Box 5
Folder 43. Lost Treasure – Harry E. Rieseberg
Item 1. Magazine Articles
Transcribed Text (OCR)
GARY MANGIACOPA ARCHIVE ============================================================ Title: B5F43I1 Slug: b5f43i1 Categories: Lost Treasure Source: https://garymangiacopraarchive.com/b5f43i1 Pages: 8 scanned, 8 extracted OCR: Google Vision API (document_text_detection) Processed: 2026-06-06 ============================================================ NORWALK TRAIN By Margaret Lewis DISASTER ge do G ca lo sel riv dr m pa tox a.r pro bri Ri the ing the col ing [AD] 228 20892820 823 2 4 7 8 9 the SO S hortly after 10:00a.m., May 6, 1853, a New Haven Rail- road passenger train shot through an open drawbridge just outside the Norwalk River, causing the death of 46 passengers and the loss of over $250,000 in gold and precious gems. At that time it was considered the worst single railroad disaster to ever happen in America. Several attempts have been made to recover the precious cargo, but as far as it is known, no one has ever found any of it. The treasure had belonged to a man named Thaddeus Birk, a jew- eler who had moved to the United States from Great Brittan only a few months prior to the disaster. He was the sole proprietor of a business that imported fine gems from London, Paris, and Bavaria. Business was very slow in the beginning and Birks' goal was to build up a reliable clien- tele of wealthy patrons. Birk's first big break came when he was asked to attend a birthday party that was being thrown for the wife of a wealthy shipping magnate, Nigel Massey, of Boston, Mass. It was an extraordinary opportunity for Birk because he was asked to attend the party not only as a guest, but also as a businessman. Nigel Massey, like Birk, had also moved to America from Great Brittan, and was familiar with the beautiful gem-encrusted jewelry of the Tawney Company, one of Londons' finest jewelry firms which 8 LOST TREASURE September 2001 A frontier train, similar to the one lost at Norwalk, causing the death of 46 people and the loss of $250,000. Thaddeus Birk represented. Massey learned about Birks' arrival in America from a friend, and consid- ered buying a few expensive pieces for his wife, Regina. Birk was asked to bring along a wide assortment of jewelry for Massey, or any other of his wealthy guests to choose from. This was a great chance for Birk to circulate with some of Bostons socialites and to also establish him- self as a supplier of some of the finest jewelry that money could buy. If he handled the situation properly, his shop would be the "in-place" for the ultra rich to expand their collections of extravagant rare gems. Several days before he left for Boston, Birk filled up two leather covered wooden trunks with dozens of his finest examples. There were solid gold bracelets, gold earrings and finger bands all encased with diamonds, emeralds and precious stones. There were also solid gold brooches, pins and necklaces, deli- cately filled with pearls and diamonds. Birks two most expensive samples were both pendants. One of them had a 30 carat teardrop dia- mond that hung from an 18 inch silver chain, and the other one con- tained an oval emerald of equal size. The total value of Birks' samples was over $50,000, and he was con- vinced that he would sell it all at the act the pa op lan jus wh thi the tra the be Th lef of fel ter CM ge Th go 46 de [PAGE BREAK] Sl at Va party. In another satchel Birk carried his personal items and a change of clothes. Early the next morning Birk boarded the New Haven train headed for Boston. He sat in the first passen- ger coach where he took the whole seat for himself and his valuable luggage. Birk looked out the win- dow at the beautiful scenery as the train chugged out of New Yorks' Grand Central Station, heading north- east towards New Haven, Conn. The New Haven Railroad fol- lowed the coastline, offering the pas- sengers an extraordinary view of the rivers, basins, and estuaries along the way. Due to the heavy traffic, some of the waterways required drawbridges to accommodate both