On September 4, 1622
the Tierra Firme flota of twenty-eight
ships left Havana bound for Spain. With it was
carried the wealth of an empire; Silver
from Peru and Mexico, gold and emeralds from
Colombia, pearls from Venezuela. Each ship
carried its crew, soldiers, passengers, and all
the necessary materials and provisions for a
successful voyage. The following day, the fleet
found itself being overtaken by a hurricane as
it entered the Florida straits. By the morning
of September 6th, eight of these vessels lay
broken on the ocean floor, scattered from the
Marquesas Keys to the Dry Tortugas. In them were
the treasures of the Americas, and the untold
stories of scores of Spanish sailors, soldiers,
noblemen, and clergy.
The heavily armed Nuestra Señora de Atocha sailed as Almirante,
or rear guard, of the flota, following
the others to prevent an attack from behind the
fleet. For additional protection, she bore the
name of the holiest of shrines in Madrid. She
had been built for the Crown in Havana in 1620
and was rated at 550 tons, with an overall
length of 112 feet, a beam of 34 feet and a
draft of 14 feet. She carried square-rigged fore
and mainmasts, and a lateen-rigged mizzenmast. Atocha would have had the high sterncastle, low waist
and high forecastle of a typical early 17th
century galeón. She had made only one
previous voyage to Spain, during which her
mainmast was burst, and had to be replaced.
For the 1622
return voyage, Atocha was loaded with a
cargo that is, today, almost beyond belief -- 24
tons of silver bullion in 1038 ingots, 180,00 pesos of silver coins, 582 copper ingots,
125 gold bars and discs, 350 chests of indigo,
525 bales of tobacco, 20 bronze cannon and 1,200
pounds of worked silverware! To this can be
added items being smuggled to avoid taxation,
and unregistered jewelry and personal goods; all
creating a treasure that could surely rival any
other ever amassed.
The Nuestra Señora
de Atocha sank with 265 people onboard. Only
five -- three sailors and two slaves -- survived
by holding on to the stump of the mizzenmast,
which was the only part of the wrecked galleon
that remained above water. Rescuers tried to
enter the drowned hulk, but found the hatches
tightly battened. The water depth, at 55 feet,
was to great to allow them
to work to open her. They marked the site of her
loss and moved on to rescue people and treasure
from Santa Margarita and Nuestra Señora
del Rosario, other ships also lost in the
storm. On October 5th a second hurricane
came through, and further destroyed the wreck of
the Atocha. For the next 60 years,
Spanish salvagers searched for the galleon, but
they never found a trace. It seemed she was gone
for good.
In 1969, Mel
Fisher and his Treasure Salvors crew began a
relentless, sixteen year quest for the treasure
of the Atocha. Using sand-clearing propwash deflectors, or
"mailboxes," that he invented, and
specially-designed proton magnetometers, they
spent long years following the wreck’s elusive
trail--sometimes finding nothing for months, and
then recovering bits of treasure and artifacts
that teasingly indicated the proximity of the
ship and its cargo.
In 1973, three
silver bars were found, and they matched the
weights and tally numbers found on the Atocha’s
manifest, which had been transcribed from the
original in Seville. This verified that Fisher
was close to the major part of the wrecksite. In
1975, his son Dirk found five bronze cannon
whose markings would clinch identification with
the Atocha. Only days later, Dirk and his
wife Angel, with diver Rick Gage, were killed
when one of the salvage boats capsized. Yet
Fisher and his intrepid crew persevered

By 1980, they had
found a significant portion of the remains of
the Santa Margarita -- with a fortune in
gold bars, jewelry and silver coins. On May 12,
1980, Fisher’s son Kane discovered a complete
section of the Margarita’s wooden hull
weighted down by ballast stones, iron cannon
balls and artifacts of 17th century Spain.
On July 20, 1985,
Kane Fisher, captain of the salvage vessel Dauntless,
sent a jubilant message to his father’s
headquarters, "Put away the charts; we’ve
found the main pile!" Ecstatic crew members
described the find as looking like a reef of
silver bars. Within days, the shipper’s marks
on the bars were matched to the Atocha’s
cargo manifest, confirming Kane’s triumphant
claim. At long last, the wreck’s "motherlode"
had been found -- and the excavation of what was
widely referred to as the "shipwreck of the
century" began.

Quickly, Duncan
Mathewson, Mel Fisher’s chief archaeologist,
assembled a team of archaeologists and
conservators from across the country to ensure
that the artifacts and treasure were excavated
and preserved properly. Because the material had
lain on the ocean floor for three and a half
centuries, much of it was in an extremely
unstable state; immediate preservation treatment
was required to prevent its destruction after it
left its saltwater tomb.
Today artifacts
and treasures from the Atocha and Margarita form the cornerstone of the Mel Fisher
Maritime Heritage Society Museum’s collection.
Among the items found on the wrecks are a
fortune in gold, silver bars, and coins destined
for the coffers of Spain; a solid gold belt and
necklace set with gems; a gold chalice designed
to prevent its user from being poisoned; an
intricately-tooled gold plate; a gold chain that
weighs more than seven pounds; a horde of
contraband emeralds -- including an impressive
77.76 carat uncut hexagonal crystal experts have
traced to the Muzo mine in Colombia; religious
and secular jewelry; and silverware.

With the
treasure, and perhaps ultimately more important,
were countless articles that provide insight
into seventeenth-century life, especially under
sail: rare navigational instruments, military
armaments, native American objects, tools of
various trades, ceramic vessels, galley wares,
even seeds and insects. A portion of the Atocha’s
lower hull were examined and then recovered to
be stored in a protected lagoon at the Florida
Keys Community College, making them readily
accessible to interested researchers.
Following
a long conservation process, the many of the
artifacts from the Nuestra Señora de Atocha and Santa Margarita are now on permanent
display at the not-for-profit Mel Fisher
Maritime Museum. Approximately 200,000 people
visit the Key West museum annually to marvel at
them -- and applaud the triumph of the human
spirit that their recovery represents. |