HNSA Crest with photos of visitors at the ships.
Seventh Maritime Heritage Conference, Norfolk, Virginia, October 27-30, 2004

Program

Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday

Wednesday, October 27

3:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.

Resources for the Study of U.S. Naval and Maritime History
Chair: Becky Poulliot, Director, Hampton Roads Naval Museum
• Dr. Michael Palmer, Chair, History Dept., East Carolina University
"The Eller Collection"
• Professor John B. Hattendorf, President, NASOH
"Resources for Maritime History at the Naval War College" Paper
• Dr. Edward Marolda, Senior Historian, Naval Historical Center
"Sources on U.S. Naval History"
• Dr. Frederick Graboske, Head, Archives Section, U.S. Marine Corps Historical Center
"Resources of the Marine Corps Historical Program"

The State of Lighthouse Preservation
Chair: Michael Vogel, President, American Lighthouse Coordinating Committee
• Wayne Wheeler, President, U.S. Lighthouse Society
"The State of Lighthouse Preservation"
• American Lighthouse Coordinating Committee
"Holland Award Presentations"

U.S. Life-Saving Service Heritage Association - Part 1
• Maurice Gibbs, former President, USLSSHA
"Forgotten Heroes: Introduction"
• John Galluzzo, historian and author
"Greater Love Hath No Man: Joshua James & the New England Experience"

Why Tall Ships?
Chair: Captain Robert Glover, Executive Director, Virginia Maritime Heritage Foundation with Schooner Virginia Project
• Peter Mello, Executive Director, American Sail Training Association
"The Economic Impact of Tall Ship Visits"
• Captain Walter Rybka, Site Administrator, Erie Maritime Museum
"Why We Sail Replicas" Paper, Slides

Wooden Boat Preservation - Part 1
Chair: Dana Hewson, Vice President, Watercraft Preservation and Programs, Mystic Seaport Museum
• Wyn Davies, Frazer-Nash Consultancy
"Trials and Tribulations in Conserving the Cutty Sark" Paper
• Peter Guerrero
"The Chesapeake Skipjack: Preserving Maritime Craft, Culture and the Environment" Paper
• Leon Poindexter, shipwright
"Modifying HMS Rose for 'Master and Commander'" Paper

Museum Education Programs - Part 1
• Margaret Renn, Director of Education, Battleship Massachusetts
"Applications, Expectations and Outcomes of Organized Field Trips to Historic Naval Ship Museums"
• Margaret Renn, Director of Education, Battleship Massachusetts
"The 'S-Word': Understanding and Linking Standards to Non-traditional Learning Experiences"

Thursday, October 28

8:30 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.

PLENARY SESSION
The State of American Maritime and Naval History
Chair: Dr. Timothy Runyan, Director, Maritime Studies Program, East Carolina University
• Dr. Timothy Runyan
"The Teaching of Maritime and Naval History"
• Dr. William Dudley, former Director, Naval Historical Center
"The State of Maritime and Naval Publications" Paper
• Dr. William Cogar, Vice President for Collections and Research, Mystic Seaport Museum
"The State of Maritime and Naval Museums" Paper
• Kelly Drake, Systems and Digital Librarian, Mystic Seaport Museum
"Maritime and Naval Research Resources"

10:30 a.m. - 12 noon

Epic Voyages in Small Craft
Chair: Peter Vermilya, Associate Curator of Small Craft, Mystic Seaport Museum
• Revell Carr, President Emeritus, Mystic Seaport Museum
"All Brave Sailors: Sinking of the Anglo Saxon, 1940" Paper
• Kim Nielsen, Director, U.S. Navy Museum
"Just One Lived to Tell the Tale: Sailing 1500 Miles across the Pacific"

Public Programming and Visitor Access at Historic Light Stations
Moderator: Donald J. Terras, Grosse Pointe Lighthouse, IL
• Lawrence Belli, National Park Service, Outer Banks Group
• Lee Radzak, Split Rock Lighthouse, MN
• Dr. Sally Snowman, Keeper, Boston Lighthouse

