WASHINGTON: A family which has spent years hunting for treasure has found $1million worth of gold artefacts in the wreckage of a fleet of 18th-century Spanish ships off the coast of Florida.
Rick and Lisa Schmitt, their two children and daughter-in-law have used their salvage vessel Aarrr Booty to scour the ocean for treasure for the past two summers.
In June, Eric, the couple’s 27-year-old son, found and recovered gold coins and chains from the wreckage of the convoy, which has laid some 15 ft under the water off Fort Pierce, around 210km north of Miami since 1715. The well-preserved hoard includes 51 gold coins of various denominations and 40 ft of ornate gold chains featuring olive blossoms.
The most historically striking piece of the find is a highly rare gold coin known as a `Tricentennial Royal’. made for Spain’s King Phillip V and dat ed 1715. Only around six of the pieces are known to exist Schmitt believes this coin alone is worth around $500,000 “These things were known as presentation pieces not meant to be circulated as currency ,” he told the Orlando Sentinel.
Brent Brisben’s company the 1715 Fleet -Queens Jewels LLC -owns the rights to the wreckage.
The Schmitts appear to have discovered a small slice of the ship’s cargo, as the convoy’s manifests suggests it carried goods work around $400 million of which $175 million has been recovered, Brisben said.
Under federal and state law, Florida will take possession of up to 20% of the find for display at a state museum. Brisben’s company and the Schmitt family will split the remainder.
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