wreck diving - Atocha Treasure Company
Transcription
wreck diving - Atocha Treasure Company
WRECK DIVING MAGAZINE W R E C K D I V IMagazine NG ™ ...uncover the past 1715 Fleet Part IV • Aquarium Dive on the USS Monitor • Boats of “Cherbourg Affair” Great Storm of 1913 • Smyrna • SS Thistlegorm • U-550 • USS Tucker • Wrecks of Gulen Following the fins of Cousteau The SS Thistlegorm and its incredible cargo The Elusive Wolf The discovery of the U-550 Issue 31 $7.95 The 100 year anniversary of the Great Storm of 1913 Thirteen of the most dramatic stories about a single storm that took over 250 lives Issue 31 A Quarterly Publication The Queen’s Priceless Jewels An eighteenth-century nautical chart showing the location where the 1715 fleet was lost. THE QUEST FOR THE A diving bell like this one was used right after the 1715 ships were lost to salvage amounts of treasure off of them. 46 ISSUE 31 • 2013 QUEEN’S PRICELESS JEWELS In 1700, Charles II of Spain, last of the Hapsburg rulers, died. In his will, he nominated the grandson of Louis XIV of France to succeed him as Philip V. The English, Dutch, and Austrians regarded this extension of Bourbon power as a threat to their countries and joined forces in a destructive and costly war against Spain and France — the War of the Spanish Succession (17011714). France lost the war, but, in the peace treaty, the major European powers agreed to accept Philip V, provided the crowns of France and Spain were never joined. During the course of the war, the Dutch and English concentrated on disrupting communications between Spain and her American colonies, thus depriving her of the treasures of the New World, which she desperately needed to finance the war. In 1702 a combined Anglo–Dutch fleet annihilated a convoy of returning Spanish treasure ships and its escort of French warships in Vigo Bay off the Spanish coast. Subsequently, Spain suspended annual sailings of the treasure fleets to and from the Indies. Only three further attempts to carry treasure to Spain were made. In 1708 the English destroyed a fleet off Cartagena. Its flagship, the San Jose, sank with the richest silver treasure ever lost in the Western Hemisphere – a total of 22,000,000 pesos excluding contraband. And, in 1711, a hurricane wrecked a treasure fleet off Cuba’s north coast. Consequently, as the war drew to a close, the Spanish Crown was on the verge of bankruptcy. At sunrise on July 24, 1715, a convoy consisting of twelve ships set sail from Havana harbor for the long voyage back to Spain. It was composed of five ships of the New Spain Flota, commanded by Captain-General Don Juan Esteban de Ubilla; six ships of the Flota de Tierra Firme, commanded by Captain-General Don Antonio de Echeverz y Zubiza; and a French ship, the Grifon, under the command of Captain Antonio Daire. The Grifon, which happened to be in Havana at the time, received permission to return to Europe in the convoy. Echeverz’s flota sailed from Spain directly to Cartagena, Colombia, carrying assorted merchandise to sell in Cartagena, Portobelo, Panama, and in Havana. When he arrived in Cartagena, Echeverz sent word to the viceroy of Peru to deliver, as usual, the accumulated treasure of Peru and Chile to Panama City. From there, mules generally transported it overland to Portobelo, where a commercial fair was held. Then, the treasure would be loaded aboard the ships of the Flota de Tierra Firme for transport to Spain. Echeverz also notified the viceroy of New Granada in Bogotá www.WreckDivingMag.com ✴ Both early 18th-century charts showing the Bahama Channel with Cuba, Bahamas and Florida. Shipwrecks of the 1715 Spanish Treasure Fleet By Robert F. Marx Part FOUR to send his stored-up treasure, and he alerted the governor of the island of Margarita to send pearls. When the Tierra Firme Flota sailed to Havana to join up with the New Spain Flota, its three largest galleons were crammed with all the pearls and South American treasure of emeralds, gold, silver specie and bullion. The New Spain Flota sailed from Spain with eight ships, but four sank during a storm while in Veracruz, so only four ships sailed for Havana where Ubilla added a small frigate. His Capitana or lead ship was one of the richest vessels ever to sail from the New World to Spain. She carried over three and a half million pesos in gold and silver plus vast amounts of jewelry, Chinese porcelain and other objects from the Orient. However, her most valuable cargo was some forty chests of jewelry and gold objects especially crafted in the Orient for the new Queen of Spain, Elizabeth Farnese. A powerful Savoy princess who married Philip V in 1701, she demanded an enormous dowry, everything from several hundred jewelstudded crowns to an eight-hundred-piece, gold, dinner set. In 1706, the entire collection, having safely reached Veracruz from Manila, was loaded on a galleon. Sometime after the flota set sail for Havana, the galleon carrying these treasures sank without a trace in the Gulf of Mexico. Unbelievable as it may sound, the same scenario was repeated five years later, in 1711. Then, in 1715, Ubilla was entrusted with a third and equally ill-fated collection for the Queen. In the hurricane that shattered the fleet, his Capitana with the Farnese treasure aboard went down just south of Sebastian www.WreckDivingMag.com Inlet in the area known today as the “Cabin Site.” Until now it has eluded discovery. The 1715 convoy had made its uneventful way from Havana, up the Bahamas Channel, also known as the Straits of Florida. But, on the night of July 30, a fierce