U.S. Life-Saving Service Heritage Association - Part 2
Chair: Fielding Tyler, Executive Director, Old Coast Guard Station, Virginia Beach, VA
• Frederick Stonehouse, maritime historian and Vice President, USLSSHA
"Storm Warriors on the Inland Seas: the USLSS on the Great Lakes" Slides
• Linda Molloy, Operations Director, Chicamacomico Historical Society And James Charlet, Lead Historical Interpreter, Roanoke Island Festival Park
"Ordinary Men, Extraordinary Heroes: Forgotten Heroes of the Outer Banks of North Carolina"

Maritime Arts
Chair: Gary Baker, Curator of Decorative Arts, The Chrysler Museum of Art
• Carol Olsen, maritime art historian
"Figureheads Privately Owned: Details of a Significant European Collection"
• Thomas Moore, Senior Curator of Photography, The Mariners' Museum
"Boat as Symbol in 19th Century Portrait Photography" Photos
• Lester Weber, Archivist, The Mariners' Museum
"Ships' Logs: More than Fair Winds and Following Seas"

Historic Naval Ship Museums - Part 1: Submarines
Chair: William Tunnell, Executive Director, USS Alabama Commission
• Dr. Eric Berryman, Naval Order of the United States
"U995: War at Sea" Paper
• Francis Lennon, Director, USS Saratoga Museum Foundation
"Project 651 Soviet Cruise Missile Submarine"Slides
• James Adams, Ship's Manager and Diane Cooper, Curator, San Francisco Maritime Park
"Preservation of USS Pampanito" Paper, Slides
• Captain Jerry Hofwolt, Executive Director, USS Bowfin Submarine Museum & Park
"Drydocking of USS Bowfin"Slides

Museum Education Programs - Part 2

• Margaret Renn, Director of Education, and Michele Kelly, Director of Oral History, Battleship Massachusetts
"Capturing History: Using Oral Histories in Educational Programs"

LUNCHEON SPEAKER

• Captain Michael Watson, President, American Pilots Association "History and Role of the American Pilots Association"

1:30 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.

Bringing People to Your Facility
Chair: Paul DeOrsay, Executive Director, The Whaling Museum at Cold Spring Harbor, NY
• Jann Hoag, Dean and Vice President of Programs, Presidential Classroom, Alexandria, VA
"Attracting Today's Visitors"
• Tom Pasha, Vice President, Contact Planning/Production, St. Cloud, FL
"Maximizing Your Market" Slides

Lighthouse Lenses
Chair: Joe Cocking, lens specialist
• James Woodward, The Lighthouse Consultant and James Dunlap, USCG (Retired)
"Lens Conservation and Restoration: Four Case Studies" Woodward Slides, Dunlap Paper, Dunlap Slides
• Dan Spinella and Gary Knappenberger, Artworks Florida
"Fabricating New Fresnel Lenses"

U.S. Life-Saving Service Heritage Association - Part 3
• David Pinyerd, President, Historic Preservation Northwest
"Shipwrecks and Great Heroes of the Northwest"

U.S. Coast Guard Heritage
Chair: Dr. Robert Browning, U.S. Coast Guard Historian
• Scott Price, Historian, U.S. Coast Guard
"The Indispensable Men: The Lighthouse and Life-Saving Service Contributions to the 'First Flight'" Paper
• Corey Thornton, Assistant Curator, Portsmouth Naval Shipyard Museum
"Life and Light: An Age of American Lightships"
• CDR John Leonard, PhD, U.S. Coast Guard Reserve
"Sailing in Shackleton's Wake: The Near Fateful 1984 Antarctic Voyage of the Coast Guard Polar Icebreaker Westwind"

