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Introduction to
Shipwreck Treasure Coins:
For most people the word
shipwreck represents the old
sunken Spanish galleons,
dismasted and rudderless in
hurricane seas... panicked
crew helpless and praying as
the ship is driven onto a
reef that rips open the
fragile hull and sends her
chests of gold and silver to
the bottom. Indeed many
Spanish galleons returning
to Europe from the Americas
met this tragic fate. By
some estimates a third of
Spain’s treasure ships never
made it home. A lot of
treasure is still waiting to
be recovered!
Spanish galleons were not
the only treasure ships
plying the cruel seas. The
Dutch, the English, the
French and the Portuguese
all sailed treasure ships to
and from the New World and
the Orient, and all suffered
horrific losses in the
process. The long voyage
from Europe to the Orient in
particular was as important
to the European economies as
the Spanish-Caribbean
connection. Many Dutch and
English treasure ships
perished on that route.
Between 1492 and the early
19th century Spain extracted
billions and billions of
dollars worth of gold,
silver, precious gems and
other treasures from the
Caribbean, Mexican and South
American colonies. Treasure
and other trade goods were
loaded at the new Spanish
ports in Panama, Colombia,
Ecuador, Bolivia, Mexico,
Peru and the Philippines,
then shipped to Spain in
large armed Fleet of
Galleons.
The Spanish Colonial Mints
at Potosi, Lima, Cartagena,
Cuzco and Mexico City
labored day and night to
produce the irregularly
shaped gold and silver coins
commonly referred to as
macuquinas (crude hammered
coins) or “Cobs'" this world
is the simplification of the
Spanish phrase, "Cabo de
Barra", that means "the end
of a bar" this pieces were
sliced off silver bars from
the Spanish Colonies, trimmed
to weight and then struck
between crude dies, thus No
two cobs are ever exactly
alike! that is what makes
these "macuquinas" unique
and really interesting to
collect.. Ironically, the
Spanish Crown put its
Colonial mints to the
trouble of striking coins
only to have much of the
coinage shipped to Spain and
immediately remelted and
restruck as Spanish coins
"Ship Money". The point of
coining the silver and gold
in the New World was to
better monitor and control
its shipment. Some of the
gold and silver coins were
of course retained in the
New World to serve the
function of a local coinage.
Gold and silver cobs were
hand-struck on unshaped
blanks using locally
produced dies, then trimmed
to approximately the proper
weight. Cobs were minted
from the early 1500’s until
the mid -18th century, when
the mechanical press finally
introduced modern milled
coinage to the Spanish
colonial mints. The Milled
Coin era began first in
Mexico in 1732, then about
twenty years later in
Colombia and forty years
later in El Peru.
Cobs (and the subsequent
milled coins) were minted in
gold denominations of 8, 4,
2, and 1 and 1/2 Escudos
(Doubloons), and in silver
denominations of 8, 4, 2, 1,
½ and ¼ Reales (Pieces of
Eight). Copper coins were
also occasionally struck in
denominations of 4, 3, 2,
and 1 Maravedis.
By a royal statute first
promulgated in the reign of
Carlos I, the official
weights of the silver Reales
were as follows:
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8 Reales (cob) = 27.3
grams [ 0.96 ounces ] (
also known as Pieces of
Eight )
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4 Reales (cob) = 13.65
grams [ 0.48 ounces ]
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2 Reales (cob) = 6.825
grams [ 0.24 ounces ]
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1 Real (cob) = 3.4125
grams [ 0.12 ounces ]
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1/2 Real (cob) = 1.70625
grams [ 0.06 ounces ]
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1/4 Real (cob) =
0.853125 grams [ 0.03
ounces ] ( also known as
Cuartillos )
(I did not include diameter
because it may vary
depending on the mint, year
and assayer.)
The production of silver
cobs from irregularly cut
blanks of silver ( planchets )
meant these ideals weight
were rarely achieved. Cobs
were often up to 3-4%
underweight, and
occasionally overweight.
With the introduction of
milled silver coins—first
Pillars, then the Bust
series—weights became much
standardized. Keep in mind
that when we are talking
about "Treasure Coins" a
notorious underweight is
very common due to the
corrosion originated by
salty water and erosion
created by being 300-400
years at the bottom of the
sea.
Both cobs and milled coinage
are found on Spanish
Treasure wrecks, depending
on date the ship was lost.
