Box 5
Folder 61. Treasure – Delaware
Item 1. Newspaper Clippings

Transcribed Text (OCR)
GARY MANGIACOPA ARCHIVE ============================================================ Title: B5F61I1 Slug: b5f61i1 Categories: Lost Treasure Source: https://garymangiacopraarchive.com/b5f61i1 Pages: 16 scanned, 16 extracted OCR: Google Vision API (document_text_detection) Processed: 2026-06-06 ============================================================ The Washington WASHINGTON, FRIDAY, JULY 20, 1888. COMMITTEE HEADQUARTERS. TO HUNT FOR BURIED TREASURE. A CONFESSION BY CHLEB BRICE EXPLAINS HIS CONNECTION WITH THE EXPEDITION TO START FROM CAMDEN, THE AQUEDUCT CONTRACTORS. EW YORK, July 10.-At the temporary quarters of the National Republican mittee in the Fifth Avenue Hotel this rnoon, clerks were busy under the direc- of Assistant Secretary Leach in attend- to correspondence and other routine , but beyond this there was little doing. real work of the campaign not be begun by the Repub- s before Monday next. Col. Swords his assistants are busy getting the per- ent headquarters of the committee, at ifth avenue, into readiness for occu- Linoleum is being laid on the floors, furniture men are moving tables, desks, rs and other necessary furnishings into cy. 1. J., TO-DAY. PHILADELPHIA, July 19.-The final prepa- rations for the cearch for the treasure on board the British sloop-of-war DeBraak, sunk near the Delaware Breakwater in 1708, are complete and the expedition will start on its mission to-morrow from Camden on a large vessel loaded with ocean charts, maps and nautical instruments. Capt. Charlen Adams.and Lieut. George P. Blow, of the United States Navy, will have charge of the expedition. Two other at- tempts have been mado to locate the sunken vesel, but they were not made on scientific principles, and were failures. A syndicate composed principally of Philadelphians was formed recently, and one hundred shares of atack at £800 a share were issued in order to HE TELLS THE STORY OF THE NAMITE PLOT. BRONEE WAS THE ORIGINATOR OF COHEM AND SHOWED HIM THE EXPLOSIV HU DEMIES THAT THE JUDGES THE INSPECTOR WERE TO BE MURDE CHICAGO, July 10.-Frank Chlobun, brown-haired, blue-eyed, sweet-voiced f who, with John Hronek and Frank Che schomed to murder Judge Gary, Judge G nell and Inspector Bonfield, has made.a and complete confession. Chlebun w locked up at the armory yesterday as the other two, and when Chepak was to to the. Central Station and Hronek to [PAGE BREAK] MOYO o Saturday so as to be ready to begin the defray the expenses of the expedition. Ing week there. t the Democratic headquarters in Twen- inth street this morning the first visitor Edwin L. Abbett, brother of ex Gov. ett, of New Jersey. Soon after his ar- he was followed by Calvin S. Brice. rman of the National Campaign Com ee, and Arthur Sewall, of Maine, of the onal Executive Committee. Among the r visitors were United States Treasurer les J. Canda, Congressman Benjamin evre, John S. Moore. of Maine and J. P. Walker; U. S. A. Brice emphatically denies ever having any connection with the aqueduct con- s of Brown, Howard & Co., beyond be- ng security for them on some of their racts. In the contracts themselves, he he had no interest. It is customary, he ins, for bankers like Drexel, Morgan & Seligman Bros's and others of like stand- o become security on large contracts, his connection with the aqueduct con- was only such as these bankers assume on contracts. rman Oelrichs, of the National Demo- c Executive Committtee, is expected to n to the city Monday next. A DEMOCRATIC EXODUS. GS HAVE A FUNNY LOOK IN THE EM- PIRE STATE. W YORK, July 19.-A prominent Dem- who has been visiting the interior of tate returned to the city yesterday, and no secret among his intimate friends of The vessel used by the expedition is the steamer City of Long Branch, and has been fitted up expressly for the work at a cost of about $7,000. She is 183 feet in length, thirty-five feet breadth of beam and has received new boil- ers and engines. Capt. Adams has obtained leave of absence from Secretary Whitney, and after a thorough survey has been made to locate the sunken sloop, divers will be put to work to search for the treasure. The De Braak was a Dutch vessel captured by the French. Her maiden name was Braak, the French adding the prefix "De." When the war broke out between England and France she was lying in Falmouth harbor, and was detained by the English Government. She was subsequently condemned, and on June 8, 1797, commissioned and ordered to the West- ern Islands. When commissioned the "De" was dropped and her maiden name retained. She was commanded by Capt. James Drew; with a complement of eighty-six men, and carried sixteen guns. On May 25, 1798. while in the vicinity of the Delaware Break- water, a sudden squall of wind laid her on her beam ends, when she immediately filled with water and went down. It is claimed that in her hold at the time were between [AD] $10,000,000 and $20,000,000 in gold, which had been captured from a Spanish ship bound from La Plata for Spain. THE RIFLES AT NANTUCKET. THEY ARE HANDSOMELY ENTERTAINED BY MR. HENRY A. WILLARD. 