George Fischer served as principal investigator on field projects undertaken through his Park Service and FSU career in two areas of
Gulf Islands National Seashore;
Castillo de San Marcos,
Fort Jefferson, and
Fort Matanzas National Monuments in
Florida; and
Fort Frederica National Monument in Georgia. Projects in
Florida outside the National Park System included investigations at Fort Picolata, St. John's County; a survey for
HMS Fox (1799) at St. George Island; a survey of Ballast Cove, Dog Island; an underwater survey of
Wakulla Springs; a project involving applications of underwater archaeological techniques to crime scene investigation for the
Florida Department of Law Enforcement; and several investigations of shipwreck sites in
Mobile Bay. He also taught portions of workshops that the Academic Diving Program has sponsored for outside agencies.
Montezuma Well In the earliest underwater archaeological investigations by the Park Service (October, 1968), Fischer directed a survey and testing of
Montezuma Well,
Montezuma Castle National Monument,
Arizona.
Steamboat Bertrand From July to September, 1969, Fischer served as field coordinator on the excavation of the 19th century steamboat
Bertrand at
Desoto National Wildlife Refuge on the
Missouri River near
Blair, Nebraska.
Fort Jefferson Fort Jefferson is a US Third System Fort 70 miles west of
Key West in the
Gulf of Mexico, and is the largest brick masonry fortification in the western hemisphere. In the late 1960s and early 1970s Fischer led evaluations of underwater archaeological resources, limited underwater archaeological survey and excavations, and extensive underwater archaeological survey and testing activities. The 1969 work marked the first extensive shipwreck survey by the NPS on park property, noting more than 20 sites. He also participated with staff of
Earth Satellite Corporation in a
remote sensing survey for historic shipwreck sites, and assisted in analysis of data. Work was conducted at Fort Jefferson in 1981 and 1982 in partnership with Florida State University.
1622 galleon Rosario In the summer of 1981 and 1982 Fischer directed underwater archaeological investigations of what is considered the wreck of the
Nuestra Señora del Rosario of the 1622 Spanish fleet, as well as an unidentified
patache of the same fleet. This investigation revealed what could represent one of the pataches that was sent to salvage the
Rosario less than a month after the hurricane that sank it, possibly documenting the speed with which the Spanish salvaged their own wrecks. Through legal conflicts and systematic surveys and archaeological investigations of the 1980s and 1990s, Fischer and his staff from the Park Service and students from Florida State University not only identified the sunken vessel but won a legal battle that effectively changed how
Admiralty law was applied to submerged shipwreck sites. The court found that the
National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 was to be applied to submerged shipwreck sites as it is to historic sites on land, no longer allowing plundering by individuals using
marine salvage and Admiralty law to profiteer from the non-archaeological salvage of a historic shipwreck in National Park grounds. This activity is seen by many of his colleagues and former students as George Fischer's defining act.
Advisory Council on Underwater Archaeology Fischer was also a founding member of the Advisory Council on Underwater Archaeology, an international committee of the
Society for Historical Archaeology that provides advice and assistance to governments, institutions, and individuals on matters relating to the field. He currently holds emeritus status.
FSU ADP During the period of Fischer's tenure as a courtesy professor the FSU Coastal and Marine Laboratory's Academic Diving Program, established in 1975, grew to one of the largest and most active diving research, support, and training programs in the
United States. The Marine Lab and Academic Diving Program traditionally supports the research diving needs of faculty and students from many departments, as well as several outside agencies, including the Florida Geological Survey and the
US Environmental Protection Agency. His input and continuity over three decades was instrumental in the expansion and ongoing development of this program.
Publications • George Fischer, with primary author and former student Russell K. Skowronek, authored the book
HMS Fowey Lost and Found: Being the Discovery, Excavation, and Identification of a British Man-of-War Lost off the Cape of Florida in 1748, published by the University Press of Florida on January 26, 2009. • Fischer, George R. (1975) A Survey of the Offshore Lands of Gulf Islands National Seashore, Florida.
International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 3(2):338-339. • Fischer, George R. (1975) "Archeological Assessment of Biscayne National Monument." Southeast Archeological Center, National Park Service, Tallahassee, Florida. • Fischer, George R. (1980) "Interim Report: Underwater Archeological Survey of Legare Anchorage, Biscayne National Park." Southeast Archeological Center, National Park Service, Tallahassee, Florida. • Fischer, George R. and Richard E. Johnson (1982) "Fort Jefferson National Monument Overview, Research Design, and Scope of Work, Investigations of Site FOJE-UW-9 (8MO83)." Southeast Archeological Center, National Park Service, Tallahassee, Florida. • Skowronek, Russell K., Richard E. Johnson, Richard H. Vernon and George R. Fischer (1987) "The Legare Anchorage Shipwreck Site-Grave of HMS
Fowey".
International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 16(4):313-324. • Fischer, George R. and Philip R. Gerrell (1990) An Underwater Archaeological Assessment of Cultural Resources Located at the Edward Ball Wakulla Springs State Park (8WA24), Florida. In
Underwater Archaeology Proceedings from the Society for Historical Archaeology Conference, edited by Toni Carrell, pp. 125–128. Society for Historical Archaeology, Tucson, Arizona. • McLean, Cecil W. and George R. Fischer (1991) Investigation of the Civil War Blockade Runner
Ivanhoe. Florida State University Department of Anthropology. • Fischer, George R. (1993) The Conference on Underwater Archaeology and The Advisory Council on Underwater Archaeology: A Brief History. In
Underwater Archaeology Proceedings from the Society for Historical Archaeology Conference, edited by Shelli O. Smith, pp. 2–6. Society for Historical Archaeology, Kansas City, Missouri. • Fischer, George R. (1999) The History of Underwater Archaeology at Florida State University: a Retrospective of the Past and a Look to the Future. In
Underwater Archaeology Proceedings from the Society for Historical Archaeology Conference, edited by Adrian A. Neidinger and Matthew A. Russell, pp. 80–84. Society for Historical Archaeology, Salt Lake City, Utah. ==Awards and honors==