trains and river traffic. The train moved along at a steady pace as it passed Long Island Sound, headed toward the South Norwalk Depot. Just a few minutes after 10:00 a.m., the steamboat Pacific ap- proached the closed railroad draw- bridge that spanned the Norwalk River just a few hundred yards from the South Norwalk train station. See- ing the steamers oncoming approach, the bridge tender lowered the red colored sphere to alert any oncom- ing trains well in advance. He then activated the drawbridge, swinging the long central span horizontally, paralleling the flow of the river. The Pacific steamed through the opening and headed into Long Is- land Sound. The bridge tender was just preparing to close the bridge when the New Haven Express came thundering around the turn towards the opening. Seeing the impending tragedy, the engine crew leaped from the moving train only a few seconds before it shot across the open chasm. The train was traveling so fast that it left the bank and slammed into one of the concrete bridge pillars, then fell into the river below. Following the engine into a wa- tery grave was the tender, two mail cars, the express car and two passen- ger cars, one of them carrying Thaddeus Birk and his fortune in gold and jewels. In less than a minute, 46 people were killed and the train demolished, a total loss of life and property. The findings of a coroners' inquest placed the blame for the di- saster on the trains' engineer. Eventually, the wreckage from the demolished train was slowly cleared from the channel, but most of the personal items that had belonged to the passengers were strewn about the water, never to be recovered. At the prices they are paying today for gold, silver and precious gems, Birks jewelry would now be worth a small fortune, possibly over a million dol- lars. Norwalk, Conn., is a small indus- trial town located in the southwest- ern part of the state. It is situated along the Norwalk River which flows south into Long Island Sound at South Norwalk. SOURCES: Treasure, June 1984. LT AL'S DISCOUNT DETECTORS (Formerly Arizona Al's) METAL DETECTORS & ACCESSORIES Tired of advertising hype? Fast Shipping Nationwide All Major Credit Cards [AD] 706-781-3040 www.discountdetectors.com Made in USA * Cuts Through Any Roots * Digs Through Any Type of Ground *Ideally Suited for For More Data Circle 14 Metal Detecting, Camping, Nursery and landscaping Send me STANDARD DIGGING TOOL TREASURE HUNTERS DON'T MISS A DEAL LIKE THIS!!! This Fine Digging Tool is Made of Aircraft Quality Steel, Heat Treated and Tempered. Plus you get a handy cadorra Belt Holder with plastic insert to carry the standard digging tool. The belt loop is 3 1/2" Standard Digging Tool(s) for $39.95 each plus $5.95 s&h (Canada add $9.95) Name Address City State Zip Mail to: Lost Treasure, Inc. PO. Box 451589, Grove, OK 74345 LOST TREASURE September 2001 9 [PAGE BREAK] CARTER LATHAM PUBLISHING CO., INC. 3201 N. Frazier Phone A.C. 713, [AD] 756-3328 [AD] P.O. Box 328 CONROE, TEXAS 77301 JOHN H. LATHAM EDITOR AND PUBLISHER HOWARD P. CARTER ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER EUGENE WOODALL ASSOCIATE EDITOR VOL. 4, NO. 4 LOST TREASURE IN THIS ISSUE MARCH, rike it r LYNN LATHAM ASSOCIATE EDITOR ILANON MOON CONTRIBUTING EDITOR JEAN LATHAM BUSINESS MANAGER DAPHNE WALKER ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER LAFITTE'S LAST CACHES ON AMERICAN SOIL..By Thomas B. Jewell I KNIFE IN A TREE ...........By Beverly Dickerson 16 TRAGEDY AND TREASURE OF LAURA'S CLIPPER....By Jeff Ferguson BOOM! WENT THE FINNS AND THE GOLD NEW ENGLAND'S UNDERSEAS BONANZAS 17 ..By Benito Villa ...By Robert E. Cahill 19 KEENE 21 IS THERE ANOTHER OAK ISLAND MONEY PIT? TREASURE AT BUZZARD ROOST LOUIS D'AURY'S MANY TREASURES MISSING $100,000 Visitors are alway ...By Al Masters 26 plant, to browse By Roberts C. Mills We're easy to f 33 in the San Ferna ..By Duff Howard 36 ...By John Ward 55 TRUE TREASURE CLASSIC CIRCULATION DEPT. JOYCE MCGLOHN, MGR. DODIE SHARP SAMMIE LUKE LOST TREASURE wants to buy articles, cartoons and