1715
Spanish Treasure Fleet
On July 31,
1715, a savage hurricane swept across the Bahamas Channel
from the northeast, catching in its path the Spanish
treasure fleet on its way from Havana to Spain. It was a
disaster to the fleet and to the King of Spain Phillip V.
His fortunes rose and fell with the arrival or loss of
the fleet. He often faced bankruptcy. This fleet was very
important because it was the first fleet leaving the new
world in four years. It carried an accumulation of gold
and silver coins and bullion from the New World
mints.
To the fleet,
it was chaos. There were twelve vessels, five of these
from General Ubilla's Nueva Espana fleet, six of General
Echeverz Galcones fleet and a French vessel. The French
vessel accompanied the fleet back to Spain for protection
and was the only one that survived. The rest of the fleet
disintegrated on the jagged coral reefs of Florida
between Fort Pierce and Sebastian
Inlet.
Over seven
hundred lives were lost, including General Ubilla, and
$14 million in gold and silver was scattered over the
beaches and reefs a few hundred yards offshore. There was
a salvage effort by the Spanish, but when their work was
done, a great quantity of treasure remained undiscovered.
One of the survivors, Captain Sebastian Mendez, the pilot
of Nuestra Senora del Carmen, spoke of "a hurricane that
came on from the east-northeast so strongly that although
he has sailed the seas for many years and suffered
through many tempests he has never seen another like it
for violence, and his ship and all the rest were lost.
Today treasure still continues to be found from these
wreck sites off the Florida Coast

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