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The E-Sylum: Volume 18, Number 31, August 2, 2015, Article 40

A NEW 1715 FLEET TREASURE FIND

There are many articles out there this week on the new 1715 fleet treasure discovery. Here are a couple decent ones. The first is from a local Florida station. -Editor

1715 Fleet treasure

A Sanford family of treasure hunters has found more than $1 million worth of gold artifacts off the coast of Fort Pierce

Multiple media outlets reported Monday that boat captain Eric Schmitt and his family made the find June 17 in about 15 feet of water off Fort Pierce.

Brent Brisben is the co-founder of 1715 Fleet - Queens Jewels LLC, the company that owns the treasure's salvage rights. He says the items recovered include 51 gold coins and 40 feet of ornate gold chain. Among the findings is a rare coin called a "Royal" that was destined for the King of Spain.

Brisben says the artifacts date from a 1715 maritime tragedy in which 11 Spain-bound galleons laden with treasures from the New World were lost during a hurricane.

“These finds are important not just for their monetary value, but their historical importance,” said Brisben.

“One of our key goals is to help learn from and preserve history, and this week’s finds draw us closer to those truths.”

To read the complete article, see:
$1M in gold artifacts, coins recovered from Treasure Coast shipwreck sites (www.wpbf.com/news/1m-in-gold-artifacts-coins-recovered-from-treasure-coast-shipwreck-sites/34378248)

Here's one with some more information on the coins. -Editor

Treasure hunters off the Florida coast recently pulled up the haul of a lifetime: nearly $1 million worth of gold coins and elaborate gold chains, as well as an extremely rare Spanish coin known as a "Tricentennial Royal."

The treasures were hidden on the seafloor for 300 years before the crew of a salvage vessel brought them to the surface last month, on June 17. The riches were found just 1,000 feet (305 meters) offshore of Fort Pierce, Florida, according to Eric Schmitt, captain of the aptly named salvage vessel, Aarrr Booty, which was used to locate the treasure.

A hurricane off Florida sank all but one of the 12 ships on July 30, 1715. The so-called "1715 Fleet" has been a treasure-hunter's fantasy ever since. In 2010, Brent Brisben and his father, William, obtained permits to explore the wrecks in search of sunken riches.

The lucky haul off Fort Pierce was the work of the entire Schmitt family, which includes Eric and his wife, as well as Eric's sister and parents. The Schmitts were subcontracted to explore the 12 different shipwrecks for Brisben's company (1715 Fleet Queen Jewels, LLC), which owns salvage permits.

Included in Aarrr Booty's recent haul were 51 gold coins and 40 feet of golden chain. But the real treasure salvaged from the deep was the rare Tricentennial Royal, one of very few gold coins minted for King Philip V of Spain, according Schmitt, lead diver of the Aarrr Booty vessel's treasure-hunting expeditions.

The coin is "very round" compared to most coins salvaged from the wrecks, said Schmitt, who told Live Science that the royal coin was die-cast (made by pouring molten gold into a coin mold). Most Colonial coins from this period were made using cruder methods that resulted in less uniform shapes, according to the coin-collecting website Coinquest. The round royal coin, which is about the size of a silver dollar, is worth an estimated $500,000, according to Brent Brisben.

And even though Brisben and Schmitt are excited about the discovery of this precious coin, both remain hopeful that even more treasure lies hidden off Florida. Brisben's company owns the salvage rights to five of the 11 ships that sank on July 30, 1715, he told Live Science. He estimates that $440 million worth of coins and other treasures have yet to be recovered from these centuries-old wrecks.

Among the treasures that are still at large are the elusive queens jewels, which belonged to Philip V's second wife, Elizabeth Farnese, Duchess of Parma. The elaborate jewels were to be a part of the queen's dowry and were supposed to be brought to Spain by the 1715 Fleet. Because jewelry wasn't a taxable commodity in Spain at the time, details about the jewels weren't entered on any official documents, but a few ornate items were allegedly aboard the fleet when it sank, including a 74-carat emerald ring and 14-carat pearl earrings, according to Brisben.

To read the complete article, see:
Million-Dollar Find: Shipwreck's Golden Treasure Includes Very Rare Coin (www.livescience.com/51679-shipwreck-treasure-hunters-gold-coins.html)

This Daily Mail article forwarded by Dick Hanscom has some better images of the coins. Thanks. -Editor

1715 Tricentennial Royal coin

1715 Fleet treasure2

To read the complete article, see:
Family of treasure hunters find $1M worth of gold coins and jewelry from legendary 1715 shipwreck off Florida coast (www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3176595/Florida-family-finds-1-mln-treasure-sunken-Spanish-armada.html)

Wayne Homren, Editor

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