filustrations. Manuscripts and photographs will be handled with care, but their safety cannot be guar anteed. Enclose stamped envelopa with all submissions Inquire before sending original art. CARTER/LATHAM PUBLISHING CO.: INC. 1979 [AD] Subscription price: One year (12 Issues) for $10 Two years 124 Issues) for $18.60 LOST TREASURE (USPS 638-080) 15 published monthly for $10.00 per year by Carter Latham Publishing Co., Inc., at 3201 Norths Frazier Street. Conroe, Texas 77301; Second-closs postage paid at Conroe, Texas, POSTMASTER Send address changes to LOST TREASURE, P.O. Box 328 Conroe, TX 77301 MISSING GOLDEN SLUGS WORTH $10,000 APIECE! DEPARTMENTS AND FEATURES PANNING FOR COLOR (With the Publisher) BLM/U.S. FOREST SERVICE PROPOSITION 13 P LETTERS TO LONG JOHN BARGAIN BOOK STORE LOST TREASURE ANSWERS YOUR QUESTIONS LONG JOHN'S (T/R RANCH CLUB) LIFERS CLASSIFIED TREASURE NUGGETS CLUB NEWS Cover photo: "The trea NON-FICTION-ALL STORIES ABOUT LOT 9330 Co By Maurice Kildare 58 AUTHOR ENGINEER ALASKA Alaska 3127 C Anch (907) Gates 17 M Clear 0907) 504 C Fairb (907) 40 46 48 ure [PAGE BREAK] Rock ouses from The retorn wn into on the uffered ise full loss. Hilli whole. ct was 1,213 550 lly re- search Finns. ted over parts buggy sinstak- was ever one of Wyom- metal rs an flore clima ch Ja el Lingue p. 2. el Auwa.! W. 4. & Joseph yours han int. S. Lompitona of the 3. el Argante. 6. Chaves. W. 7. Sa Belódia que yua aloft b. 8. Herrera. 23. Tees Puentes. • Dias. Silver pieces of eight and Spanish cobs have been found at Appledore Island, New Hampshire, and Wellfleet and Winthrop in Massachusetts. NEW ENGLAND'S UNDERSEAS BONANZAS Florida has captured international attention by the richness of the treasure finds emerging from its coastal waters. In 1960, the U.S. Treasury Department reported $11 million in sunken treasure recovered that year from American coastal Waters primarily Florida. By 1970, the annual recovery had doubled, and it may have quadru- pled since then. A single rich recent find, the Atocha off Florida, could vield $60 million or more. Although little has been recovered from New England waters, these By ROBERT E. CAHILL waters do hold their share of yet- to-be-found treasure ships. Also, it's not just sunken gold and silver that can make a lucky skin diver rich. An old bottle can bring $500 or more from an avid collector. Recently, a diver found six tiny Chinese figurines in a shallow-water wreck and sold them to a collector for $10,000. How much, for example, do you think a trunkful of Paul Revere's personal belongings might bring? His trunk is in the charred remains of the brig Spring Bird, sunk off the coast of Maine in about 15 feet of water. But that's a story that conjures up visions of all kinds of underwater treasure, and it's all in New Eng- land. One of the greatest, yet unherald-, ed battles of the American Revolu- tion took place in the Penobscot River in Maine in 1779. This battle is not emphasized in American history books because six British ships managed to defeat 17 of America's finest warships and trans- ports. asure March, 1979 While Florida gets most of the attention, New England's waters hold their share of yet-to-be-found treasure ships 21 [PAGE BREAK] New England continued How much, for example, do you think a trunkfa For 21 days, beginning July 24, Colonial soldiers tried to take the British garrison at Penobscot Bay. Gen. Peleg Wadsworth (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's grand- the 1,300 American father) led troops. They couldn't defeat the British and were forced to retreat. As they reboarded their transport ships waiting in the river under the protection of American warships, six British men-of-war came around a bend in the river, and the sea battle began. The American frigate Defiance was hiding in a small inlet in the bay, but her crew, spying a British warship waiting outside the inlet, put a torch to their own ship. The flagship Warren, with Com- modore Dudley Saltonstall aboard, sailed to Oak Point Cove near Frankfort. There Saltonstall ordered the Warren and the