10 Special to the Washington Post. Chleban was sent to an outlying ponce tion. He was not subjected, as were others, to the ordeal of having his pic taken for the rogues' gallery. The preced Last night Inspector Bonfield, accompa by two of his Bohemian secret service of atives, elad in workingmen's suits, with black hats and blue flannel shirts, visited innocent-looking prisoner. day he had intimated that he was ready tell all he knew, and last evening the Ins tor went to hear his story. Through the terpreters Chlebun went into the whole s from his first meeting with Hronek Chepak. His confession was that Hro had unfolded his plans for revenge and told of a bomb, which he, Hronek, had vented. It was small, no larger than & b ball, and was to be loaded with dyna and bits of broken glass. It was denied Chlebun that the plot W&S murder the judges and Inspector. T is, he heard of no such definite sche They were talked of, as was Capt. Scha and he understood that he was to pay n attention to the captain than to any one There was no concerted plan of action, it was agreed that when all preparat were, made he and two others were t informed by Hronek just what they wer do in the way of avenging the death of martyrs. After July 1 he was visited by Hro who brought him two bombs of the bro glass variety and two sticks of dynam from which he was to make bombs of OAK BLUFFS, MARTHA'S VINEYARD, July pipe after the usual pattern. The other The National RiAna ament en dan in [PAGE BREAK] pl-3 post The Washington Post, P.C. 5654 SE [PAGE BREAK] Section of British treasure ship pulled from deep 12 Au The Associated Press 86 Ge LEWES, Del. Salvagers hoping to find millions of dollars in treasure pulled the wreck of the HMS deBraak up from Delaware Bay last night, nearly two centuries after the 18th Scentury British brig sank. Asbury Pa After a full day of heavy seas, high winds, and mechanical problems with the crane used to lift the ship, a 70- foot section was raised and loaded onto a barge. Kevin McCormick, project man- ager for Sub-Sal Inc., which has a contract with the state to salvage the ship, said it will take from two to three weeks to scoop out the sediment on the bottom where the treasure may be. When part of the ship broke the surface at around 9m., Claudia Mel- son, a state curator, was full of excite- ment. Floodlights silhouetted billowing smoke from the crane's roar- billowing smoke from the crane's roar- ing motor as the starboard side of the deBraak hung suspended in the dark. "It was very dramatic to see it here at nighttime, with all the ghostly qualities the legend deserves," said Ms. Melson, who has been involved in the project for a year, cleaning, restoring and cataloging artifacts re- covered from the wreck since salvag- ing began in 1984. The 70-foot stern was raised up side down. "The keel is to the top. The plank- ing is the starboard side. It's what you see the most intact," Ms. Melson said. "The extreme bow and stern were not physically attached to this portion. The port portion is mostly gone." Plans to raise the ship Monday afternoon were abandoned because of high seas and heavy winds and also because one of the slings placed around the hull popped off the hook on a crane. "The weather isn't the best. There are heavy seas and high winds," said McCormick. McCormick wanted to complete the operation last night be- cause "if there's bad weather tomor- cause "if there's bad weather tomor- row (today), it tends to stay for three row (today), it tends to stay for three days." The part of the ship that was to be raised was brought up at 80 feet at a rate of 1% feet per minute to keep the hull and its contents intact, McCor- mick said. The ship was originally a Dutch cutter that was captured by the British in 1795, and was then used for ha- rassing Spanish and French shipping in the Caribbean. The deBraak, which sank more pe Henlopen in 1798, is believed to hold [AD] $5 million to $500 million in treasure. Sub-Sal has been salvaging the ship since 1984 and has recovered about 600 gold and silver coins and marine artifacts. The state, which is providing secu- rity for the venture, will receive 25 percent of the profits. [PAGE BREAK] NEW HAVEN REGISTER, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1986 Salvage team hopes to raise treasure ship United Press International LEWES, Del. Treasure hunters awaited slack tide today to Braak in a search for the $500 mil- raise the British frigate HMS De- lion in gold, silver and jewels ru- mored to be in the ship's hold when it sank in a squall in 1798. earlier salvage efforts. L. John Da- The DeBraak has defied eight vidson, who is directing this at- tempt, is not overly optimistic the 85-foot ship was, in fact, carrying a