hurricane dashed all the ships but the Grifon upon the coast of Florida. Over a thousand people perished, including Ubilla and his principal officers. Fifteen hundred reached shore by swimming or floating on pieces of wreckage. Many of them perished from exposure, thirst, and hunger before aid arrived from Havana and St. Augustine. Ubilla’s flagship (Almiranta), carrying over 2,700,000 pesos of registered gold and silver, plus other valuables, met her fate several miles north of Vero Beach. Two ships carrying lesser amounts of treasure sank near Fort Pierce at Douglas Beach. According to the bills of lading, the smallest one, a patache, (a small advice boat, which rarely carried treasure or cargo), had only 44,000 pesos in registered silver coins. However, like virtually all Spanish ships sailing home, this little vessel was no exception to the rule that Spanish vessels invariably carried tremendous amounts of contraband cargo in an effort to escape the government’s onerous taxes. According to official records, contemporary salvors made no attempt to salvage the patache. However, in the past 30 years divers have recovered over 30,000 gold coins (more than all the other 1715 ships combined) and over 50,000 silver coins, plus large amounts of jewelry. Salvage attempts began immediately after the hurricane. By the end of December 1715, officials in charge of the operation reported ISSUE 31 • 2013 47 they had recovered all of the treasure—the major part of that belonging to private individuals and totaling 5,200,000 pesos. At that time a peso was not an actual coin but rather a monetary unit equivalent to an ounce and a quarter of silver. A piece of eight was one ounce of silver in weight. The following spring, salvors recovered an additional small amount. By July, when salvage efforts halted, they reported a total find of 5,241,166 pesos in silver specie and bars, excluding gold specie and bars, silverware, and general cargoes. After Spanish salvage operations ended, Englishmen from Jamaica and the Bahamas continued to recover unknown amounts from these wrecks. When the Spaniards stopped salvage work, an official total of 1,244,900 pesos of registered treasure was unaccounted for. The actual amount is unknown since both survivors and salvors stole what they could and there is no way to determine how much unregistered treasure remains. Gold, which in terms of weight was then sixteen times more valuable than silver, was the most common item smuggled to Spain. This is substantiated by the fact that most of the gold disks recovered lacked the multiple required markings for registered gold bars. Smugglers used ingenious methods. In 1606, for example, Custom’s Officers in Cadiz, suspicious of two, freshly-painted, huge anchors on a galleon, discovered they were not iron but solid gold, weighing over two tons. There is no recorded mention of the 1715 wrecks until around the beginning of the nineteenth century when a surveyor discovered several hundred silver and gold coins on a beach near Fort Pierce Inlet. Then, in 1948, a building contractor named Kip Wagner, walking along the beach near Sebastian Inlet (about midway between Fort Pierce Inlet and Cape Canaveral), found seven Spanish silver coins. Although Wagner hadn’t been interested in history or treasure, this discovery hooked him for life and led to one of the most amazing treasure finds in history. During the next year he spent hours each day walking up and down the beaches without finding another coin. He began to think the coins he had found might have been planted by someone playing a joke on him. He borrowed a metal detector and discovered a coin buried under several inches of sand. Over the next several months he unearthed forty more coins and concluded that, since he made most of his finds after storms, the coins must be coming from an offshore wreck. So he began wading and swimming off shore when the water was calm and clear, using his toes to search in the crevices and holes on the reef for any objects that might identify a wreck. All he got for his labors were severe cuts on his legs and feet from the razorrock and coral. In those days he didn’t dive; he didn’t even have a facemask. A neighbor and close friend, Kip Kelso, a physician who was also a history buff, disagreed with Wagner. He believed the coins were coming from a buried hoard on a shipwreck that bad weather had uncovered and scattered over the beach. For several years, the two men spent many evenings arguing this point. Meanwhile, Wagner continued to find more coins. Ignorant of their numismatic value, he melted many coins and fashioned them into toy soldiers for “ 48 ISSUE 31 • 2013 When the Spaniards stopped salvage work, an official total of 1,244,900 pesos of registered treasure was unaccounted for. neighborhood children. One day he heard that some boys had just discovered a shipwreck while swimming about 75 feet from shore in four feet of water, about three miles south of Sebastian Inlet and about one mile from where he had found many coins on the beach. Believing the wreck might well be the source of the coins, Wagner and Kelso and several friends spent the summer of 1949 salvaging what they thought was a treasure wreck. They rented a dragline, a bulldozer, and a pneumatic hammer as excavation tools, establishing a campsite on the beach. At low tide, they used the bulldozer to build a temporary pier out to the wreck area and then dropped the dragline in and pulled it ashore. They had to construct a new sand pier after each high tide. When the dragline pulled ashore fragments