- by foxnews
- 24 May 2025
The New York State Museum announced in a mid-May press release that the ship will be housed in its Albany headquarters. The 18th-century vessel was found during an excavation of Ground Zero in July 2010.
With help from Texas A&M University historical preservationists, experts have been working for 14 years to gather facts about the ship while preserving it carefully.
The ship, which measures 50 feet long and 18 feet wide, has been identified as a "rare" American-built gunboat.
The vessel was likely built in the Philadelphia area in the 1770s.
It was used during the Revolutionary War but was decommissioned after roughly two decades.
"[B]y the 1790s, the ship was out of commission and repurposed as landfill to expand New York City, ultimately ending up beneath what would become the World Trade Center," the New York State Museum said.
"Today, it stands as one of the few American-built Revolutionary War ships to be identified, studied and preserved in New York State."
In total, 600 pieces of wood and roughly 2,000 artifacts were found at the site, including musketballs.
After years of carefully preserving each piece of wood and artifact, the preservation team began the process of reconstructing the vessel at the New York State Museum on May 14.
In a statement, New York State Historian Devin Lander said the exhibit is "history in its rawest, most thrilling form."
"New York stood at the epicenter of our fight for freedom, and this gunboat is a physical reminder of that courage and grit."
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