Historic Naval Ship Museums - Part 2
Chair: Jeffrey Nilsson, Executive Director, Historic Naval Ships Association
• Charles Harden, The Victory Ship, Inc., Tampa, FL
"Delivery trip of SS American Victory to Tampa" Paper
• William Tunnell, Executive Director, USS Alabama, Mobile, AL
"Still Afloat - Well, Not Really... Saving Two National Historic Landmarks: A Brief Overview of Ship Restoration in Alabama"
• Harry Jaeger, President, National Association of Fleet Tug Sailors, Inc.
"Saving USCGC Tamaroa" Paper

Trends in Maritime Libraries: Blowing Down on a Lee Shore?
Moderator: Cathy Williamson, Public Services Librarian, The Mariners' Museum
Panelists:
• Joseph Judge, Curator, Hampton Roads Naval Museum
• Dr. Timothy Runyan, Director, Maritime Studies Program, East Carolina University
• Thomas Wilcox, Executive Director, Maine Maritime Museum
• Paul O'Pecko, Director, G.W. Blunt Library, Mystic Seaport Museum
• Cathy Williamson, Public Services Librarian, The Mariners' Museum
• Sam Scott, Curator of Maritime Arts and History, Peabody Essex Museum

3:30 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.

A Monitor Out of Water
All presenters are with The Mariners' Museum

• Curtiss Peterson, Conservator
"Conserving the Monitor (Making it Safe)"
• David Dwyer, Project Manager
"Building a Home for a National Treasure"
• Anna Holloway, Curator
"Curating the Monitor: Bringing a Dead Ship to Life"
• Justin Lyons, Public Relations
"Getting Out the Word: If You Build It: They will Come"
• Lester Weber, Archivist
"Providing the Context: Building the Monitor Archives"
• Desmond Cook, Old Dominion University and Curtiss Peterson
"Investigation of the Corrosion of Monitor Artifacts"

Lighthouse and Keeper Research
Chair: Michael Vogel, President, ALCC
• Thomas Tag, Great Lakes Lighthouse Research
"Researching Lighthouse Technology and Managing Artifacts" Paper
• Sandra Clunies, lighthouse researcher
"Documenting the Keepers"

U.S. Life-Saving Service Heritage Association - Part 4
• Lori Newmyer, Executive Director, Hull Lifesaving Museum
"They Had to Go Out"
• Maurice Gibbs, former President, USLSSHA
"A Sailor's GAM'"

Hampton Roads Maritime History
Chair: Peggy McPhillips, Norfolk City Historian
• Gordon Calhoun, Publications Editor, Hampton Roads Naval Museum
"The Norfolk Navy Yard during Reconstruction (1865-1877)"
• Joseph Judge, Curator, Hampton Roads Naval Museum
"History Beneath the James: The Archaeology and Artifacts of USS Cumberland and USS Florida" Paper
• Joseph Mosier, Archivist, Chrysler Museum of Art
"Patterns of Trade for the Port of Norfolk (1804-1805)"
• Dr. Brian Cudahy, Transportation Historian
"The Excursion Boat Empire of Benjamin Bowling Wills"

Historic Naval Ship Museums - Part 3: Submarines
Chair: Dr. John Fakan, President, USS Cod Submarine Memorial
• LCDR Christopher Slawson, Officer in Charge, Historic Ship Nautilus and Sub Force Museum
"Preservation of USS Nautilus" Slides
• Richard Pekelney, Webmaster, Historic Naval Ships Association
"Diesel Attack Submarines: The Final Chapter"Slides

The Navy Motor Whaleboat, Common Workboat, Uncommon Survivor
Moderator: Kim Nielsen, Director, The Navy Museum
Panelists:
• Joseph Lombardi, Principal Surveyor, Ocean Technical Services Slides
• Timothy Rizzuto, Ship's Superintendent, Destroyer Escort Historical Museum - USS Slater Paper
• Captain David Scheu, Director, USS North Carolina Battleship Commission

Friday, October 29

8:30 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.