king's ransom in booty. "We don't know what was on the ship," Davidson said from the warehouse office of Sub-Sal Inc. "We do know the story is 200 years old and we're bringing it to its conclusion Monday. "It is a raw gamble as to whether or not it is a treasure ship," added Davidson, who sank [AD] $1.5 million of his money and $1 million from investors into the operation. "This is a high-risk investment that has no real justification from a business point of view," he said. "I'm one of those people that likes crazy things.' The DeBraak was captured from the Dutch and was en route from the Caribbean to Lewes to be refitted when it sank in a storm just a mile offshore. Half its crew survived, and the ship's legend was fueled by reports of sailors strug- gling ashore laden with gold coins and staying in Lewes to "live it up. Divers waited today for slack tide the period between tides when they hoped to ease the ship's partially intact wooden hull off the ocean floor and into a cradle. The cradle then will be carefully winched 80 feet to the surface. The treasure, if there is one, probably is buried in the sediment beneath the hull, said Davidson. Davidson, 55, a Harvard-edu- cated real estate developer from Laconia, N.H., took charge of the floundering salvage operation last year when Harvey Harrington the original salvor who found the DeBraak with sophisticated sonar gear in July 1984 ran short of cash. Other than thousands of arti- facts and 300 gold coins, the ship has not yielded anything near a fortune. Harrington also had to fight several lawsuits and opposition from sport divers who wanted the wreck left as an "underwater park." Harrington is still president and part owner of Sub-Sal, but is busy trying to salvage other wrecks in the area, Davidson said. After taking over the salvage at- tempt, Davidson hired expert divers from offshore oil rigs and "mechanized" the operation, which has recovered 6,000 arti- facts, but only the 300 gold coins. [PAGE BREAK] 18th-Century Wreck Yields Gold Ring and Trove of Coins By WILLIAM ROBBINS Special to The New York Times LEWES, Del., Sept. 17 The ocean floor has yielded a historic trove to treasure hunters: the gold ring of James Drew, captain of a British sloop of war that sank in 1798. The treasure hunters say the artifact is proof that their site, in 100 feet of water two miles off the Delaware INSIDE Pope Assails Inequalities Pope John Paul II, on his Canadian tour, condemned inequalities be- tween rich and poor nations and the "imperialistic monopoly." Page A9. New Head of Smithsonian Robert McC. Adams, former provost of the University of Chicago, was in- stalled as the head of the Smithsonian Institution. Page C19. A26 C19 B8 A27 Around Nation..... A18 | Letters Art Books C17,C19 Man in the News A16 C20 Movies C17,C20 Bridge. C19 Music Business Day D1-27 Obituaries Campaign Notes B7 Op-Ed Chess Crossword- Dance ..C19 Science Times C1-16 ...C20 Sports Pages ..B10-16 C20 Style B9 Day by Day Editorials Education B4 TV/Radio ... C21,C23 A26 U.N. Events C1,C6 Washington Talk A24 A7 Going Out Guide ...C21 | Weather. News Summary and Index, Page Bl Classified Ads B16-24 Auto Exchange B15 coast, is the ocean grave of the long- sought sloop of war De Braak, a lone- wolf hunter that preyed on ships of Na- poleon's allies. Their finds, the result of three years of research and several months of scientific exploration in Delaware's wreck-strewn waters, were displayed today at a heavily guarded news con- ference here. "This," said Robert Reedy Jr., a ma- rine historian who is monitoring the search for the state, "is the most signif- icant underwater archeological find in this part of the world." Odds 'One in 10 Million' Mr. Reedy said the odds against find- ing an item so small, lost in the ocean for 186 years, were "astronomical, like one in 10 million. . On display besides the captain's ring were 69 gold coins, spread on a back- cloth of blue velvet. Thirty-five of them were Spanish doubloons, or eight-es- cudo pieces, dated from 1792 to 1796 and bearing marks indicating that they had been minted in Mexico City and Lima, Peru. The other coins were British guineas of similar vintage. The display was "just a sampling" of a larger find, said Harvey Harrington, Continued on Page A18, Column 2 RENT-A-PC. Free immediate delivery and maint. [AD] 516-273-8888-ADVT FIND OUT ABOUT HOME OR OFFICE DELIVERY of The Times in New York, Boston, Philadelphia or [AD] B15 Washington. Call toll-free, 1-800-631-2500-ADVT. Tuesday Net-Troms 18 Sept 1984 page [PAGE BREAK] NEW HAVEN REGISTER, TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1984 NATION KE CLA R L Associated Press From left, Joe Wise; Harry Harrington, operations director; Joe Amara, underwater photographer; Alan Bieber of Klein Side Scan Operations; and John Fish view a cannon found where the ship is believed to have gone down. Riches of sunken ship lure investors Associated Press LEWES, Del. Treasure