brig Active burned to the waterline. The Spring Bird, with Paul Revere's trunk aboard, was also put to the torch and abandoned. The British captured her, but she sank moments later. Two American sloops and a brig were captured intact by the British, but the Hector, Charming Sally, Black Prince, Hazard, Dilligence, Monmouth, Providence, and Tyran- nicide sank in the Kenduskeag River, which flows through Bangor. The General Putnam and Vengeance were grounded opposite Hanipden, where their crews blasted them apart with explosives. The victorious British came out of the battle with- out a scratch, while Paul Revere and his men walked home to Boston. In 1960, the Warren, General Putnam and Vengeance were found by scuba divers. Among the valuable artifacts recovered was a Paul Revere brass cannon, one of only four known to exist today. ne ship that treasure hunters are Oitching to get their hands on is the Spanish frigate Conception, also known as the Sagunto. She wrecked at Cedar Island Ledge southeast of Smuttynose Island, ten miles off Portsmouth, New Hamp- shire, in a blizzard in 1813. Al- though the disaster occurred only a stone's throw from the Isles of Shoals, not one Spaniard survived. A few years after the disaster, silver pieces-of-eight and Spanish cob coins began drifting ashore at 22 AUTHENTIC NEW ENGLAND - NEW YORK TREASURE MAP (100 buried and sunken treasures - lost and found) LEGEND 1. Pirate treasure buried at Swans Isle, Kennebec River. 2. Gold and silver buried at Sassona River some found in 1800. Islands 3. Pirato Low buried gold from Spanish ship MONTCLOVA at Pond Isle, Casco Bay, valued at $2,000,000-kottle of [AD] $700,000 in Spanish coins found on Ram Isle in 1840. 4. Castine Hoard, 2000 coins found in 1849 at Bagaduco River - worth. [AD] $700,000. 5. $20,000 in gold and diamonds buried by pirate, Roberts in Kennebec River, found by G. Benner in 1890's. 6. Circus ship ROYAL TAR, burned and sank in 1836 $20,000 in silver-off Penobscot Bay. 7. Scuba divers found silver bars and coins off Bar Harbor, 1965. 8. Capt. Kidd and Capt. Bellamy buried loot on island here. 9. Pirato Black Walt buried treasure' Richmond Isle some found in 1855 by D. Hanscom, $200,000 remains. 10. Antique airplane lost in bay, 1927 also many shipwrecks. 11. Fisherman found $4,000 in silver at Haskell Isle, 1870. 12. Supply ship EMPIRE KNIGHT sank 1944 and 1710 galley wrecked at Boone Ldg. 13. Many shipwrecks, some of value, off Mount Desert Islo. 14. Schooner BIRKMYRE, sank 1875 at Duck Isle, $20,000 in strong box. 15. Cobb coins found from Spanish wreck, Appledore Isle, 1865. 16. Spanish frigate CONCEPTION, sank Codar Isle Ledge, 1813, silver aboard. 17. Sam Haley found 3 silver bars, Smutty- nose Islo, 1820. 18. Old coins found by divers and residents at Gosport Harbor in 1870, 1901 and 1962. 19. Pirate Quelch buried 190 silver bars at Smuttynose Isle in 1700's. 20. British payroll ship, sank at Crane's Beach, coins still wash ashore. 21. Cutter GALLATIN, sank Boo Hoo Ldg., 1892, some articles found in 1962, valu- able guns remain. 22. Bark JOHN, sank in 1645, found by J. Cahill off Misery Isle. 23. USS NEW HAMPSHIRE, Civil War frigato, off Graves Isle Paul Revere spikes and one 1803 gold coin recovered. 24. Schooner UNION, sank 1810, off Bakers Isle valuable block tin cargo. 25. Whaling ship BRITANNIA, on maiden voyage. sank off Manchester, 1800's. 26. Bark TEDESCO, sank off Swampscott, 1857, artifacts aboard. 27. Diver A. Channell found ancient Spanish medallion off Nahant, 1964. 28. Gold coins found at Short Beach, 1880, silver coins found Deer Isle, 1906. 29. Schooner MINNIE, sank 1874, rare Spanish guns aboard. 30. D. Conrad found ancient cannons in shallows at Hampton Beach, 1963. 31. Capt. Kidd buried treasure at Great Head Pirate Veal at Dungeon Rock Lynn. 32. ELIZABETH-ANN, sank in 1829, silver coins found off Winthrop. 33. Pirates from the brig CHARLES buried treasure in Marblehead, 1703. 34. Pirates buried $70,000 on banks of Parker River, Byfield. 35. Schooner JULIET, sank 1886, off Fawn Bar, silver aboard. 