Galleon "Nuestra Señora de Atocha": not invented adventures of treasure hunters. The treasure ship "Nuestra Senora De Atocha" is the largest treasure sunk in the sea Research and search for Mel Fisher

The History of the Spanish Galleon Nuestra Senora de Atocha and the Mel Fisher Museum.

I'll tell you about my trip to the Mel Fisher Museum in Key West. Key West is one of the islands in the Florida Keys archipelago. It is located about 140 km from Cuba, and is considered the southernmost point of the continental United States. I have written about him in my diary before. So I will not write about the island itself. But this museum deserves special attention and story.

Museum founder Mel Fisher (August 21, 1922 – December 19, 1998) was an American treasure hunter best known for discovering the wreck of the Spanish galleons Nuestra Señora de Atocha and Santa Margarita. As a result of many years of work, Fisher's expedition lifted jewels worth $450 million from the seabed.
Today, artifacts and treasures from Atocha and Margherita are in the Mel Fisher Museum. Among them are gold and silver bars and coins; gold belt and chain, trimmed with precious stones; a golden bowl, a golden chain, which weighs 3.5 kg; emeralds, including one uncut 77.76 carats, bronze cannons, crockery and many, many other interesting things.

One of the exhibits of the museum is a large golden cross with Colombian emeralds. The color of the stones, of course, did not convey as well as we would like. Colombian emeralds are considered among the most expensive in the world for their color and clarity.

So Nuestra Senora de Atocha.

On September 4, 1622, a Spanish flotilla of 28 ships left Havana and headed for Spain. The ships were loaded with the treasures of the empire. Silver from Peru and Mexico, gold and emeralds from Colombia, pearls from Venezuela. On each ship, in addition to the crew, there were guards and passengers, as well as all the necessary things and provisions for a successful trip. The next day, entering the Strait of Florida, the flotilla was captured by a hurricane. And already on the morning of September 6th, eight ships lay wrecked on the ocean floor, scattered from the islands of the Marquesas Keys to the Dry Tortugas. With them went to the bottom of the treasures of both Americas, and dozens of Spanish sailors, soldiers, nobles and clergy.
The heavily armed "Nuestra Senora de Atocha" came in rear to guard the flotilla against any attack from behind. The ship was built in Havana in 1620, with a displacement of 550 tons, a length of 112 feet, a beam of 34 feet and a draft of 14 feet. For the voyage of 1622, Atocha was loaded with 24 tons of silver, 180,000 pesos of silver coins, 582 ingots of copper, 125 gold ingots and discs, 350 cases of indigo, 525 bales of tobacco, 20 bronze cannons, and 1,200 pounds of silverware and wares. Add to this unregistered goods to avoid duty, as well as personal items and jewelry! All this amounted to a treasure that no other ever transported could compete with.
Atocha sank with 265 people on board. And only five - three sailors and two slaves - survived the shipwreck. They were saved, thanks to a fragment of the mizzen mast, which they held on to all the time. Rescuers from the ships that approached the scene of the tragedy tried to get into the holds of the ship, but the hatches were tightly battened down. The depth of 55 feet was not very deep, but the divers were never able to open the bars and get to Atocha. After futile attempts to save people or cargo, they set off to help other sunken ships.
The site of the Nuestra Señora de Atocha was located about 56 kilometers west of Key West. And in the first days after the crash, the location was easy to determine by the masts sticking out of the water. However, on October 5th, a second hurricane struck and destroyed the remains of the shipwreck. The storm scattered the fragments of the masts and it was already impossible to find the exact place.
For several years, Spain was in an extremely difficult financial situation. She needed funds to fight the Thirty Years' War. In the next 60 years, the Spaniards searched for the galleon, but could not even find a trace. It looked like Atocha was gone forever.

In 1969, Mel Fisher and his team began a relentless, 16-year search for the treasure of the Atocha galleon. The historian Eugene Lyons came to their aid, who did a gigantic job in the Spanish archives to find out at least an approximate search area. Using special equipment and magnetometers, humans have spent years following the shipwreck's subtle trail - sometimes finding nothing for months, sometimes unearthing a few treasures and artifacts that tease them about the ship's proximity.
In 1973, three silver bars were found that matched in weight and hallmarks those described in the Atocha manifesto, which was kept in Seville. This proved that Fisher was close to the main part of the shipwreck. In 1975, his son Dirk found five bronze cannons, which were identified as cannons from Atocha. Tragedy struck a few days later - Dirk, his wife Angel, and diver Rick Gage died when one of the search boats capsized. But Fischer and his dignified team continued to move towards the goal.
By 1980, they had found a significant portion of the remains of the Santa Margarita treasure - gold bars, silver coins and jewelry. And on May 12, 1980, Fisher's son Kane found an entire section of Margarita's wooden hull, complete with cannonballs and artifacts from 17th-century Spain.
The day of July 20, 1985 was crowned with a stunning find. People describe it as a whole reef of silver bars. Finally, the location of the main part of the shipwreck has been found. And the "excavations of the century" began.
Archaeologists and specialists in the preservation of antiquities were involved from all over the country. Since the treasure lay at the bottom for almost 400 years, much was in poor condition. 40 tons of silver and gold were lifted; 114,000 Spanish silver coins, 1,000 silver bars, gold coins, Colombian emeralds, gold and silver artifacts. And this is about half of the treasures that went to the bottom with Atocha. The richest part of the ship - the stern quarters, where the most valuable cargo was stored, have not yet been found. The remaining eight bronze cannons and 300 silver ingots, and much more that was in the inventory of the galleon, were also not found.
The approximate amount of Atocha treasures still under water is estimated at no less than $500 million.

The photos, unfortunately, turned out to be one in the forest, one for firewood :) It is difficult to take pictures in such a darkened museum. But what is, is...

At the entrance: huge anchors from Atocha and Margarita

Ingots of silver and gold

silver plate


Astrolabe


The bronze gun turned out really bad. But I really want to show that the gun is very large, like the carriage on which it is mounted.


And this one is smaller.


Fragment of the golden belt


Gold wedding chain that weighs 3.5 kg.

silver bars


close


Silver reales and the box they were in

One of these can be purchased at the museum shop. Expensive - $ 2,400 - but real :)

Smuggled gold, unregistered in the inventory


More gold chains


An ingot of gold that you can touch, hold by sticking your hand into the hole. I also held it - well, it’s heavy! By the way, in the end it was still stolen, although it looked completely impossible. And now he is wanted. The cost of the ingot is many, many thousands of dollars. They hardly find...


doubloons


The same cross without flash

And this is an absolutely unusual exhibit! A small gecko that had lain at the bottom for almost 400 years :) We found it in some kind of crack that was sealed by itself. Just a miracle :)


This is the museum building itself.


Mel Fisher with trophies

And this is what Nuestra Señora de Atocha could look like


Underwater excavations are ongoing to this day. By the way, you can join them and look for luck at the bottom of the sea yourself. For example, I would really like to :) But everything takes time and money ...

"Nuestra Señora de Atocha"

The galleon Nuestra Señora de Atocha, along with 27 other ships, was part of the Spanish Royal Navy, carrying out the annual transportation of cargoes of precious metals and valuables from the American colonies of Spain to the metropolis as part of convoys. The ship was named after one of the chapels of the Catholic Cathedral in Madrid. The ship's crew consisted of 133 people, in addition, there were 82 soldiers and 48 civilians on board, as well as slaves, more than 260 people in total.

The galleon sank on September 6, 1622 off the coast of Florida in a storm. He transported significant valuables to Spain, including gold and silver bars, silver coins with a total weight of more than 40 tons, as well as tobacco, copper, weapons and jewelry. The exact location of the galleon wreck was discovered after years of searching on July 20, 1985 by treasure hunter Mel Fisher. Values ​​totaling $450 million were raised from the bottom.

From the place of collection of the fleet - the port of Havana in Cuba - the convoy left on September 4, 1622, but by the evening of September 5, the weather deteriorated greatly, a strong wind rose, carrying the ships north to the coast of Florida. Overloaded with gold and silver bars, the galleons lost control and were blown to coral reefs off the coast of Florida by the wind. Of the 28 galleons, eight sank, including the Nuestra Señora de Atocha, the Santa Margarita, and the Nuestra Señora de Consoliacion. Only three sailors and two slaves survived from the galleon Nuestra Señora de Atocha. In total, 550 people died, more than 2 million pesos worth of valuables sank. This caused the wrath of the king of Spain, who was in dire need of funds to wage the Thirty Years' War. For several years, Spain was in an extremely difficult financial situation. The king ordered to get the treasures of the convoy from the bottom at any cost.