U.S. Frigate Chesapeake and an 1820 Village Mill in the United Kingdom
Moderator: Dr. William Dudley, former Director of Naval History
• Dr. Angus Goldberg, St. Andrews, University
"Josiah Fox, the Gosport Navy Yard and the Building of the Frigate Chesapeake"
• Dr. Robert Prescott, St. Andrews University
"Pictorial Representations of the Chesapeake-Shannon action, 1st June 1813"
• Daniel Atkinson and Dr. Robert Prescott, St. Andrews University
"Recent Archaeological Work at the Chesapeake Mill"
• Dr. Robert Prescott and Captain Adriane de Savorgnani, USN (Ret)
"The Chesapeake Mill: A Case Study in Cultural Resource Management"

Saving a Lighthouse
Chair: Jennifer Perunko, Historian, Maritime Heritage Program, National Park Service
• Joseph Jakubik, International Chimney Corp.
"Moving the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse"
• Kevin Duffus, author
"Recovering the Cape Hatteras Lens" Paper

Marine Sanctuaries - Part 1
Chair: Dr. John Broadwater, Manager, NOAA's Maritime Heritage Program
• Dr. John Broadwater
"Heritage Resource Management in NOAA's National Marine Sanctuaries"
• Tane Casserly, Nautical Archaeologist, NOAA's Monitor National Marine Sanctuary
"CGS Canada: A Canadian Warship in the Florida Keys"
• Jeff Gray, Manager, NOAA's Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary and Underwater Preserve
"An Update on the Sanctuary"
• Wayne Lusardi, Michigan Dept. of History, Arts and Libraries
"Archaeological and Historical Research at Thunder Bay"

Capturing Recollections
Chair: Fred Schultz, Editor-in-Chief, Naval History Magazine, U.S. Naval Institute
• Dr. David Winkler, Program Director, Naval Historical Foundation
"The $1,000,000 Interview" Paper, Slides
• Michele Kelly, Director of Oral History, Battleship Massachusetts
"Massachusetts Veterans Interviews"
• Joseph Smith, San Jose University
"Library of Congress Veterans History Program"Slides

Annual Reports and Donors
Chair: Burchenal Green, Executive Vice President, National Maritime Historical Society
• William Galvani, Director, Naval Undersea Museum, Keyport, WA
"Annual Reports for Nonprofits"
• David Guertin, Director of Development, Battleship Massachusetts and Mita Vail, Vice President, Development and Government Relations, The Mariners' Museum
"Growing and Managing Your Donor Base: The Fundraising Linchpin"

Reviving Extinct Small Craft
Chair: Hallie Bond, Curator, The Adirondack Museum
• Michael Alford, Curator Emeritus, North Carolina Maritime Museum & Paul Fontenoy, Curator, North Carolina Maritime Museum
"Periaugers: North Carolina Plantation Craft", Paper
• Paul Fontenoy, NCMM and Scott Whitesides, Curator, Roanoke Island Festival Park
"North Carolina Shad Boats"
• John Muir, Associate Curator, San Francisco Maritime Park
"East Meets West: Chinese-Americans and the San Francisco Bay Shrimp Junk"
• Dr. John Montague, Professor of Watercraft Studies, Buffalo State University
"The People's Yacht: The Lark, 1898"

10:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.

PLENARY SESSION

• James Delgado, Executive Director, Vancouver Maritime Museum
"The Union Submarine Explorer" Offsite Information

Saturday, October 30

8:30 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.