36. $1,800 in old coins dug up by Ed Snow at Calf Isle, 1958. 37. Gold coins found on Lovell's Isle by lighthouse keeper, 1920. 38. French Man-O-War, MAGNIFIQUE, wrecked at Lovell's Isle, 1782, $1,000,000. 39. Russian ship sank in harbor, 1700's, 400 lb. bell salvaged in 1959. 40. CORDELIA, off Cliff Beach, sank 1807, precious china aboard, some recovered. 41. Danish transport GERTRUDE-MARIA, 1783, rare artifacts, toys, etc. 42. Brig KADOSH, sank 1860, guns and good whiskey aboard. 43. Bronze shield and claw found in nets off Brant Rock, from sunken ship. 44. Schooner WHITE SQUALL, 1866, valu- able block tin cargo. 45. British frigate SOMERSET, of Bunker Hill fame, 1778, buried under sand. 46. British Man O War, off Monomoy Beach, with $1,000,000 payroll. 47. Pirate ship WHIDDAH, wrecked 1717, treasure, ivory worth $3,000,000. 48. Sidewheeler PORTLAND, sank 1898, [AD] $150,000 aboard. 49. Italian Liner ANDREA DORIA sank 1956, $3,000,000 in valuables - bronze statue recovered. 50. British liner REPUBLIC, sank 1909, $2,- 000,000 in gold. 51. Freighter OREGON, sank 1941, $3,000,- 000 cargo of Merino wool. 52. Coins and pirate sword found by E Rick, 1934, on Martha's Vineyard. 53. $30,000 in silver buried, 1846, East Chop Light. 54. VINEYARD SOUND LIGHTSHIP, sank 1944, artifacts recovered by B. Luther, 1965. 55. 600 valuable wrecks off Point Judith, including steamer ATLANTIC, 1846. 56. Pirate Brodish sank ship ADVENTURE, 1699, estimated $2,000,000 aboard. 57. Blackboard landed, said to have buried treasure at Providence, 1716. 58. Pirate sword, coins and artifacts found off Cranston by divers, 1963. 59. Treasure buried by Capt. Kidd's first mate at Jamestown, some recovered. 60. Treasure chest washed ashore at New- port, 1850, but lost again. 61. Steamer FAIRFAX, 1898 and SS SILVIA, 1908, off Sow & Pigs Reef, of some value. 62. German U-boat 853, sank 1945, $1,000,- 000 in jewels hidden in ammo shell cases. Lost Treasure CO 63. Stea article [AD] $150,000 64. Supply ship LA and other ite for $4,000, by divars 66. Privateer Di loot, sank 6. "Us ner and off Old 67. Steamship sank in 10 68. Privatear H silver aboa 6. "Unidentif cam digge 70. French fri 1875, $20 71. Spanish London wi here. 72. Miniature walk 73. Capt. Kidd Isles, some 1949. 74. Blackboardi said to hav 75. Gold coin on Tuxis 76. In 1880, C old coins pirates in 77. HMS HU Gate, with coins. So 78. Steamer away Be 79. Sidewhe under san cross Ale 80. Sidewhe brec shi 81. Liner Of Pirate sank one c the r treas [PAGE BREAK] hink trunkful of Paul Revere's personal belongings might bring? nd) Great Rock silver buried als of lf Fawn Snow le by NIFIQUE ,000,000. 00's, 400 nk 1807, overed. MARIA and nets off valu Bunker sand, homoy recked 000,000. Ja 1898, 63. Steamer LARCHMONT, 1907, some articles recovered by divers, 1963, [AD] $150,000 remains. 64. Supply ship ONONDEGA, 1918, dishes and other items of value. Propeller sold for $6,000, many other items recovered by divers. 65. Privateer DEFENCE, 1779, loaded with loot, sank off Bartlett's Reef. 66. "Unknown" wreck found by divers Wag- ner and Brose, 3 silver bars recovered, off Old Saybrook. 67. Steamship LEXINGTON, caught fire, sank in 1840, $60,000 in coin aboard. 68. Privateer HERMIONE sank here in 1782, silver aboard. 69. "Unidentified" frigate off Savin Rock, clam diggers found brass cannons, 1940. 70. French frigate sank off Thimbles Isles, 1875, $20,000 in gold and brandy. 71. Spanish frigate SAN JOSE, loft Now London with $500,000, swamped appx. here. 72. Miniature submarine swamped off Nor- walk "Fenian Ram Jr.," historic relic. 73. Capt. Kidd buried $90,000 on Thimbles Isles, some coins and gold ring found in 1949. 74. Blackbeard landed at New Haven, 1716, said to have buried treasure hero. 75. Gold coins and bracelet found by boys on Tuxis Island, 1903. 76. In 1888, G. Hawley found $21,500 in old coins at Penfield Reef, buried by pirates in 1795. 77. HMS HUSSAR, sank 1780 at Hell's Gate, with $4,000,000 in gold and silver coins. Some recovered by divers in 1965. 78. Steamer BLACK WARRIOR, off Rock- away Beach, 1858, artifacts aboard. 