The crash site was located about 56 kilometers west of Key West. Due to the fact that the depth at the place of the flooding of the galleon was only 16 meters, in the first days after the crash, the place was easy to identify by the fragments of the mizzen mast sticking out of the water. However, in October, when Captain Gaspar de Vargas, at the head of a team of slave divers and Indian pearl divers, arrived at the crash site and the Spaniards made their first attempt to raise valuables from the bottom, storms scattered the remains of the masts and it was no longer possible to find the exact crash site. They could only determine the crash site of the second galleon with treasures - "Santa Margarita". After several months of exhausting work, only a few pieces of Atocha's skin were found and nothing more. The divers could only work for a short time at shallow depths, and Vargas did not have the ability to move huge amounts of moving sand from place to place.

In 1625, the Spaniards made a second attempt to raise the Nuestra Señora de Atocha and Santa Margarita treasures from the bottom. A search party arrived at the crash site, led by Captain Francisco Nunez Melian. Over the next four years, a team of swimmers, armed with an air bell (an invention of Melian), managed to extract a total of 380 silver bars and 67 thousand silver coins from the Santa Margarita from the water, but no traces of the Nuestra Señora de Atocha were found. In the future, search work was carried out until 1641, but did not bring success. The search for the place of flooding of the galleons with treasures was stopped for many centuries, and information about the disaster remained only in the Spanish royal archives.

By the time the galleon search began, Mel Fisher had already had several major successes in the search for treasures of Spanish galleons off the coast of Florida. To search for Nuestra Señora de Atocha, Fisher organized Treasurs Salvors Incorporated and attracted investors. Historian Eugene Lyons came to his aid, who did a gigantic job in the Spanish archives to find out at least an approximate area of ​​\u200b\u200bthe search, which began in 1970.

But it turned out to be far from easy to extract treasures scattered over a large area from the seabed and, moreover, covered with a thick layer of bottom sediments. By the summer of 1971, the size of the surveyed area amounted to 120 thousand square miles, and all to no avail. For many months, the extraction of treasure hunters was limited only to rusty tin cans, barrels and scraps of metal gear.

In order to find the sunken galleon, Fisher used a number of technically innovative solutions, for example, he used the “letter boxes” he invented - curved cylinders that were attached under the propellers of the boat and directed the stream of water vertically down. With such a water cannon, a hole thirty feet wide and ten feet deep was washed out in the sand in ten minutes.

With the advent of 1975, fate seemed to finally turn to face Mel Fisher. For him, this was already the sixth season of the search for Atocha. This time, the "Golden Galleon" presented the scuba divers with a lot of 8-real coins and three gold bars and five bronze cannons from the galleon "Nuestra Señora de Atocha". Four more bronze cannons were found 30 meters from the first find.

In the summer of 1980, scuba divers attacked a promising trail several miles east of the alleged sinking site of the Atocha. A strong surge of the magnetometer showed the presence of large metal objects at the bottom. They turned out to be another anchor and a copper boiler. Then a pile of ballast stones was found nearby, as well as ceramics and a scattering of coins.

On the morning of July 20, 1985, the magnetometer of the search boat registered the presence of a significant mass of metal underwater. Scuba divers Andy Matroski and Greg Wareham, who were on duty that day, immediately went under the water. What appeared to be a piece of rock was actually a heap of caked silver ingots. There was no doubt that here, forty miles from Key West and ten from the archipelago of the Marquesas Keys, lay the bulk of the cargo of the Nuestra Señora de Atocha. The result of the treasure-hunting work is 3,200 emeralds, one hundred and fifty thousand silver coins and over a thousand silver bars weighing an average of about forty kilograms each.

On July 4, 2011, a new discovery became known - a 10-carat gold ring with an emerald, which was valued at $500,000. In addition to the ancient jewelry, two silver spoons and two silver artifacts were also found. They were discovered 56 kilometers west of Key West, part of the Florida Keys archipelago in the southeastern United States. According to Sean Fisher, one of the leaders of Mel Fisher's Treasures, who was present at the time of the discovery of the ring, this is one of the most important artifacts found in the shipwreck area. This ring most likely belonged to one of the aristocrats who sailed on the Atocha, Fischer added.

As a result of many years of work, Fisher's expedition raised jewels worth $450 million from the seabed. The approximate amount of Atocha treasures still under water is estimated at no less than $500 million.

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"Santa Margarita" and "Nuestra Señora de Atocha" (September 6, 1622)

The Spanish galleons "Santa Margarita" and "Nuestra Señora de Atocha", which sank during a hurricane off the coast of the Strait of Florida, claimed the lives of more than 500 people.

1622 was a critical year for Spain. young king Philip IV inherited a vast, but already losing influence, empire. Spain's support for the Catholic German states plunged it into the last and bloodiest of religious conflicts, the Thirty Years' War.

In 1622 the war for Spain was successful, but at a high cost. And when the twelve-year truce ended with Holland, a horde of enemy ships rushed into Castilian West Indies.

Despite the fact that the Spanish claims in North America contested by the British, French and Dutch, her wealthy colonies in Central and South America were still intact. The only link between Spain And West Indies were its maritime communications, through which the fleets transported merchant goods and royal income, weapons and soldiers, as well as passengers.

Philip IV forced his merchants to pay for the protection of their ships by imposing a tax on trade with West Indies. In 1622 Spain built with this money eight powerful military galleons and staffed them with two thousand soldiers and sailors. This security flotilla escorted merchants and led the flagships of the merchant fleet, " Captain" And " Almirantu”, to South American ships sailing from Portobelo And Cartagena with treasure New World.

The security flotilla went to West Indies at the end of April, having lost two galleons before the shores Spain out of sight. The convoy included Santa Margarita", a beautiful new galleon, bought specifically for this trip, and performing the same functions as " Almiranta", And " Nuestra Señora de Atocha"- a ship, shortly before built in Havana for the king. " Atocha”, a six-hundred-ton gallion, got its name in honor of one of the famous Madrid chapels dedicated to the Virgin.

The departing fleet carried wine, textiles, metalwork, books, and papal indulgences that bestow heavenly bliss on whoever purchases them, as well as half a million pounds of mercury, the Crown's monopoly metal used to extract silver and gold from rich ores. Potosi.

fleet commander, Lope Diaz de Armendariz, Marquis of Cadereita, safely brought his ship to Isthmus of Panama. There, at the big fair in Portobelo, European goods were exchanged for Upper silver Peru. Worn-out porters filled the holds of ships heading home while their owners wrote things down and ingots on their cargo manifests.

IN Portobelo the marquis learned that off the coast Venezuela recently saw thirty-six Dutch ships, and prudently added another galleon to his squadron, " Nuestra Señora de Rosario". On July 27 the flotilla reached Cartagena, where gold from the mines was loaded onto ships Nueva Granada and tons of royal tobacco. A huge amount of silver in bullion and coins was intended to be transferred to its owners in Seville. The flotilla then left for Havana, your last destination port in West Indies.

Tensions rose as ships were forced to drift in the days of sudden dead calm. On August 22, when it was still far from the terrifying hurricane season, they entered the harbor Havana. The new Spanish fleet, which sailed between Veracruz And Spain, already gone.

Sailors Atochi” cursed the suffocating heat, dragging five hundred bales of tobacco from the hold to load hundreds of copper ingots into it. On " Atoche"there were fifteen tons of Cuban copper shipped to Malaga for casting bronze cannons to defend the empire. At last the tobacco was piled up with a load of Honduran indigo. gallion captain Jacob de Vreder also entered a large amount of gold, silver and silverware on the cargo manifest. But now it has become clear that the ships will not be able to leave on August 28, as he had hoped Marquis of Cadereita.

The captains decided to weigh anchor with the onset of the new moon. At that time, sailors believed that favorable weather conditions during the period of the new moon would last at least a few days. ( In recent times, science has proven that their belief was to some extent justified.) Thus, if the weather is good on September 5, the day of the full moon, it should remain so long enough to allow the flotilla to safely reach the infamous coast Florida. However, the Spaniards could not know that at this very moment a small but intensifying storm moving from the northeast reached Cuba.