The Legendary CSS Alabama
Chair: Dr. William Dudley, former Director of Naval History
• Robert Edington, President, CSS Alabama Association
"Admiral Semmes and the Cruise of CSS Alabama"
• Gordon Watts, Director, Institute for International Maritime Research
"The CSS Alabama Recovery Project" Paper

Stewardship: A "Save America's Treasures" Grant for Bodie Island Light Station
Chair: Ralph Eshelman, Eshelman & Associates
• Steve Harrison, Cape Hatteras National Seashore, National Park Service
"Management and the Planning and Documentation Project" Slides
• Candace Clifford, Vice President, ALCC and author
"Research and History of Bodie Island Lighthouse"
• Todd Croteau, Historic American Engineering Record, National Park Service
"HABS/HAER Documentation and Lens Digitizing", Paper, Slides

Marine Sanctuaries - Part 2:
Marine Archaeology
Chair: Dr. Lawrence Babits, Maritime Studies Program, East Carolina University
• James Smailes, Secretary, Maritime Archaeological and Historical Society
"French Reef: A Study in Volunteer Stewardship", Paper, Slides
• Bruce Terrell, Senior Archaeologist, NOAA's National Marine Sanctuaries Program and David Porter Howe, Maritime Archaeological and Historical Society
"General McClellan's Navy: Surveying the Army Quartermaster Ships of the Peninsula Campaign on Virginia's Pamunkey River"
• John William Morris, III, Lighthouse Archaeological Maritime Program
"The Investigation, Interpretation and Recreation of an Early 19th Century Floridian Centerboard Vessel"
• Hans Van Tilburg, NOAA's National Marine Sanctuary Program
"The Many faces of Midway"

Digital Resources in Maritime Studies
Chair: Paul O'Pecko, Director, G. W. Blunt White Library, Mystic Seaport, Museum
• Peter McCracken, Co-founder, Serials Solutions, Inc., Seattle, WA
"Finding the Rose among Thorns: A Sampling of Useful Sites in Virtual Maritime History" Paper
• Kelly Drake, Systems and Digital Librarian, Mystic Seaport Museum
"Scholarly Desires: Digital Wants in the Primary Source World"
• Dr. Joshua Smith, Humanities Department, U.S. Merchant Marine Academy
"Attention on the Deck: Teaching and Research with Digital Data"

Historic Naval Ship Museums - Part 4
Chair: Captain Channing Zucker, Executive Director Emeritus, Historic Naval Ships Association
• Joseph Lombardi, Principal Surveyor, Ocean Technical Services and RADM Thomas Seigenthaler, former Executive Director, Battleship New Jersey Museum
"The Historic Naval Ships Association goes to Russia" Slides
• Paul Cora, Curator, Baltimore Maritime Museum
"2003 Dry-docking of USCGC Taney" Paper

Shipbuilding - Then and Now
Chair: Dr. Raymond Ashley, Executive Director, Maritime Museum of San Diego
• Christina Kjellson, Mid-Sweden University
"Swedish Shipbuilding in the 19th Century" Paper
• Peter Lesher, Curator, Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum
"Small Vessel Shipbuilding on the Chesapeake in the 19th Century" Paper
• Dr. James Morris, Christopher Newport University
"Newport News Shipbuilding and the City it Built"

10:30 a.m. - noon

Maritime Heritage Education at Sea Chair: Cathy Green, Education Coordinator, Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary & Underwater Preserve
• Dr. Mary Malloy, Historian and Faculty Member, Sea Education Association
"Mariners, Museums, Ships and Science: Connecting the Present and Ship to Shore"
• Alix Thorne, President, Ocean Classroom Foundation
"Voyaging Into Maritime History: Reporting Statue of Liberty Broad off Port Bow"
• Deirdre O'Regan, Editor, Sea History magazine, National Maritime Historical Society
"Preserving our Maritime Heritage through Working Sail: Sail Training and the Professional Mariner"

Lighthouse Stewardship

• John Birkholz, Outer Banks conservationist and Daniel Smith, Special Assistant to the Director, National Park Service
"The Battle for Currituck"

