLLEGE NEWSPAPER SITES

The Berkeley Beacon

The weekly student newspaper at Emerson College

The Daily Collegian

The student newspaper of UMass-Amherst.

The Daily Free Press

The independent student newspaper at Boston University

The Harvard Crimson

The nation's oldest continuously published daily college newspaper.

The Heights

The independent student newspaper of Boston College

The Huntington News

The independent student newspaper of Northeastern University

The Suffolk Journal

Suffolk University's student-run newspaper

The Tech

MIT's oldest and largest newspaper

The Tufts Daily

The independent student newspaper of Tufts University