Sunday morning September 4, 1622 came, as the Marquis noted, “ with a cloudless and clear sky and a pleasant breeze". Twenty-eight ships with wind-filled sails, waving flags and pennants solemnly passed by Castillo del Morro into the open sea. Each ship was Castile in miniature, the bearer of culture, wealth and power Spain.

« Atocha”was a floating fortress carrying twenty bronze cannons, sixty muskets and large stocks of gunpowder and cannonballs. In addition to the crew, there were eighty-two soldiers on board under the command of Captain Bartolome de Nodal , famous traveler. The team consisted of 133 people, including eighteen gunners. From his cabin Vice Admiral of the Fleet Pedro Pasquier de Esparza supervised the actions of the ships entrusted to him.

All free space on Atoche» was full of treasures West Indies. Chests and boxes, filled with gold and silver bars and eight real silver coins, were the result of numerous commercial transactions; one shipment contained 133 silver bars, some of the crown silver mined and smelted in Potosi thousands of people in the colony.

The holds also contained twenty thousand pesos for the heirs. Christopher Columbus , a tidy sum obtained from the sale of papal indulgences, and the money of the royal treasury received for those sold in Cartagena black slaves. Together with copper, indigo and tobacco " Atocha"carried huge treasures - nine hundred and one silver bars, one hundred and sixty-one gold bars or discs and about 255 thousand silver coins.

Forty-eight passengers were accommodated in small cabins at the stern - a social cross section of society Castile And West Indies. Dignitary Royal Envoy to Peru, father Pedro de la Madriz , shared his dwelling with three other Augustinian brothers. IN Portobelo boarded Don Diego de Guezman , governor Cusco , and wealthy Peruvian merchants Lorenzo de Arriola and Michel de Munibe , as well as clerk of the Peruvian Court of Appeal Martin de Salgado with his wife and three servants.

Although " Santa Margarita"carried half as many precious ingots as" Atocha”, the passengers on it were just as crowded, not excluding the governor of the Spanish Venezuela, don Francisco de la Josa. On each ship there were passengers who were not mentioned by name in the ship lists - slaves and servants, the so-called " people who don't matter».

The chief pilot sent the flotilla into the Strait of Florida, trying to get into the most powerful stream. gulf stream near Florida Keys. But the growing wind of the storm, which then grew into a hurricane, was already approaching the strait. By Monday morning, September 5, a strong northeasterly wind raised waves.

Soon the situation worsened even more, and each ship became an isolated, fighting world. For people, the whistling wind and surging waves have become the only reality - this is also a hopeless struggle with seasickness and the fear of death. When the wind tore the sails, broke the masts and smashed the rudders, the ships turned into uncontrollable pieces of wood.

Subsequent events are described in an English account of the time: " As the waves roll one after another, so one misfortune followed another: first the wind turned to the south, then they began to fear that they would be carried into some mouth of the river or bay of the Florida coast ... And then there was no choice but to crash on the shallows or perish on the shore».

Eight unfortunate vessels were captured by a strong current of wind, including " Rosario», « Atochu" And " Santa Margarita". They were quickly carried north, towards the reefs. Gutierre de Espinosa , captain" Santa Margarita”, was in his cabin and was preparing for the crash. He had just ordered his adjutant to hide part of the cargo - several gold and silver bars, silverware and a bowler of chocolate - in his personal chest. Then Espinosa tied this chest tightly with a rope so that it could keep afloat. The rest of the people on board at that moment cared little for material values: kneeling around the priests, they prayed.

After dark" Santa Margarita"lost her foremast - the main sail on the foremast. Huge waves, rolling over her hull, demolished the mainmast and the helm. The ship was drifting north.

At dawn on September 6, Tuesday, the pilot made an entry in the ship's logbook about the decrease in depth; misfortune was near. Several brave sailors tried to put another foresail and, tacking, get away from danger, but it was blown away again.

When the ship was passing between the Florida reefs, they tried to drop the anchors, but they did not take the soil. Suddenly, the gallion ran aground and sat on it.

When it was completely dawn, the commander of the infantry on board, captain Bernadino de Lugo approached the bulwark " Santa Margarita". Then, as the commander of the fleet reports in accordance with the report de Lugo , « at seven o'clock in the morning the captain saw, one league east of his galleon, another galleon called the Nuestra Señora de Atocha, on which only the mizzen mast remained. While he was watching him, the galleon sank". Then his own ship began to sink. jumping overboard, de Lugo grabbed a wooden beam and swam. Another sixty-seven people found salvation on the wreckage " Santa Margarita". As recorded in the English report, " many passengers after the disappearance of the ship could not be saved, the sea did not give them such an opportunity". One hundred twenty-seven people drowned.

In the afternoon, the wind died down, and the high sun illuminated a sad picture: a surging sea, a hodgepodge of broken boxes and chests. By a lucky chance, that afternoon, a ship with Jamaica. The surviving people were taken aboard, where they met five survivors with " Atochi» - two cabin boys - Juan Munoz and F rancisco nunez , sailor Andres Lorenzo and two slaves. They told how Atocha hit a reef and quickly sank. The remaining two hundred and sixty people who were on it died.

A few days later, the captain of a small ship Santa Catalina» Bartolome Lopez saw the crash site; he noticed the corpus Atochi» with a fragment of a mizzen mast protruding from the water. His sailors fished out a chest floating nearby, broke it open and separated the silver and gold found inside. It was a chest Gutierre de Espinosa the drowned captain Santa Margarita».

When those who escaped Rosario» set foot on the land of the island Dry Tortugas, not far from their stranded galleon, they hardly believed that they had escaped death. The shipwrecks stretched more than forty miles to the east: first a small Portuguese slave trader, then a messenger ship of the fleet, then " Santa Margarita" And " Atocha". A little further on, a small Cuban patrol boat perished, somewhere not far from the shore, two more small “ merchant».

In total, the storm killed five hundred and fifty people and sank a cargo worth more than one and a half million ducats - at modern prices about two hundred and fifty million dollars.

After the disaster of 1622, the Spaniards had to explore a large area and move a lot of sand in order to find the lost ships. Finding out the location Atochi» from the records of the captains de Lugo and Lopez they found about Dry Tortugas run aground" Rosario». Marquis of Cadereita sent from Havana to rescue the cargo of the lost vessel of the captain Gaspar de Vargas . Captain Vargas first came to Atoche and found her intact at a depth of fifty-five feet. Vargas was able to raise only two guns, and then went to " Rosario". Meanwhile, another hurricane swept through the area. When the lifeguard returned to where she sank Atocha”, he found that the storm had broken her hull and scattered the wreckage.

Viceroy of New Spain sent Vargas an experienced engineer Nicholas de Cardono , with slave divers from Acapulco, and with Caribbean islands came the Indian pearl divers. Myself Marquis de Cadereita arrived at Florida to watch the work; the island where he was camped was named " El Cayo del Marques».

Several months of hard work followed. Vargas wrote: " Every day we left this island on two boats at four o'clock in the morning and reached the place only at seven ... We worked until two o'clock, and the rest of the time it took us to get to the land for the night».

The Spaniards found several wrecks at a depth " Atochi" and nothing more. Divers could only work for a short time at shallow depths, and Vargas it was not possible to move huge quantities of mobile sand from place to place. Because of this, he failed. The Spaniards spent more than a thousand pesos without finding any " Atochu', nor ' Santa Margarita».

The troubles that nullified the efforts of the Spaniards continued. Disappeared in 1625 Francisco del Luz and his entire crew, who set up buoys at shipwrecks. But now a man has appeared who partially atoned for the failure Gaspar de Vargas : some Francisco Nunez Melian who served on Cuba royal treasurer for religious offerings. Melian He was inventive, persistent and also a gambler.

Melian concluded with the king Philip rescue contract; he and the crown would each receive a third of the finds, and salvage costs would be paid from the remaining third. His accounts of these expenses gave us the first clue to the true whereabouts of the wrecked ships.

Melian invented a secret device for rescue work. According to him, with the help of this device, a person could discover hidden things. " This is something never seen before, in addition to being the first inventor of such a new and wonderful device, it requires incalculable money to bring it to perfection and successfully implement the results of these considerations ...»

His device was a 680-pound bronze bell fitted with a seat and windows, which Melian pissed in Havana. It was both a search vehicle and a diving station.