Marine Sanctuaries - Part 3
Chair: Dr. John Broadwater, Manager, NOAA's Maritime Heritage Program
• Deborah Marx, Maritime Archaeologist, NOAA's Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary
"The Steamship Portland: Update on Site Investigations" Paper
• Tane Casserly, Nautical Archaeologist, NOAA's Monitor National Marine Sanctuary
"2004 Season on the Monitor"
• Bruce Terrell, Senior Archaeologist, NOAA's National Marine Sanctuary Program
"Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary: 2005 USS Macon Expedition
• Matthew Lawrence, Maritime Archaeologist, Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary
"Keeping New England Warm: The Archaeology of Colliers in the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary"

History of Maritime Zones and NOAA Publications and Charts
Chair: Captain Steven Barnum, Chief, Navigation Services Division, NOAA
• Meredith Westington, Coast Survey Development Laboratory, NOAA
"The History of Maritime Zones: Territorial Sea, Continguous Zone and Exclusive Economic Zone"
• Thomas Jackson, NOAA
"History of the U.S. Coast Pilot" Paper
• Joseph Robinson, Marine Chart Division, NOAA
"The History of Nautical Charting by the U.S. Coast Survey"

Historic Naval Ship Museums - Part 5

• Joseph Lombardi, Principal Surveyor, Ocean Technical Services
"Bringing a Nuclear Powered Submarine to Newport, Kentucky"
• Captain Dick Jose, Europe Coordinator, Historic Naval Ships Association
"Three Dutch Naval Ship Museums", Paper, Slides

Maritime Data Bases: Getting It All Together Chair: Michael Overfield, Office of Ocean Exploration, NOAA
• Randy Drew, Southwynde Studios
"Acquisition and Digitization of Historical Records"
• Gavin Duncan
"Shipbuilding History: Progress During the Past Three Years" Paper
• Joseph Mosier, Archivist, Chrysler Museum of Art and William Prochazka, IT Manager, Chrysler Museum of Art
"Making Data Bases Available"

LUNCHEON SPEAKER

• Peter Stanford, President Emeritus, National Maritime Historical Society
"American Achievements by Sea"

1:30 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.

The Navy and African-Americans
Chair: Dr. Edward Marolda, Senior Historian, Naval Historical Center
• Don Canney, Historian and U.S. Coast Guard Museum Registrar
"The U.S. Navy versus the Slave Trade, 1842-1862"
• Dr. Joseph Reidy, Howard University
"Lessons in Life from the Annals of Death: The Experience of African-American Sailors who died in Civil War Naval Service"
• Dr. Herbert Gilliland, U.S. Naval Academy
"More Wine Captain Bell? An Abolitionist Naval Commander and Theodore Canot" Paper

Lighthouse Alliances Chair: Anne Webster, Vice President, ALCC and Maine Lights Program
• Dr. Daniel Koski-Karell and Kebby Kelley, U.S. Coast Guard
"The Coast Guard and the National Lighthouse Preservation Act" Slides
• Anne Webster, Vice President, ALCC and Maine Lights Program
"Working with State Historic Preservation Officers" Paper
• Joseph Jakubik, International Chimney Corp.
"Working with Contractors: Build-design Contracts"

Shipwrecks
Chair: Dr. Nathan Richards, Maritime Studies Program, East Carolina University
• Rand Pixa, Proctor in Admiralty
"In Defense of Perpetual Title to Sovereign Wrecks." Paper, Slides
• Edward Von der Porten, Historian
"New Research about the Manila Galleon San Felipe"
• David Moore, Curator of Nautical Archaeology, North Carolina Maritime Museum
"Interpreting Blackbeard the Pirate and the Queen Anne's Revenge Shipwreck Project through the North Carolina Maritime Museum"

National Parks and Trails
Chair: Kevin Foster, Chief, Maritime Heritage Program, National Park Service
• Douglas Stover, Historian, National Park Service
"Hurricane Impacts to our Maritime Resources" Slides
• Ralph Eshelman, Eshelman & Associates
"The Star-Spangled Banner National Historic Trail: A Potential National Maritime Legacy of the War of 1812" Paper
• Stephen Carlson, Preservation Specialist, Boston National Historical Park, National Park Service
"Dry Dock No. 1, Charlestown Navy Yard" Paper