of wood, metal spikes, and ship’s fasteners in the first few days, their anticipation soared. Several days later they discovered a cannon carriage and some unbroken bottles. After three months of backbreaking work, the only treasure recovered was a single, Spanish copper maravedi coin dated 1649. The treasure seekers were exhausted and disillusioned. They had spent $12,000, a small fortune in those days, and had nothing to show for it. However, Wagner was unshaken in his belief that an offshore shipwreck was the source of coins on the beach. Years later, he discovered he had been partially correct — what they had found was actually a section of the superstructure of a galleon; the main body of the wrecked ship and its treasure lay farther off shore. During the next ten years, Wagner continued beachcombing whenever he could get away from his construction business. He found a few other places on the beach, miles from the first area, which yielded similar coins. None of the hundreds www.WreckDivingMag.com Opposite Page: Every day there are beach combers with metal detectors searching for treasure on the 1715 wreck sites and other wrecks in the area. Above: Small bronze signal cannon draped with gold rosaries which were found on the Flagship (Cabin) site in just four feet of water. Bob Marx examining piles of Spanish silver pieces of eight he and his crew recovered in 1968 off the Cabin site on the 1715 wreck. of coins were dated later than 1715. A National Park Service historian told him he’d read somewhere that a Spanish fleet had sunk off Cape Canaveral during a hurricane in 1715. Wagner wrote to an expert at the Smithsonian for information. The reply he received indicated that a fleet had indeed sunk in 1715, but off the Florida Keys, not off the East Coast. Wagner was confused. Two “expert” opinions placed the sunken fleet in locations more than 250 miles apart. Wagner wrote to the director of the Archives of the Indies in Seville. His reply was vague, supplying no new information. He asked a friend, who was in Spain, to visit the archives and investigate. Months later he received a package containing hundreds of microfilmed pages of documents concerning the fleet. Ironically, the documents were uncovered in the archives by Dr. Nancy Farris, PhD, my wife at that time. This was when I learned of the Queen’s jewels. The ancient documents mentioned that the Spanish salvors had camped on the beach near Sebastian Inlet — opposite one of the principal treasure ships. Wagner located the camp after long searching with a metal detector. He cleared thick scrub covering the site, and began sifting the sand with a shovel and screen. Work under the relentless sun was agonizingly slow, but for months he persisted. In the first week he unearthed hundreds of ceramic and porcelain shards, tacks, nails, musket balls, and other items. Eventually, he found more interesting artifacts, including a pair of cutlasses, coins, and chunks of silver, which he believed the salvors made by melting coins they recovered. His most spectacular find was a gold ring set with six small diamonds. One day Wagner was inspired to fashion a small surfboard with a glass viewing port and every day spent time www.WreckDivingMag.com A pile of Spanish silver pieces of eight off the Cabin site of the 1715 fleet. ISSUE 31 • 2013 49 paddling in the shallow water searching for a trace of the wreck he was certain was there. One afternoon when the water was unusually limpid, he sighted five iron cannon in nine feet of water. He rushed to tell Kip Kelso of his find. Kelso immediately set out to find scuba equipment for Wagner. Without any instruction in scuba diving, Wagner dove on the wreck site the following day and located more cannon and several anchors. A few days later he found a fistsized cluster of small silver coins fused together in a shape indicating they had originally been in a pouch, which had long since disintegrated. After exploring the wreck site for several weeks, Wagner realized most of the vestiges of the wreck were buried under sand and coral. He understood that if he had any hope of finding the queen’s jewels, he needed to regroup and develop a well-thought-out plan for salvaging the site of the 1715 wreck. About the Author: Robert Marx, in his many years as an underwater archeologist, has discovered and excavated ancient shipwrecks in over 60 sites worldwide. He has written more than 50 books, several hundred scientific reports and popular articles, and produced or shot over 50 documentary films. Above: Kip Wagner examining Spanish silver wedges recovered from one of the 1715 wrecks. Right - Top to Bottom: A gold religious medallion which usually contained some remnant of a saint’s possession. Second and Third Photo: Exquisite Chinese porcelain tea cups miraculously intact and found on the Cabin site. A pile of beautiful Spanish gold escudo, or doubloon coins. Girl with a large gold chain of which thousands were lost on the 1715 galleons. WHAT ARE PEOPLE SAYING ABOUT YOUR COMPANY? GET AN ADVANTAGE ON YOUR COMPETITION BY INVESTING IN YOUR GROWTH AND PUTTING YOUR MARKETING DOLLARS TO WORK FOR YOU NOW! We monitor social media for you to help your company achieve a variety of business objectives such as: • Improved Product Marketing • Customer Support • Brand Loyality • Consumer Purchase Decisions SOCIAL PERCEPTION collects near real-time social data from over 650 million sources from over 20 languages. We help you obtain a strong, coordinated social listening strategy. 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