Melian sailed to the shallows in May 1626 and set to work. The bell was slowly dragged underwater while the man inside surveyed the sandy bottom. June 6 Slave Diver Juan Bagnon rose to the surface with a silver ingot with " Santa Margarita and got freedom. The Spaniards then quickly found three hundred and fifty silver bars and thousands of coins, several bronze cannons, and many copper items.

Over the next four years Melian sent expeditions to the shallows in a variety of weather. His men fought off three Dutch raiders; they calmed the fury of the Indians with Florida Keys, bribing them with knives and sugar after they burned down their camp on Marquesas. Melian was rewarded for his work by gaining the office of governor Venezuela.

Meanwhile, cargo rescue Santa Margarita» and searches « Atochi continued. After death Meliana in 1644 these efforts began to wane. A Spanish report from 1688 notes that by this time " Nuestra Señora de Atocha was listed among the missing. Her vast treasures still lay beside the vast shoal to the west of Marquesas Keys or underneath...

...Mel Fisher was simply obsessed with the 1622 gallion hunt. He even built a semblance of an ancient autogyro - the forerunner of a helicopter - to tow an aviation magnetometer, but the device fell apart without even rising into the air. After a tedious fruitless search near the central islets Chalk returned to the northern shoals. But neither he nor any of the team found traces of the 1622 ships. Their whereabouts remained a mystery hidden for centuries.

Five years Fisher searched for ships that died in 1622. And only in 1973 luck smiled at him. Fifteen months later, the finds were finally divided. Collection in the public vault in Tallahassee amounted to 6240 silver coins of four colonial mints, 11 gold coins minted in Seville, 10 gold chains, 2 rings, 2 gold bars and discs, an astrolabe and 3 navigational compasses, 3 tin plates and 3 silver spoons, a rare silver wash jug, a golden cup and part of a copper ingot. Most of the finds were weapons - 34 muskets with matchlocks and arquebuses with lead bullets for them, fragments of 44 sabers and 15 daggers, 6 stone cannonballs and 120 lead ones.

treasure hunter's son Dirk Fischer found a pilot astrolabe that had lain for many years deep under the sand. Subsequent research showed that it was made in Lisbon some Lopu Omen around 1560. Perhaps this is the most valuable item discovered by underwater archaeologists...

"Nuestra Señora de Atocha"
Nuestra Senora de Atocha

Spanish galleon

Service:Spain Spain
Vessel class and typeGalleon
OrganizationRoyal Spanish Navy
Launched into the water1620
Commissioned1620
Main characteristics
Displacement550 tons
Length between perpendiculars112 feet
Midship width34 feet
Draft4 feet
EnginesSail
travel speed8 knots
Crew133 officers and sailors
Armament
Total number of guns20 guns

"Nuestra Señora de Atocha"(Spanish) Nuestra Senora de Atocha listen)) is a Spanish galleon that sank on September 6, 1622 off the coast of Florida as a result of a storm. The galleon transported significant valuables to Spain, including gold and silver bars, silver coins with a total weight of more than 40 tons, as well as tobacco, copper, weapons and jewelry. The exact location of the galleon wreck was discovered after years of searching on July 20, 1985 by treasure hunter Mel Fisher ( English). Values ​​totaling $450 million were raised from the bottom.

Shipwreck

Galleon " Nuestra Señora de Atocha”was part of the Spanish Royal Navy along with 27 more ships, carrying out the annual transportation of cargoes of precious metals and valuables from the American colonies of Spain to the metropolis as part of convoys. The ship was named after one of the chapels of the Catholic Cathedral in Madrid. The ship's crew consisted of 133 people, in addition, there were eighty-two soldiers and 48 civilians on board, as well as slaves, in total more than 260 people.

From the place of collection of the fleet - the port of Havana in Cuba, the convoy left on September 4, 1622, but by the evening of September 5, the weather deteriorated greatly, a strong wind rose, carrying the ships north to the coast of Florida. Overloaded with gold and silver bars, the galleons lost control and were blown to coral reefs off the coast of Florida by the wind. Of the 28 galleons, 8 sank, including " Nuestra Señora de Atocha”, “Santa Margarita”, “Nuestra Señora de Consoliacion”. From the galleon Nuestra Señora de Atocha" Only five survived - three sailors and two slaves. In total, 550 people died on 8 ships, more than 2 million pesos worth of valuables sank. This angered the King of Spain, who was in dire need of funds to fight the Thirty Years' War. For several years, Spain was in an extremely difficult financial situation. The king ordered to get the treasures of the convoy from the bottom at any cost.

Finding and raising treasures

Search operations of the Spanish fleet

The place of the crash Nuestra Señora de Atocha” was located about 56 kilometers west of the Key West Islands. Due to the fact that the depth at the place of the flooding of the galleon was only 16 meters, in the first days after the crash, the place was easy to identify by the fragments of the mizzen mast sticking out of the water. However, in October, when Captain Gaspar de Vargas, at the head of a team of slave divers and Indian pearl divers, arrived at the crash site and the Spaniards made their first attempt to raise valuables from the bottom, storms scattered the remains of the masts and it was no longer possible to find the exact crash site. They could only determine the crash site of the second galleon with treasures - "Santa Margarita". After several months of exhausting work, only a few pieces of Atocha's skin were found and nothing more. Divers could only work for short periods at shallow depths, and Vargas did not have the ability to move huge amounts of moving sand from place to place.

In 1625, the Spaniards made a second attempt to raise the treasure from the bottom " Nuestra Señora de Atocha and Santa Margarita. A search party arrived at the crash site, led by Captain Francisco Nunez Melian. Over the next 4 years, a team of swimmers, armed with an air bell (an invention of Melian), managed to extract a total of 380 silver bars and 67 thousand silver coins from Santa Margarita from the water, but there were no traces of Nuestra Señora de Atocha' was never found. In the future, search work was carried out until 1641, but did not bring success. The search for the place of flooding of the galleons with treasures was stopped for many centuries, and information about the disaster remained only in the Spanish royal archives.

Research and search for Mel Fisher

By the time the galleon search began, Mel Fisher had already had several major successes in the search for treasures of Spanish galleons off the coast of Florida. For searching " Nuestra Señora de Atocha» Fisher organized Treasures Salvors Incorporated and attracted investors. The historian Eugene Lyons came to his aid, who did a gigantic job in the Spanish archives in order to find out at least an approximate area of ​​\u200b\u200bthe search, which began in 1970.

But it was far from easy to extract treasures scattered over a large area from the seabed and, moreover, covered with a thick layer of bottom sediments. By the summer of 1971, the size of the surveyed area amounted to 120 thousand square miles, and all to no avail. For many months, the extraction of treasure hunters was limited only to rusty tin cans, barrels and scraps of metal gear.

In order to find the sunken galleon, Fisher used a number of technically innovative solutions, for example, he used the “mailboxes” he invented - curved cylinders that were attached under the propellers of the boat and directed the stream of water vertically down. With the help of such a water jet, a hole thirty feet wide and ten feet deep was washed out in the sand in ten minutes.

With the advent of 1975, fate seemed to finally turn to face Mel Fisher. For him, this was already the sixth season of the search for Atocha. This time, the "Golden Galleon" presented the scuba divers with a lot of 8-real coins and three gold bars and five bronze cannons from the galleon "Nuestra Señora de Atocha". Thirty meters from the first find, four more bronze cannons were found.

On July 19, 1975, Dirk Fischer (son of Mel Fischer) tragically died in the crash of one of the tugboats used for the search. Together with Dirk, his wife Angel died.

In the summer of 1980, scuba divers attacked a promising trail several miles east of the alleged sinking site of the Atocha. A strong surge of the magnetometer showed the presence of large metal objects at the bottom. They turned out to be another anchor and a copper boiler. Then a pile of ballast stones was found nearby, as well as ceramics and a scattering of coins.

On the morning of July 20, 1985, the magnetometer of the search boat registered the presence of a significant mass of metal underwater. Scuba divers Andy Matroski and Greg Wareham, who were on duty that day, immediately went under the water. What appeared to be a piece of rock was actually a heap of caked silver ingots. There was no doubt that here, forty miles from Key West and ten from the archipelago of the Marquesas Keys, lay the bulk of the cargo of the Nuestra Señora de Atocha. The result of the treasure-hunting work is 3,200 emeralds, one hundred and fifty thousand silver coins and over a thousand silver bars weighing an average of about forty kilograms each.