What Has The Government Done for You Lately?
Chair: Captain Mary Mosier, Manager, Battleship USS Wisconsin
• Captain Albert Theberge, NOAA Historian
"Two Hundred Years of Service: The Coast Survey"
• Timothy Thompson, Archaeologist, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
"The Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway: Putting the Pieces Together"
• Brian Jordan, National Marine Protected Areas Center
"Submerged Cultural Resources and the National Marine Protected Areas System Development Process" Paper, Slides

Wooden Boat Preservation - Part 2
Chair: Dana Hewson, Vice President, Watercraft Preservation and Programs, Mystic Seaport Museum
• Susan Daly, Coronet Development and Marketing Director, International Yacht Restoration School
"Restoration of the schooner Coronet" Slides
• Peter Roos, Newport Restoration Foundation
"Earning Their Keep"
• Quentin Snediker, Henry Dupont Preservation Shipyard
"The Impact of Regulation on Historic Vessels in Underway Service"

3:30 p.m. -5:00 p.m.

Lieutenant Charles Wilkes and the U.S. Exploring Expedition
Chair: Dr. Harold Langley, former Curator of Naval History, The Smithsonian Institution
• Nathaniel Philbrick, Director, Egan Institute of Maritime Studies
"Wilkes at Sea"
• David Brose, Director, Cranbrook Institute of Science, Bloomfield Hills, MI and Barbara Brose, former Director, Gaston County Museum of Art and History, Dallas, NC
"Discovering Charles Wilkes in North Carolina" D. Brose Paper, B. Brose Paper

The National Lighthouse Preservation Act: A Town Meeting
Facilitator: Kathy Fleming, St. Augustine Lighthouse & Museum

How Advances in Remote Sensing Have Helped Underwater Archaeology
Chair: Dr. Frank Cantelas, Maritime Studies Program, East Carolina University
• Martin Klein, Martin Klein Consultants
"The Role of Technology in Underwater Archaeology"
• Vincent Capone, Bateaux Below.
"A Decade-and-a-half of Submerged Remote Sensing at Lake George, New York"
• Joseph Zarzynski, Bateaux Below
"High Tech Helps Underwater Archaeology at Lake George"

Civil-Military Relations of Civil War Navies-Session Cancelled
Chair: Dr. William Still, author and historian
• Howard Fuller, Research Fellow in U.S. Naval History
"An 'Obedient Servant'? John Ericsson, the Navy and Control of the Union Ironclad Program"
• Thomas Campbell, naval historian
"Confederate Naval Leadership"
• COL Kevin Weddle, U.S. Army
"Charleston is a Cul-de-Sac: Union Naval Civil-Military Relations and the Plan to Seize Charleston by Sea, 1862-1863"

International Ship Museums
Chair: LCdr Sherry Richardson, HMCS Sackville, Halifax, NS
• Commander John Paton, Secretary, National Historic Ships Committee
"The United Kingdom's Core Collection of Historic Ships" Paper
• Alexei Shutkin, Deputy Director, Museum of the World Ocean, Kaliningrad, Russia
"Problems with the Museum Ship Vityaz Preservation"

Historic Site Mapping and Confederate Submarine H. L. Hunley Project Update

• Carlos Velazquez, Project Manager, Epic Scan, Ltd.
"2D and 3D LIDAR Mapping of Heritage Sites and Vessels"
• Dr. Robert Neyland, Head, Underwater Archaeology Branch, Naval Historical Center
"H.L. Hunley - From Recovery to Reburial"

 

Copyright © 1997-2007, Historic Naval Ships Association.
All Rights Reserved.
Legal Notices and Privacy Policy
Version 3.00