A Florida family who has hunted treasure for years found more
than US$1 million (RM3.819 million) worth of gold artifacts this summer from
the wreckage of a 1715 Spanish fleet that sank in the Atlantic, according to a
salvage company’s estimate. The
find included 51 gold coins of various denominations and 12 metres of ornate
gold chain, said Brent Brisben, whose company, 1715 Fleet — Queens Jewels LLC,
owns the rights to the wreckage. The
Schmitt family — parents Rick and Lisa and their two children and
daughter-in-law — who hunt for treasure off their salvage vessel Aarrr Booty,
could not immediately be reached for comment.
Brisben
said Rick and Lisa’s 27-year-old son, Eric, found and recovered the pieces in
June.
Brisben
said he timed the announcement to coincide with Friday’s 300th anniversary of
the sinking of 11 galleons brought down by a hurricane off the coast of Florida
as the convoy was sailing from Havana to Spain.
Eric
Schmitt found the artifacts in 4.5m of water off Fort Pierce, approximately
210km north of Miami.
The
Spanish convoy’s manifests indicated the ships carried cargo valued today at
about US$400 million, of which US$175 million has been recovered, Brisben said.
His
company bought the rights to the site in 2010 from heirs of the legendary
treasure hunter Mel Fisher and the firm allows others, including the Schmitts,
to search under subcontract agreements.
The
centerpiece of the Schmitt’s latest find is a perfect specimen of a coin called
a royal made for Spain’s King Phillip V and dated 1715.
Only
a few royals were known to exist, according to a news release from Brisben’s
company.
The
gold chains are made of small, handcrafted, two-sided links of six-petaled
olive blossoms.
They
were called money chains and are believed to have been used as a tax-free
coinage, the news release said.
Under
federal and state law, Florida will take possession of up to 20 per cent of the
find for display in a state museum.
Brisben’s
company and the Schmitt family will split the reminder, Brisben said. — Reuters
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