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Vicious winter storms in Maine brought a rare glimpse of the 112-year-old shipwreck of the two-masted schooner Tay.
BAR HARBOR, Maine - Record-breaking storm surge from winter storms in Maine recently uncovered a shipwreck known as the "Tay" in Acadia National Park. The shipwreck washed ashore in 1911, several ...
The ship was carrying close to 90,000 feet of spruce planks when it struck a ledge on July 28, 1911, according to the National Park Service.
Vicious winter storms in Maine brought a rare glimpse of the 112-year-old shipwreck of the two-masted schooner Tay. ... A load of shingles was lost but planks carried below deck washed ashore.
The ship was carrying close to 90,000 feet of spruce planks when it struck a ledge on July 28, 1911, according to the National Park Service.
The two-masted schooner Tay ran aground on Mount Desert Island in July 1911, resulting in the death of the ship’s cook. The Tay, captained by I.W. Scott of St. John, New Brunswick, sprung a leak ...
The ship was carrying close to 90,000 feet of spruce planks when it struck a ledge on July 28, 1911, according to the National Park Service.
The ship was carrying close to 90,000 feet of spruce planks when it struck a ledge on July 28, 1911, according to the National Park Service.
The ship was carrying close to 90,000 feet of spruce planks when it struck a ledge on July 28, 1911, according to the National Park Service. The wreckage of a sailing schooner named the "Tay" was ...
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