Harris, Lynn BSchuler, Jillian2023-06-052024-05-012023-052023-05-03May 2023http://hdl.handle.net/10342/12884Before General Charles Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown in 1781, he scuttled a portion of his shipping fleet along the Yorktown riverbank to defend the town from a Franco- American amphibious attack. An environment rife with maritime material culture, the river has been subject to formal and informal salvage, including a joint effort in the 1930s by the Mariners' Museum and the National Park Service that produced a significant artifact assemblage with minimal archaeological context. This thesis will attempt to contextualize the 1930s salvaged assemblage of York River through an artifact pattern developed from four case studies: HMS Invincible (1758), HMS Swift (1770), General Carleton (1785), and Betsy (1781). The artifact pattern presents potential archaeological distinctions between British naval and merchant vessels during the second half of the 18th century.application/pdfenAmerican War of IndependenceBattle of YorktownMaritime Material CultureArtifact Patterning18th Century British NavySalvage archaeology--Virginia--York RiverUnited States--History--Revolution, 1775-1783Underwater archaeology--Virginia--York RiverInvincible (Ship : 1744-1758)General Carleton (Ship)Betsy (Ship)Swift (Sloop of war)“GUNS AND SHIPS AND SO THE BALANCE SHIFTS”: USING ARTIFACT PATTERNING TO CONTEXTUALIZE A SALVAGED ASSEMBLAGE DATED TO THE BATTLE OF YORKTOWN, 1781Master's Thesis2023-06-02