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El Cazador Shipwreck Silver Coin

$ 248.16

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Certification: F.F. C.J. "Whitey" Keevan
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Spain
  • Composition: Silver
  • KM Number: 10024
  • Denomination: Real
  • Condition: Very good condition
  • Year: 1783

    Description

    Selling my 1783 silver coin from the El Cazador Ship Wreck.
    Includes all the paper work and certification of authenticity.
    Signed by C.J. "Whitey" Keevan - dated: 27 feb. 2008.
    Bought by me in Florida 2017.
    Seller was James Stenlund.
    Size: 37 mm
    Cert: 10024
    Denom: 8 Reale
    Material: Silver
    Date: 1783
    Reign: Carolus III
    Mint: Mexico
    Assayer: F.F.
    Weight: 23 gr
    Grade: One
    HISTORY:
    Sometimes called the shipwreck that changed American history, the story of the ill-fated El Cazador begins in New Orleans?
    In the 1770?s the Spanish controlled Louisiana Territory?s economy was failing, and so Charles III of Spain ordered captain Gabriel de Campos y Pineda to sail the Spanish brig of war, El Cazador (The Hunter), to Veracruz, New Spain (present day Mexico), on 20 October 1783. There she was to be loaded with silver Spanish coins, mostly 8 reales, ?Pieces of Eight,? that were to be used to bolster the region?s economy. On 11 January 1784, El Cazador set sail for New Orleans and was never heard from again.
    Some historians speculate that had El Cazador made it to New Orleans, and its treasure been able to bolster the economy, Spain might not have given the territory back to France in 1801. And, in turn, the United States would not have been able to acquire it for 15 million dollars in 1803 (60 million francs) from the French. Remember, Napoleon was the Man in France in 1803 (The Napoleonic Wars raged from 1803-15), and the 60 million francs were supposed to be used for the construction of five new canals in France. Instead, Bonaparte spent the whole amount on his planned invasion of the United Kingdom, which, by the way, in case you missed it, was eventually scrapped.
    Two hundred years later, about 50 miles south of Louisiana in the Gulf of Mexico, the butterfish trawler, Mistake, was fishing in 300 feet of water when her net snagged something on the bottom. It was 2 August 1993. Captain Jerry Murphy and his crew held their breath as they retrieved the net to examine it for damage. As it was personally related to Robert by one of the salvors in 1994, when they got the net up and dumped the contents on the deck, debris and black clumps fell out. Thinking they were rocks, some of the crew started kicking them through the scuppers and back into the abyss. Then someone yelled ?COINS! COINS? and, or course, all fishing stopped.
    The coin in this glittering pendant was recovered from the remains of the once proud Spanish galleon, El Cazador. It is doubly rare in that it is a ?Pillar Dollar? Reale, rather than the more common Portrait style. While we will never know how history may have been changed if she had made it to New Orleans, we do know that it is a living testament to a time when kings ruled the lands and pirates ruled the seas!