George R. Fischer

George R. Fischer at his namesake laboratory at Florida State University

George Robert Fischer (May 4, 1937 – May 29, 2016) was an American underwater archaeologist, considered the founding father of the field in the National Park Service. A native Californian, he did undergraduate and graduate work at Stanford University, and began his career with the National Park Service in 1959, which included assignments in six parks, the Washington, D.C. Office, and the Southeast Archaeological Center from which he retired in 1988. He began teaching courses in underwater archaeology at Florida State University in 1974 and co-instructed inter-disciplinary courses in scientific diving techniques. After retirement from the NPS his FSU activities were expanded and his assistance helped shape the university's program in underwater archaeology.

Fischer was a true pioneer[1] in the field of underwater archaeology and his students are now professors in the U.S. and abroad, serve as state, federal, and territorial archaeologists, direct non-profit research organizations, and work in the private sector. He founded and oversaw the underwater archaeology program for the National Park Service in 1968, and was involved with many of the early shipwreck excavations that are now required reading in introductory textbooks (such as the 1554 Padre Island galleons,[2][3] 1733 galleon San Jose,[4] 1622 galleon Rosario,[5][6] 1748 British warship HMS Fowey,[7] 1865 steamboat Bertrand[8]). Fischer taught, as a volunteer at no cost to the university, for almost 30 years at Florida State University, which enabled their underwater archaeology program and introduced hundreds of students to this field.

  1. ^ "LAMP Lifetime Achievement award". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2013-02-18.
  2. ^ Padre Island Spanish Shipwrecks of 1554, Texas State Historical Association
  3. ^ "Arnold, J. Barto III, and Robert S. Weddle (1978) The Nautical Archaeology of Padre Island: the Spanish Shipwrecks of 1554. Academic Press, New York.
  4. ^ The 1733 Spanish Galleon Trail: San Jose
  5. ^ Fort Jefferson, Dry Tortugas National Park, Florida
  6. ^ "Johnson, Richard (1982) Underwater Archaeological Investigations at FOJE-UW-9 Conducted in Summer 1982 at Fort Jefferson National Monument, Dry Tortugas, Florida. Southeastern Archaeological Center, National Park Service, Tallahassee, Florida.
  7. ^ HMS Fowey Lost and Found, by Russell Skowronek and George Fischer, University Press of Florida (2009) Description at University Press of Florida. Retrieved 2012-04-27. ISBN 978-0-8130-3320-4
  8. ^ Petsche, Jerome E. "Uncovering the Steamboat Bertrand".[usurped] Nebraska History 51 (1970), pp. 1-15.