As a result of many years of work, Fisher's expedition lifted jewels worth $450 million from the seabed. The approximate amount of Atocha treasures still remaining under water is estimated at no less than $ 500 million.

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Notes

An excerpt characterizing Nuestra Señora de Atocha

From embarrassment or deliberately (no one could make it out), he did not lower his arms for a long time when the shawl was already put on, and seemed to be hugging a young woman.
She gracefully, but still smiling, pulled away, turned and looked at her husband. Prince Andrei's eyes were closed: he seemed so tired and sleepy.
- You are ready? he asked his wife, looking around her.
Prince Hippolyte hurriedly put on his coat, which, according to the new, was longer than his heels, and, tangled in it, ran to the porch after the princess, whom the footman was putting into the carriage.
- Princesse, au revoir, [Princess, goodbye,] - he shouted, tangling his tongue as well as his legs.
The princess, picking up her dress, sat down in the darkness of the carriage; her husband was adjusting his saber; Prince Ippolit, under the pretext of serving, interfered with everyone.
- Excuse me, sir, - Prince Andrei dryly unpleasantly turned in Russian to Prince Ippolit, who prevented him from passing.
"I'm waiting for you, Pierre," said the same voice of Prince Andrei affectionately and tenderly.
The postilion moved off, and the carriage rattled its wheels. Prince Hippolyte laughed abruptly, standing on the porch and waiting for the viscount, whom he promised to take home.

“Eh bien, mon cher, votre petite princesse est tres bien, tres bien,” said the viscount, getting into the carriage with Hippolyte. - Mais tres bien. He kissed the tips of his fingers. – Et tout a fait francaise. [Well, my dear, your little princess is very cute! Very nice and perfect French.]
Hippolyte laughed with a snort.
“Et savez vous que vous etes terrible avec votre petit air innocent,” continued the viscount. - Je plains le pauvre Mariei, ce petit officier, qui se donne des airs de prince regnant.. [Do you know, you are a terrible person, despite your innocent appearance. I feel sorry for the poor husband, this officer who poses as a possessive person.]
Hippolyte snorted again and said through laughter:
- Et vous disiez, que les dames russes ne valaient pas les dames francaises. Il faut savoir s "y prendre. [And you said that Russian ladies are worse than French ones. You have to be able to take it.]
Pierre, arriving ahead, like a domestic person, went into Prince Andrei's office and immediately, out of habit, lay down on the sofa, took the first book that came across from the shelf (these were Caesar's Notes) and began, leaning on his elbows, to read it from the middle.
– What did you do with m lle Scherer? She will be completely ill now,” said Prince Andrei, entering the office and rubbing his small, white hands.
Pierre turned his whole body so that the sofa creaked, turned his animated face to Prince Andrei, smiled and waved his hand.
“No, this abbot is very interesting, but he just doesn’t understand the matter like that ... In my opinion, eternal peace is possible, but I don’t know how to say it ... But not by political equilibrium ...
Prince Andrei was apparently not interested in these abstract conversations.
- It is impossible, mon cher, [my dear,] everywhere to say everything that you think. So, have you finally decided on something? Will you be a cavalry guard or a diplomat? asked Prince Andrei after a moment's silence.
Pierre sat down on the sofa, tucking his legs under him.
You can imagine, I still don't know. I don't like either one.
“But you have to make a decision, don’t you? Your father is waiting.
Pierre, from the age of ten, was sent abroad with the tutor abbot, where he stayed until the age of twenty. When he returned to Moscow, his father released the abbot and said to the young man: “Now you go to Petersburg, look around and choose. I agree to everything. Here's a letter for you to Prince Vasily, and here's some money for you. Write about everything, I will help you in everything. Pierre had been choosing a career for three months and did nothing. Prince Andrei told him about this choice. Pierre rubbed his forehead.
“But he must be a Freemason,” he said, referring to the abbot whom he had seen at the party.
- All this is nonsense, - Prince Andrei stopped him again, - let's talk about the case. Were you in the Horse Guards?
- No, I wasn't, but that's what came to my mind, and I wanted to tell you. Now the war against Napoleon. If it were a war for freedom, I would understand, I would be the first to enter the military service; but helping England and Austria against the greatest man in the world... that's not good...
Prince Andrei only shrugged his shoulders at Pierre's childish speeches. He pretended that such nonsense was not to be answered; but it was really difficult to answer this naive question with anything other than what Prince Andrei answered.
“If everyone fought only according to their convictions, there would be no war,” he said.
“That would be fine,” said Pierre.
Prince Andrew chuckled.
- It may very well be that it would be wonderful, but this will never happen ...
“Well, why are you going to war?” Pierre asked.
- For what? I don't know. So it is necessary. Besides, I'm going…” He stopped. “I am going because this life that I lead here, this life is not for me!

A woman's dress rustled in the next room. As if waking up, Prince Andrei shook himself, and his face assumed the same expression that it had in Anna Pavlovna's drawing room. Pierre swung his legs off the sofa. The princess entered. She was already in a different, homely, but equally elegant and fresh dress. Prince Andrei stood up, courteously pushing a chair for her.
“Why, I often think,” she began, as always, in French, hastily and bustlingly sitting down in an armchair, “why didn’t Annette get married?” How stupid you all are, messurs, for not marrying her. Excuse me, but you don't understand anything about women. What a debater you are, Monsieur Pierre.
- I argue everything with your husband; I don’t understand why he wants to go to war, ”said Pierre, without any hesitation (so common in the relationship of a young man to a young woman) turning to the princess.
The princess was startled. Apparently, Pierre's words touched her to the core.
Ah, that's what I'm saying! - she said. “I don’t understand, I absolutely don’t understand why men can’t live without war?” Why do we women want nothing, why do we need nothing? Well, you be the judge. I tell him everything: here he is an uncle's adjutant, the most brilliant position. Everyone knows him so well and appreciates him so much. The other day at the Apraksins, I heard a lady ask: "c" est ca le fameux prince Andre? Ma parole d "honneur! [Is this the famous Prince Andrei? Honestly!] She laughed. - He is so accepted everywhere. He can very easily be an adjutant wing. You know, the sovereign spoke to him very graciously. Annette and I talked about how easy it would be to arrange. How do you think?
Pierre looked at Prince Andrei and, noticing that his friend did not like this conversation, did not answer.
- When are you leaving? - he asked.
- Ah! ne me parlez pas de ce depart, ne m "en parlez pas. Je ne veux pas en entendre parler, [Ah, don't tell me about this departure! I don't want to hear about it,] the princess spoke in such a capriciously playful tone as she spoke with Hippolyte in the living room, and who obviously did not go to the family circle, where Pierre was, as it were, a member. “Today, when I thought that all these expensive relationships should be interrupted ... And then, you know, Andre?” She winked significantly at her husband. - J "ai peur, j" ai peur! [I'm scared, I'm scared!] She whispered, shuddering her back.
The husband looked at her with a look as if he was surprised to notice that someone else, besides him and Pierre, was in the room; and he turned inquiringly to his wife with cold courtesy:
What are you afraid of, Lisa? I can't understand, he said.
- That's how all men are selfish; everyone, all egoists! Because of his own whims, God knows why, he leaves me, locks me up in a village alone.
“With your father and sister, don’t forget,” Prince Andrei said quietly.
- All the same, alone, without my friends ... And she wants me not to be afraid.
Her tone was already grouchy, her lip rose, giving her face not a joyful, but a brutal, squirrel-like expression. She fell silent, as if finding it indecent to talk about her pregnancy in front of Pierre, while this was the essence of the matter.
“All the same, I didn’t understand, de quoi vous avez peur, [What are you afraid of],” Prince Andrei said slowly, not taking his eyes off his wife.
The princess blushed and frantically waved her hands.
- Non, Andre, je dis que vous avez tellement, tellement change ... [No, Andrey, I say: you have changed so, so much ...]
“Your doctor tells you to go to bed earlier,” said Prince Andrei. - You should go to sleep.
The princess said nothing, and suddenly her short, mustache-lined sponge trembled; Prince Andrei, standing up and shrugging his shoulders, walked across the room.
Pierre, surprised and naive, looked through his glasses first at him, then at the princess, and stirred, as if he, too, wanted to get up, but again pondered.
“What does it matter to me that Monsieur Pierre is here,” the little princess suddenly said, and her pretty face suddenly broke into a tearful grimace. “I wanted to tell you for a long time, Andre: why have you changed so much towards me?” What I did to you? You're going to the army, you don't feel sorry for me. For what?
– Lise! - only said Prince Andrei; but in this word there was both a request, and a threat, and, most importantly, an assurance that she herself would repent of her words; but she went on hurriedly:
“You treat me like a sick person or a child. I see everything. Were you like this six months ago?

