Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Book Cover
Bestseller
BestsellerE-Book

Title La Belle : the ship that changed history / exhibition organized by the Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum ; James E. Bruseth, guest curator and catalog editor ; guest essays by Juliana Barr [and others].

Publication Info. College Station, Tex. : Published for the Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum by Texas A and M University Press, 2013.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Rocky Hill - Downloadable Materials  EBSCO Ebook    Downloadable
Rocky Hill cardholders click here to access this title from EBSCO
Description 1 online resource (104 pages)
Note Exhibition catalog.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Preface / Mark Wolfe -- Foreword / Clay Johnson -- Introduction / Joan Marshall and David Denney -- European competition for the New World / Jesús F. de la Teja -- La Salle's 1684 expedition / William C. Foster -- Native Americans / Juliana Barr -- Life and death at Matagorda Bay / Jeffrey Durst and James E. Bruseth -- Discovery, excavation, and preservation of La Belle / James E. Bruseth and Toni S. Turner -- The colony kit / James E. Bruseth.
Summary After two decades of searching for La Salle's lost ship La Belle, Texas Historical Commission (THC) divers in 1995 located a shipwreck containing historic artifacts of European origin in the silty bottom of Matagorda Bay, off the coast of Texas. The first cannon lifted from the waters bore late seventeenth-century French insignias. The ill-fated La Belle had been found. Under the direction of then-THC Archeology Division Director James Bruseth, the THC conducted a full excavation of the water-logged La Belle. The conservation was subsequently completed at Texas A and M University's Conservation Research Laboratory, resulting in preservation of more than one million artifacts from the wreck. An official naval vessel granted to La Salle by the king of France in 1684, La Belle is still considered a sovereign naval vessel belonging to the French government under international maritime law. A formal agreement negotiated by the French Republic, the Muse national de la Marine, the US Department of State, and the THC allows the ship and artifacts to remain in Texas permanently and to be housed in an exhibit at the Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum in Austin, opening October 2014. This richly illustrated catalog will accompany the exhibit.
Note Print version record.
Subject La Salle, Robert Cavelier, sieur de, 1643-1687 -- Exhibitions.
La Belle (Frigate) -- Exhibitions.
La Salle, Robert Cavelier, sieur de, 1643-1687. (OCoLC)fst00014960
La Belle (Frigate) (OCoLC)fst00759442
Underwater archaeology -- Texas -- Matagorda Bay -- Exhibitions.
Shipwrecks -- Texas -- Matagorda Bay -- Exhibitions.
Matagorda Bay (Tex.) -- Antiquities -- Exhibitions.
HISTORY -- United States -- State & Local -- Southwest (AZ, NM, OK, TX)
Antiquities. (OCoLC)fst00810745
Shipwrecks. (OCoLC)fst01116638
Underwater archaeology. (OCoLC)fst01161071
Gulf of Mexico -- Matagorda Bay. (OCoLC)fst01239547
Genre/Form Exhibition catalogs. (OCoLC)fst01424028
Added Author Barr, Juliana.
Bruseth, James E.
Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum.
Other Form: Print version: Bruseth, James E. Belle, the Ship That Changed History. College Station : Texas A & M University Press, ©2014 9781623490331
ISBN 9781623490843 (electronic bk.)
1623490847 (electronic bk.)
-->
Add a Review