79. Sidewheeler SAVANNAH, 1819, buried under sand off Bellport, first steamer to cross Atlantic. 80. Sidewheeler FRANKLIN, 1854, bric-a- brac still aboard, but much recovered. 81. Liner OREGON, sank 1886, materials worth $1,000,000 aboard, some recov ered. 82. 17th century "Money Ship," buried in sand, may be PRINS-MAURIS, coins found. 83. "Unknown" schooner, wrecked at Shin- necock, 1816, Spanish gold found in sand. 84. PACIFIC, wrecked 1871, cargo of clay pipes, many found on beach. 85. VINEYARD, sank 1836 off Southampton, [AD] $54,000 in gold and silver. 86. HMS LEXINGTON, 1781, East River, [AD] $1,800,000 in gold. 87. ELIZABETH, sank 1850, with rare Italian stones and $16,000 in coin. 88. Steamer ACARIA, wrecked 1902, Jones Inlet, some artifacts recovered by divers. 89. ANN HOPE, sank 1781, with $500,000 in valuables. 90. PRINCESS AUGUSTA, wrecked 1738, immigrants from Holland and valuables. 91. USS SAN DIEGO, cruiser, 1902, found by divers, 1960, copper valued at [AD] $17,000. 92. CITY OF NORWICH, sank 1866 off Huntington, with $50,000 in valuables. 93. Chest containing $200,000 fell into har- bor at dockside from ship ROMAH in 1928. 94. Steamer GREAT WESTERN, wrecked 1876, artifacts and cash aboard. 95. Steamer RODA, wrecked 1908, copper cargo valued at $100,000. 96. PORT HUNTER, wrecked 1918, $500,- 000 in merchandise, most recovered. 97. British privateer QUEEN, 1812, some cargo and treasure salvaged, much ro- mains. 98. Gold coins buried near Chatham Light by pirates in 1800's, worth $50,000. 99. 18th century cannons found in shallows in 1879. 100. Schooner CLARA BELLE, 1872, and bark MONTE TABOR, 1896, at Peaked Hill Bars. Valuables aboard both ships. MAINE Bath Portland NEW HAMPSHIRE Portsmouth The Isles of Shoals RIA sank bron 999, $2, [AD] $3,000,- by E. 4 East HIP, sank Luther, Judith, 1846. VENTURE board. rebaried cts found dd's first wered. at New- S SILVIA of some [AD] $1,000,- cases, Pirate ship sank with one of the richest treasures reasure March, 1979 MASSACHUSETTS Boston CAPE COD RHODE Providence ISLAND Newport Nantucket New London Martha's Vineyard CONNECTICUT New Haven LONG ISLAND Fire Island Bar Harbor 23 23 [PAGE BREAK] 24 A Revolutionary War cannon, made by Paul Revere and found by divers off the coast of Maine. New England continued Smuttynose and Appledore islands. In 1820, an islander named Sam Haley found three silver bars in the shallows at Smuttynose. Recently, scuba divers found old Spanish coins at Gosport Harbor, linking Smutty- nose and Star Island. Mrs. James Allen found a gold coin, minted in Spain and dated 1600, on a ledge at the southwest side of Star Island. This coin is thought to be from another Spanish ship that sank in 1685. Paul Revere is limelighted again as we enter Massachusetts waters, for his foundry made the copper ..spikes that hold together the U.S.S. Constitution (Old Ironsides) and the U.S.S. New Hampshire. The keel of the latter battleship was laid in 1818, the year Revere died. Because of lack of funds, it took 44 years to finish the New Hamp- shire longer than was ever taken to build any other ship. At the age of 107, she was decommissioned in 1925. While being towed to Maine, she caught fire and wrecked off Graves Island near Gloucester, Massachusetts. Scuba divers found the wreck in 20 feet of water in 1955, and started picking through her bones to recover Revere's spikes. The more enterprising divers used the spikes to make candle holders and lamp bases. These now sell at selected antique and furniture stores for [AD] $150 or more per set. A few years ago, diver Dick Pevedra found an 1803 British shill- ing, worth $100, in the wreckage. Since then divers have flocked to Graves Island, hoping to find more coins. Diver Art Channell found an ancient Spanish medallion in shal- low water at Bass Point near Nahant, just north of Boston, in 1963. It is thought to have come from the schooner Minnie, which sank in 1874 with a cargo of 17 rare Spanish guns. Coins from the wreck have washed ashore at nearby Winthrop. In 1880, more