Probably, if you add up in your mind all the legendary treasures allegedly hidden in the ocean depths, then their total weight will far exceed the weight of gold mined on Earth in the entire history of mankind.

But, despite the fantastic nature of many testimonies about underwater treasures, they continue to be searched for. And - find. Probably the loudest find of the 20th century was the treasure of the Spanish galleon Nuestra Señora de Atocha, which sank in 1622 off the coast of Florida.

Once Mel Fisher - the famous American treasure hunter, who received the title of "king of treasure hunters" - was incredibly lucky. In 1963, at the head of a group of submariners from Treasurs Salvors Incorporated, he found valuables from a Spanish ship that sank off the Florida peninsula. The valuables raised from the day of the sea were pulled by several million dollars. But the treasure hunters did not calm down. Mel Fisher's attention was drawn to the fate of another Spanish galleon, the Nuestra Señora de Atocha.

The last voyage of the Atocha tragically ended on September 6, 1622. A huge ship crashed on the reefs off the coast of Florida, taking 264 lives with it. Only five managed to escape. From the open belly of the galleon spilled 47 tons of gold and silver coins and ingots. They dotted the sea floor for over 50 miles...

Strange coincidence: Mel Fisher was also born on September 6th. Only almost 300 years after the death of Atocha. Later they will talk about some kind of mystical connection that connected the legendary diver and the no less legendary ship. Be that as it may, Mel Fisher has been obsessed with the dream of finding the treasures of the "golden galleon" for almost two decades. All his previous dives, searches, successes and failures served only as stages on the way to the cherished goal. He turned all his finds, including the treasures of Santa Margarita, into capital and invested this capital in a dream ...

On the way to the goal, not only sensitive failures awaited him, but also real tragedies. The biggest blow to Mel Fisher was the death of his son Dirk. Dirk's wife and another member of the team died with him. This happened on July 20, 1975, during search operations at the site of the death of Atocha.

Perhaps someone in Fischer's place would have given up. But the tireless seeker stubbornly continued to believe in his star. In essence, he had no choice: all the bridges were burned, and either the tragic fate of Dirk or ... "Atocha" awaited him ahead!

The famous General Archives of India in Seville is a treasure trove (for those who understand, of course). Forty thousand bundles of old documents, a million storage units tell in great detail about the history of the discovery and development of the New World by the Spaniards, about their 400-year colonial rule over vast territories across the ocean. In this sea of ​​information, each grain of which has its own value, Mel Fisher had to find one single tiny drop: documents telling about the last voyage of the galleon "Nuestra Señora de Atocha" ...

In that summer of 1622 everything was the same as always. The Spanish fleet safely crossed the ocean and was divided into several detachments. Seven galleons guarding the convoy, including the Santa Margarita, remained in Porto Domingo (Haiti). Another detachment, led by the "Nuestra Señora de Atocha", went to the Isthmus of Panama and on May 24 anchored in the harbor of Portobello. Sixteen smaller ships went off to load in various Caribbean ports, and a third detachment of galleons moved to Cartagena (Colombia). Here the ships took on board a large cargo of gold and silver and on July 21 met with the second detachment in Portobello. On July 27, the galleons weighed anchor and headed for Cuba. By August 22, the entire flotilla had gathered in the port of Havana. The so-called “New Spain fleet” also came here from the coast of Mexico, delivering a cargo of Mexican silver to Havana.

The Spanish admirals were alarmed: rumors had reached Havana that a large Dutch fleet had appeared in the waters of the Caribbean Sea. The commander of the "New Spain Fleet" turned to the chief commander, the Marquis Karderey, with a request to allow him to immediately go to Spain. The marquis gave such permission, but on the condition that most of the ingots and coins remain in Havana: they will be reloaded into millions, and thus the treasures will be under a more reliable shield.


The "New Spain Fleet" left, and the Marquis of Cardereith remained in Havana, waiting for the arrival of the last ships. Soon the whole flotilla was available, and on the morning of September 4, 28 heavily loaded ships lined up on the harbor road, preparing to set off on a long and dangerous voyage. The Marquis of Carderate raised his flag on the lead ship, the galleon of the captain of the Nuestra Señora Candelaria. The main part of the Mexican silver and gold was loaded onto the galleons "Santa Margarita" and "Nuestra Señora de Atocha". Armed with 20 huge bronze cannons, the Atocha sailed as the trailing galleon, following the tail of the slow merchant ships.

The next day, September 5, the weather deteriorated noticeably, the sky was covered with low clouds. By the middle of the day, a real storm broke out. Huge shafts rolled along the sea, the marshals could hardly see the ships ahead through the veil of rain. The waves tossed the clumsy galleons from side to side like splinters. Before the very eyes of the crew and passengers of the Atocha, the Nuestra Señora de Consoliacion, which was ahead, suddenly capsized and disappeared into the depths of the sea ...

At night, the wind changed direction and carried the Spanish fleet north to the shores of Florida. Before dawn, the Candelaria and 20 other ships in the convoy passed the western coast of the Dry Torgugas Islands. Four ships that broke away from the main group, including the Atocha and the Santa Margarita, were thrown by the storm to the east, to the Florida Keys chain of islands. Dawn caught them at some low coral atoll overgrown with mangrove trees. Huge waves of 5 meters high, like a toy, threw the Santa Margarita over the coral reef. From the Margarita, Captain Don Bernardino Lugo watched with helpless despair as the crew of the Atocha struggled to save the ship.

The sailors dropped anchor, hoping to catch on to the reef, but a huge wave unexpectedly lifted the ship and threw it right onto the reef with all its might. There was a terrifying crack, the mainmast collapsed. At the same moment, another wave easily removed the half-wrecked ship from the reef and carried it to the depths. Water gushed into huge holes, and the Atocha sank in the blink of an eye. From the side of the Margarita, it was visible how three Spanish sailors and two black slaves, convulsively clinging to a fragment of the mainmast dangling on the waves, were trying to escape from the embrace of death ... They were picked up only the next morning by the ship "Santa Cruz".

The hurricane that swept the Spanish fleet caused a lot of trouble: 8 of the 28 ships of the transatlantic convoy sank, 550 people died, and an invaluable cargo worth more than two million pesos was lost. For comparison, we note that for the entire period 1503-1660, Spain exported precious metals from America in the amount of 448 million pesos, that is, about 2.8 million pesos per year. Thus, it was about losing almost the entire annual income of the kingdom!

The surviving ships hurried back to Havana. When the seas calmed down, the Marquis of Cardereita sent Captain Gaspar Vargas with five ships to save the Atocha and the Santa Margarita. The Atocha was found quickly: the galleon sank at a depth of 55 feet, and her mizzen mast was still sticking out of the water. From the sunken ship, the Spaniards managed to remove only two small iron cannons that were on the upper deck. The mighty bronze guns remained on the battery deck. The gun ports were closed, and the guns themselves were firmly fixed in anticipation of a storm ... There were no traces of the Santa Margarita at all. However, a small group of sailors managed to escape from this ship - Vargas picked them up on the shores of Loggerhead Bay. The galleon Nuestra Señora de Rosario, badly battered by the storm, also stood there. Having removed the cargo from it, Vargas ordered to burn the useless ship.

In early October, Vargas returned to the Gulf of Florida again in the hope of saving the treasures of the Atocha. However, this time the Spaniards could not even find the place of the ship's death - apparently, another hurricane that had swept shortly before that finally buried the ship at the bottom of the sea. Vargas and his men searched the bottom in vain with hooks...

In February of the following year, the Marquis of Cardereit himself joined the search for "Atocha" and "Margarita". He knew perfectly well what fury would cause in Madrid the news of the loss of the entire annual output of the Mexican silver mines and what awaited him in this regard. At the cost of great effort, several silver ingots were raised from the bottom, but where the hulls of both lost ships disappeared remained a mystery. In August, the fruitless search was abandoned. Cardereita and Vargas returned to Spain. Before their departure, the geographer Nicolas Cardona drew a detailed map of the area of ​​the shipwreck.