Here is a list of some of
the most famous Spanish (
and Dutch ) shipwrecks, and
a brief indication of the
type of coinage recovered
from the wreck:
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The “Golden
Fleece”
wreck, a Spanish ship lost
in Caribbean in 1550's,
carried gold and silver
bullion, plus early Mexican
silver cobs from the reign
of Carlos & Johanna
(Juana).
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The
Nuestra Señora de Atocha,
a galleon of the 1622 Fleet
lost in Florida Keys,
carried large quantities of
silver bullion and silver
cobs.
-
The
Santa Margarita,
another 1622 ship lost in
the same storm, carried the
same cargo of silver cobs
and bullion.
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The Nuestra Señora De
La
Concepcion,
lost off the isle of
Hispaniola, Dominican
Republic in 1641, carried
substantial amounts of
silver cobs.
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The Jesus Maria de La Limpia
Concepcion "La
Capitana,”
a Spanish galleon wrecked
off Chanduy, Ecuador in
1654, carried silver cobs of
both the old Shield and new
Pillars design (also transitional
and countermarked pieces).
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The Nuestra Señora de
Las
Maravillas,
a Spanish galleon sunk off
Grand Bahamas Island in the
Caribbean in 1656, carried
Colombian gold cobs and both
old and new style silver
cobs.
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The Santa Maria de
La
Consolacion
“Pirate related Ship,” A
Spanish galleon lost off
Santa Clara Island, Ecuador
in 1681, carried silver
cobs.
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The
1715 Fleet,
eleven Spanish ships lost
together in a hurricane
along the East Coast of
Florida in July of 1715,
carried large numbers of
gold and silver cobs.
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The
1733 Fleet,
twenty-two Spanish ships,
most of which were lost in a
hurricane in the Florida
Keys, carried silver cobs.
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The Dutch merchantman
Rooswijk,
lost in 1739 on the Goodwin
Sands, England, carried
silver bullion, cobs,
klippes and early pillar
dollars.
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The Spanish ship
El
Cazador,
sunk off the Louisiana coast
of the US in 1784, carried
Bust-type milled Spanish
silver.
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The
Princess Louisa,
lost off Cape Verde, South
Africa in 1743, carried
silver cobs.
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The VOC merchantman
Hollandia,
lost off the Isles of Sicily
in 1743, carried silver
pillars dollars and a few
silver cobs.
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The
Nuestra Señora de la Luz,
lost in Montevideo harbor,
Uruguay in 1752, carried
gold and silver cobs.
We may summarize the common
types of Spanish coins
recovered from shipwrecks as
follows:
Macuquinas or cob coins
- Carlos y Juana Type ( 1536
- 1572 )
- Old Type Crude Shield and
Cross ( 1572 - 1652 )
- New Type Pillars and Waves
( 1652 -1773 )
Milled coins:
- Pillar Type ( 1732 - 1770
)
- Bust type ( 1772 – 1825 )
Examples of the different
coins recovered from
shipwrecks:
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Atocha 4 Reales
Cob - Assayer M
- 1617
- Potosi
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8
Reales Atocha
Cob 1621 -
Assayer Quadra -
Potosi
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La Consolacion 8
Reales 1679
Assayer V
Potosi
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La Consolacion 8
Reales 1679
Assayer
C
-
Potosi
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8
Reales (cut for
change) La
Capitana 1649
countermarked |
8
Reales La
Capitana 1650
countermarked
"L" Crown
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1732 8 Reales
Mexican Cob -
VOC Rooswijk |
2
Escudos (Gold) -
Lima 1711 - 1715
Plate Fleet
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8R Pillar dollar
1737 - "dos
mundos" Rooswijk
Wreck VOC 1739 -
Mexico mint |
8
Reales Cob -
1715 Fleet -
1712-1715
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1733 Klippe on
cob planchet -
Rooswijk 1739
VOC - Mexico
city mint |
1733 Fleet - 8
Reales Mexico
Mint |
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El Cazador Wreck
- 1783 Bust
Dollar Mexico
Mint |
4
Reales 1715
Fleet -omJ
Mexico mint Cob |
8
Reales Assayer
Roas (o)
countermarked
cob old style
crown 1650 |
Transitional
quasi-royal 1652
Rare - Ergueta
Assayer mark -
La Capitana 1654 |
- Pictures and article can
not be reproduced in any
form.
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