gold coins were found scattered in the sand between Short Beach and Grover's Cliff, near Winthrop. In 1906, workmen building a seawall at Deer Island found over 1,300 silver coins under a few inches of water. Interesting, valuable items have also been fished from the ocean off Massachusetts' South Shore. A Marshfield lobsterman brought up a large metal claw attached to one of Lost Treasure am dive ren tuck 000 Cod ship "T drun by gro Her folk Bost splin bar two and Man [PAGE BREAK] ds. the ently, COLDS Stry gold dated west in is panish again aters, Copper U.S.S. nd the keel aid in took Hamp taken he age ned in Maine ed off cester, wreck and bones he more spikes lamp selected res for er Dick sh shill reckage. cked to nd more und an in shal- int near ston, in ve come which 20 of 17 From the at nearby old coins the sand Grover's 1906, at Deer ver coins ter. ems have ocean off Shore. A ht up a to one of reasure his traps while fishing off Rock Point a few years ago. In 1952, less than two miles from where the claw was recovered, an- other fisherman recovered a bronze war shield, deeply encrusted with marine life. Some historians believe the claw and shield are from a sunken Viking ship. If so, it could be the find of the century for some lucky scuba diver. The conservative opinion is that a 17th century British warship is nestled in the sand off Brant Rock. O ne of the more recent additions to the sunken treasure fleet is the 690-foot Italian liner Andrea Doria, sunk after a collision in 1956. With her at the bottom is Chrysler Corporation's $100,000 idea car, valuable paintings, $100,000 or more in jewels, and an unknown amount of cash. Relatively few divers have visited the wreck, 40 miles south of Nantucket Island. Deep, murky water, rough cur- rents and aggressive sharks have caused the British liner Republic to lie idle, untouched by human hands, since she sank on January 22, 1909. She went down while under tow about 26 miles southeast of Nan- tucket Shoals. She carried $2,000,- 000 in golden eagle coins, worth many times their face value today. One of New England's richest wrecks is a pirate ship yet to be found in the shallows off Wellfleet, Massachusetts. Known as the Whi- daw, or Whidah, she was command- ed by infamous Sam Bellamy. After Bellamy and his crew spent a suc- cessful winter in 1717 plundering Spanish ships in the Caribbean, they headed north with approximately [AD] $4,000,000 worth of gold, silver, jewels and ivory tusks-worth many times that amount today. Off Cape Cod they captured the Scottish wine ship Mary Ann. While sailing both ships off the "Tableland" at Wellfleet, the drunken crew was further blinded by a thick fog. The Mary Ann grounded off Stage Harbor, near Orleans, then called Packet Sound. Her crew was captured by towns- folk. They were later hanged in Boston. The treasure-laden Whidah splintered in the breakers on a sand- bar some 300 yards offshore. Only two of her crew survived, an Indian and a "young Welsh lad." In the early 1900's, a few items from the wreck washed ashore. Two Chatham residents found 16 large silver coins, a pair of flintlock pistols, and two dagger handles. The , bulk of the treasure remains un- March, 1979 recovered. Off Montauk Point on Long Island, New York, is another pirate ship, the Adventurer. Owned by pirate Bull Bradish, she was follow- ed by a British man-of-war and cornered off Montauk in 1699. Bradish scuttled the ship and down with her went an estimated $1,500,- 000 in gold and silver. Bradish and his crew swam ashore, but were soon captured. Bradish was returned to England where he was later hanged. In addition to these treasures, there are hundreds of other old ships sitting on the bottom off the New England coast. All you've got to do is find them Cahill Robert E. Above, Dick Pavarada of Beverly, Massachusetts, displays a British gold piece found on the wreck of the battleship U.S.S. New Hampshire off Manchester, Maine. Below, an $8 gold piece, worth many times its face value, found on the U.S.S. New Hampshire, sister ship of Old Ironsides.




