Captain Cook's HM Endeavour may have been found after 240 years

Researchers say they believe they have located the wreckage of the Endeavour, the ship sailed by British explorer James Cook and carrying Lincolnshire's Sir Joseph Banks on route to Australia, which was sunk off the United States during the Revolutionary War.
Stern view of the HM Bark Endeavour. Photo credit: Australian National Maritime MuseumStern view of the HM Bark Endeavour. Photo credit: Australian National Maritime Museum
Stern view of the HM Bark Endeavour. Photo credit: Australian National Maritime Museum

The ship was scuttled in 1778 leading up to the Battle of Rhode Island between American colonists and the British, and was part of a blockade during the Revolutionary War.

It now appears to have been located by the Rhode Island Marine Archaeology Project (RIMAP) at one of nine sites containing 13 ships.

The ship, which Captain Cook sailed in the Pacific Ocean, passed through a number of hands before eventually being renamed the Lord Sandwich and was used in the Revolutionary War blockade.

RIMAP said it had pinpointed the wreckage at a site that included five other vessels, off the state of Rhode Island in Newport Harbor.

The association is launching a campaign to finance the construction of a storage facility to accommodate the objects that are likely to be found during excavation.

During his famous 1768 to 1771 voyage, Captain Cook helped map the south-west Pacific Ocean and took possession of Australia in the name of the Crown.