The death of the "golden galleons" in 1622 was a real disaster for the royal treasury. In order to finance the ongoing hostilities, Spain was forced to increase foreign loans. Several battle galleons were sold to compensate for at least part of the losses, but this was not enough. The king ordered: the treasures of "Margarita" and "Atocha" by all means must be found!

In 1624, a search party led by Captain Francisco Nunez Melian arrived at the crash site of the "golden galleons". For two years, she used a 680-pound copper water bell to find the missing treasure. Luck smiled at the search engines only in June 1626: a diver, a slave named Juan Bagon, first lifted a silver ingot from the Santa Margarita from the bottom.

Hurricanes, then raids by English and Dutch pirates made their own adjustments to the search program every now and then. Nevertheless, over the next four years, Nunez Melian's team managed to extract 380 silver bars, 67 thousand silver coins and 8 bronze cannons from Santa Margarita from the depths of the sea. But no trace of "Atocha" was ever found.

For his services, Melian was appointed governor of Venezuela. Further work to search for underwater treasures was sporadically sung until 1641, but they did not bring any significant results. The events of subsequent years marked the decline of the former power of Spain. The Dutch, the British, the French gradually ousted her from the leading positions in Europe and took control of a number of the former Caribbean possessions of Spain. In 1817, Florida was bought by the United States of America. The mystery of the missing treasures of the Atocha and many other "gold galleons" was forgotten for many years. Once again, only the tireless seeker Mel Fisher returned to this exciting riddle.


- I turned out to have more patience, methodicalness and ... luck, - Fischer later said. - When I hear about all sorts of secrets there, for which simpletons get crazy money, I feel sorry for these naive people to tears. I want to warn everyone who wants to get rich quick by going scuba diving to warm seas. The life of a treasure hunter has nothing to do with the halo of mystery, romance and other nonsense. At least take me. In total, I spent more than one month underwater. The hours there stretch endlessly, the work is monotonous and boring, and thirty-five divers are always dissatisfied with the beggarly salary and my endless promises. After long months of unsuccessful searches, at best, you are convinced that gold does not at all glow with seductive witch fire at the bottom of the sea. The treasure rolled out and scattered for miles. If a recorder were to draw the life of an underwater treasure hunter on a tape, an endless, slightly wavy line with rare bursts would turn out. Well, the high peaks on it can be counted on the fingers of one hand.

The future "king of treasure hunters" was born in the Midwest, graduated from a technical college and settled in California, where he opened a school for scuba divers, and with it a diving equipment store. But this business, while lucrative, could not satisfy Mal's romantic, adventurous nature. To begin with, he took part in an underwater expedition that went to the coast of Central America in search of treasures. This expedition, although not crowned with particular success, determined the fate of Fischer: he decided to devote himself to the search for underwater treasures.

In 1963, Fisher sold his property in California and moved to the East Coast with his wife, Dolores, and four sons. With the proceeds, he founded Treasures Salvors Incorporated, headquartered in Key West, on the southern tip of the Florida Keys. His companion was Kip Wagner, a romantic, as obsessed with the passion for treasure hunting as Fisher. They agreed that he would work for free for a year or until the treasure was found.

Alas, this turned out to be much more difficult than they expected. The main obstacle was the sand. The flat bottom covered with it would be ideal if it were a question of searching for the skeletons of sunken galleons. But over the centuries, storms and storms have swept away their debris without a trace. Therefore, the divers decided to bet on the values ​​that were on the Spanish ships. And then an unpleasant surprise awaited them: it was almost impossible to get to the hard bottom, where heavy objects could lie. During the night, a thick layer of shifting sand covered the trenches dug during the day.

Fischer's technical ingenuity came to the rescue. He came up with an original device, which he called a "letter box", which made it relatively easy to carry out underwater excavations over a large area. It was a curved cylinder that was attached under the propellers of the boat and directed the stream of water vertically downwards. With such a water cannon, a hole thirty feet wide and ten feet deep was washed out in ten minutes. Where the sand layer was thinner, the "mailbox", like a giant broom, swept it from the selected area of ​​the bottom. After his inspection, the boat moved a little further, and the operation was repeated.

The first year of searching was already at an end when Fisher's perseverance finally paid off. In May 1964, a real carpet of jewels was opened on another “swept” area near Fort Pierce. Gold and silver coins littered the bottom. In two days, Fischer raised 1933 gold doubloons. In total, this season, rescuers collected 2,500 doubloons, which cost a fortune. For more than a year Treasurers Salvors has been working near Fort Pierce. When the stream of coins coming from the bottom turned into a miserable stream, the rescuers left the happy place not without regret.

Now Fisher decided to look for the legendary galleons "Nuestra Señora de Atocha" and "Santa Margarita". The historian Eugene Lyons came to his aid, having done gigantic work in the I Sviel General Archives of India. He sought out reports on the last voyage of the Atocha, on the underwater work of Francisco Nunez Melian and on the treasures he rescued from sunken galleons, studied many old maps of the Florida Keys from the 16th century. However, these searches by no means solved all the problems. Chief among them - how to comb hundreds of thousands of square miles of the seabed? Although the Tragers Salvors had 35 scuba divers on staff, even for such a large team, this was unrealistic. The only way out is to use boats towing magnet meters on a cable. But the galleons sank in the open sea, where there are no fixed landmarks. This means that it is possible that during the search some areas may remain unexplored. To prevent this from happening, Fisher proposed an original method: to put two navigation towers in the sea at a distance of three miles from one another. Rising 10 to 15 feet above the water, they sent out microwave signals that the boats accurately determined their location. In this way it could be guaranteed that every inch of the seabed would be covered.

Fisher even risked additional, very significant expenses, ordering images of the search area from space, equipment for molecular analysis of water samples, and even thought about acquiring dolphins to train them to find gold and silver objects at the bottom. Upon completion of all the preparatory work in 1970, Mel Fisher and his team arrived at the crash site of Atocha and San ga Margarita. Alas, despite the excellent equipment, for many months the extraction of treasure hunters was limited only to rusty cans, barrels and scraps of metal gear. But Mel Fisher continued to firmly believe in success: "The more area we plow for nothing, the closer our hour!"

By the summer of 1971, the size of the surveyed area amounted to 120,000 square miles. And at this time the first finds appeared. It began with the fact that the magnetometer on one of the search boats registered a weak surge. After some hesitation, the scuba diver on duty returned to this place and jumped into the water. Visibility at a depth of six meters was excellent, and he immediately saw the barrel of an ancient musket lying on the sand. A little further - a boarding saber and a second musket. Having placed a buoy over this place, the diver decided to inspect the neighboring sections of the bottom, and, as it turned out, not in vain: thirty meters away a large anchor stuck out of the sand.

Returning to the boat, the scuba diver fired a flare. From the "Fearless" - the headquarters ship of the expedition - immediately rushed photographer Don Kinkaid, who was instructed to take pictures of all the finds. After capturing a saber and muskets on film, he sank to the bottom to choose the best angle for filming me. And... in surprise, he almost dropped the box with the camera: right in front of him on the sand, several rings of a massive gold chain were clearly visible... Still not believing in luck, Kinkaid pulled the entire chain out of the sand by the end. Yes, what a chain - two and a half meters long!

In the weeks that followed, Fisher's team uncovered many silver coins, inlaid spoons and plates, a boatswain's whistle, a working bronze astrolabe, and a dozen small gold bars. There was no doubt that they were on the trail of the Spanish ship. But what? Fischer was at a loss. None of the finds could shed light on this. The crudely cast ingots bore neither the hallmark of the Spanish tax office nor numbers indicating their weight. In addition, ingots of this kind were not listed in the cargo manifest of any of the sunken galleons. Therefore, it was contraband, which could equally well be on board the Atocha and on board the Santa Margarita. However, Fisher believed that, in the end, it does not make much difference which galleon traces they found. More importantly, now it is possible to restore the overall picture of the shipwreck.

The ship, apparently, ran into a reef, near which Fisher and his comrades found an anchor. Moreover, having damaged the hull, it did not sink immediately, but drifted with the wind for some time, gradually falling apart and losing cargo over an area of ​​several square miles. Consequently, the main wreckage of the ship is further southeast at greater depths.

The 1972 season brought nothing new. With the advent of the following spring, scuba divers resumed their search. “First, silver coins flowed in a thin stream, then this stream turned into a stream, and, finally, divers discovered whole deposits of silver. There were so many coins that the search engines jokingly dubbed this place the “Spanish Bank”.

On July 4, Fisher's youngest son, 14-year-old Kane, saw some strange object at the bottom, similar, in his words, to "a loaf of bread." When the “loaf” was taken out, it turned out to be a silver ingot with the numbers 569 on it. The historian Eugene Lyons accompanying the expedition took up copies of documents from the Seville archive: the Atocha cargo manifest did indeed contain an ingot with that number! His weight was also indicated there - 28 kilograms. That's how much the find weighed. So, everything fell into place: "Atocha" was found!

But to extract from the bottom of the sea treasures scattered over a large area and, moreover, covered with a thick layer of bottom sediments, turned out to be far from easy. In the end, Fischer came to the conclusion: it is necessary to make large-sized "letter boxes" that would give strong jets to erode the soil. For this purpose, he acquired two powerful tugboats with huge propellers (They were called the "North Wind" and "South Wind"). Using these tugs with improved "letterboxes" that not only moved tons of sand, but also greatly improved underwater visibility, rescuers followed the trail of finds to the southeast of the location of the galleon's anchor. At first they came across cockleshells, sabers, lead cannonballs overgrown with shells. Then came the scattering. silver coins.

() once Dirk Fischer surfaced next to the South Wind, clutching a round object in his hands. It was a navigational astrolabe that had lain at the bottom for several centuries. Nevertheless, it was preserved so well that it could well be used today. Subsequent research showed that the astrolabe was made in Lessbon by a certain Lopu Omen around 1560. The next day, scuba divers picked up two gold bars and a gold disc weighing four and a half pounds. And on July 4, Bluff McHaley, a diver exploring the edges of the Spanish Bank, stumbled upon a small rosary of coral and gold.

The search for the treasures of the Atocha was fraught with considerable difficulties: financial problems, the dangers inevitable in spearfishing, a huge search area ... Once, while the South Wind was clearing the bottom, an uninvited guest suddenly appeared in the sea from the stern. A ten-year-old boy was hit by propellers before anyone could stop him. He was rushed to Key West by helicopter, but died in the hospital.

The treasures found were the main source of funds for current expenses: "Atocha" has already given a rich "harvest". From the bottom of the sea, 11 gold and 6240 silver coins, ten gold chains, two rings, several gold ingots and discs, a gold wash bowl and a rare beauty silver jug ​​were raised. In addition, scuba divers have collected a whole museum of antiques: pewter plates and navigational instruments, muskets, arquebuses, sabers, daggers. Archaeologist Duncan Mathewson recorded the location of each item. This shed new light on the circumstances of the shipwreck. Based on the collected facts, Mathewson put forward a new hypothesis about where the main cargo of the "golden galleon" lies.

With the advent of 1975, fate seemed to finally turn to face Mel Fisher. For him, this was already the sixth season of the search for Atocha. This time, the "Golden Galleon" gave the scuba divers a lot of 8 real coins and three gold bars. Then Dirk Fischer, guided by the assumptions of Mathewson, led the "North Wind" to the depth - behind the island of Quicksands. On July 13, 1975, he swam alone under water, inspecting the rocky ocean floor. Suddenly, a fantastic picture opened up before Dirk - a pile of green, log-like objects lying openly at the bottom, as if someone had previously cleared them of sediment. These were... five bronze cannons from the galleon "Nuestra Señora de Atocha"!

He flew to the surface with such a desperate, as it seemed to us, cry that we thought he was attacked by a shark, Dirk Fischer's wife Angel later recalled. - Then we heard the word "guns!" and they also yelled with joy.

Thirty meters from the first find, four more bronze cannons were found. Everyone was immensely happy: the treasures of the "golden" galleon are somewhere nearby. But instead of triumph, the most grievous of losses awaited them ahead...

On July 19, Dirk Fischer took the North Wind back to the Marquesas Keys, to the shipwreck. For the night they anchored southwest of the islands. Just before dawn, the tugboat suddenly leaked, lurched and suddenly capsized. Eight crew members were thrown into the sea, but three - Dirk and Angel Fisher, scuba diver Rick Gage - remained in the underdeck compartment and died. The cause of the tragedy could not be determined ...

This terrible blow did not break Mel Fisher. First of all, he ordered the protection of the cannons, which were extracted from the depths of centuries by his son. “Dirk really wanted them to get into museums,” he later explained to reporters. Fischer then got an even more powerful vessel ready to go: a 180-foot tender, which proved to be an immediate success. Thanks to its propellers, which were not inferior to aircraft propellers, the bottom clearing went much faster.

Only the beginning of winter storms forced Mel Fisher to announce another break in the search. This has already become a familiar schedule: three to four months of winter rest, and with the advent of spring, the resumption of work to lift the precious cargo of Atoni. However, there were weeks and even months when the arrows of magnetometers showed no signs of life, and the divers returned empty-handed. And if it wasn't for Fisher's persistence, the Treasurers Salvors would have probably curtailed their operations. Moreover, the company entered another period of financial difficulties. The millions that Fisher raised from the bottom of the sea went to pay off loans and pay taxes. Sometimes he did not even have money to buy fuel for the search flotilla.

A long-awaited event occurred in the summer of 1980, when scuba divers attacked a promising trail a few miles east of the alleged sinking site of the Atocha. A strong surge of the magnetometer showed the presence of large metal objects at the bottom. They turned out to be another anchor and a copper boiler. Then a pile of ballast stones was found nearby, as well as ceramics and a scattering of coins. And then ... Further, a fantastic sight opened before the divers: a strip of the seabed four thousand feet long was literally covered with gold and silver. But - what an irony of fate - judging by the numbers on the ingots, it was not a cargo from the Atocha, but ... from another galleon that died that day, the Santa Margarita. The treasures of Atocha were yet to be found...

The cost of the treasures found was about $ 20 million, and this allowed Fisher to return to the search for Atocha again the next year. Archaeologist Mathewson, who recorded in his records every, even the smallest find, counting the trophies raised from the bottom of the sea and comparing them with the Atocha cargo manifest, came to the unequivocal conclusion that the bulk of the valuables had not yet been discovered.

Another five years have passed. And finally, in the spring of 1985, divers raised 414 silver doubloons, 16 brooches with emeralds and several gold bars from the bottom of the sea. The excitement knew no bounds. But for the next month and a half, no find was made at all! Mel Fisher was lost in doubt: maybe they are looking in the wrong place again? Maybe the drift line of the Atocha looked completely different and they deviated from it to the side?

On the morning of July 20, the magnetometer of the search boat registered the presence of a significant mass of metal underwater. Scuba divers Andy Matroski and Greg Wareham, who were on duty that day, immediately went under the water. At a depth of eighteen meters, Andy noticed dim light spots on the sand. Nearby rose a block overgrown with algae - downright underwater rock in miniature. "Where did she come from on a flat day?" Sailor was surprised. With signs, he called to a comrade who had a manual metal detector. As soon as Wareham brought the probe to the mysterious block, a piercing howl rang out in the headphones. From the expression on his face, Matroska guessed that the mysterious object was fraught with some kind of surprise. Just in case, he carefully scratched the "stone" with a knife. A narrow silver strip glittered against a brown-green background. What seemed to be a piece of rock was actually a heap of caked silver ingots...

With delight, Matroska and Wareham embraced each other right under the water. "We attacked a root vein!" - they shouted in one voice, emerging from the side of the "South Wind". This news had the effect of an exploding bomb. Everyone who was on the ship, snatching masks and scuba gear, fell into the water.

This time there was no doubt: here, forty miles from Key West and ten from the archipelago of small coral islands of the Marquesas Keys, lay the main part of the cargo of the Nuestra Señora de Atocha. Moreover, fate ordered that he be found exactly ten years later - to the day - after the tragic death of Dirk Fischer ...

On that day, no one else began to sink into the water. We once again prayed for people close to all of us who gave their lives to bring this success closer. Well, then the usual routine work began, - recalls Mel Fisher. - From morning to evening we raised silver ingots. There were so many of them that wire baskets borrowed from one of the Key West supermarkets had to be adapted for this. When later, already at the headquarters of our Treasurers Salvors, we counted the "catch", we ourselves could hardly believe the results: 3200 emeralds, one hundred and fifty thousand silver coins and over a thousand silver bars weighing an average of about forty kilograms each.


As a result of many years of work, Fisher's expedition raised jewels worth $250 million from the seabed. The approximate amount of the Atocha treasures still remaining under water is estimated at no less than $100 million.