hunters expect to become "either rich or broke" trying to recover booty from a British privateer that sank in the Atlantic Ocean, reportedly carrying a fortune in gold bars, silver and jewels. The state would receive one-fourth of what- ever is found on HMS De Braak if Gov. Pierre S. du Pont IV signs a lease with Sub-Sal Inc. of Reno, Nev., which announced Monday that it had located the ship in waters two miles off Cape Henlopen. Sub-Sal's investors did three years of re- search in British, Dutch and U.S. records of the ship, which sank during a squall May 25, 1798. They also are financing a recovery team of divers who in April detected a sunken ship that meets many of the specifications of the De Braak. "It's a rich shipwreck," John Fish, diver, staff historian and consultant for Sub-Sal said at a news conference Monday. Asked if they expected to get rich from the find, Assistant Operations Director Joseph Wise said, "either rich or broke." The treasure hunters displayed objects al- ready recovered from the ship, including a short, stocky cannon, believed to be one of 16 24-pound carronades aboard the De Braak. The rusty cannon bears the "King's broad ar- row," a symbol used for centuries to denote property of the British crown. The divers said they had not found any treasure. - a Fish said the ship's plans match the size and location of items found at the wreckage deck 85 feet long and 27 feet wide, numerous 18th century British rum and wine bottles lo- cated in the area of the De Braak's "spirits room," a stove located in the correct spot and light arms in the magazine or munitions room. "To have all of these things fit to a T is very, unusual," Fish said. Divers have recovered a musket so encrust- ed it had to be X-rayed to determine what it was, with the flint in place and the firearm uncocked. Five search attempts, two by the British,, during the past 184 years have been unsuccess- ful, Fish said. The state gave Sub-Sal a research permit last October, three years after the company began researching records of the De Braak. Using a Klein side scan sonar, Sub Sal's search team located a sunken ship in April mired in sand nearly 120 feet beneath the ocean surface within two miles of shore. Com- pany officials would not say exactly where the ship is, but they have placed the sight under surveillance to prevent modern-day pirates from stealing their treasure. The De Braak was acquired by the Dutch in 1781 and seized by the British in 1795, Fish said. The British rerigged the sloop with two sails, leading to criticism that it was top-heavy. The De Braak was dispatched in a convoy to North America in January 1798, carrying a letter of marque authorizing the fleet to pursue foreign vessels, particularly those of Napoleon and his allies. James Drew, captain of the De Braak, left the convoy and was separated for 25 days be- fore sailing north to Lewes, towing the cap- tured Spanish vessel San Francisco Xavier, to get fresh water. [PAGE BREAK] A18 THE NEW YORK TIMES, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1984 18th-Century British Wreck Yields a Coin Trove Continued From Page 1 president of Sub-Sal Inc., of Reno, the salvage company that is conducting the search. For security reasons, he said that he would not say how much more treasure had been found, but added that the site was expected to yield "anywhere from $5 million to $500 mil- lion" in treasure. The doubloons, he said, are "in mint condition" and "not pocketworn." That and the number found indicate to him, he said, that vessels captured by the De Braak might have been transporting the coins from a Spanish mint. Joseph Wise, vice president of Sub- Sal, said privately that the number of additional coins already found has been "substantial." There is evidence, he said, that the site may also yield gold bullion. Spanish doubloons in good condition are normally worth from $800 to $1,200, Mr. Wise said, and the old guineas from $125 to $250. But for collectors, he said, the history of a coin, such as its recovery from a noted wreck, can add substantially to its value. The proof authenticating the find was an inscription on the heavy gold ring found, indicating its ownership by Capt. James Drew, who went down with the ship and about half of his 38- member crew. Inscription on Ring "In memory of my brother, Capt. John Drew, drowned 11 January 1798, aged 47," said the inscription. Capt. John Drew, skipper of the frig- ate Cerberus, drowned in Plymouth Sound, according to news accounts of the period. About five months later, on May 25, 1798, Capt. James Drew's sloop sank in a storm. Items bearing a ship's name are rarely found in an old wreck, said Ar- nold Carr, a marine historian who is a consultant to Sub-Sal. Usually struc- tural details provide proof of identity. Both the ring and the coins were found in sand, scattered but in a con- centrated area. They were near a part of the wreck believed to be the cap- tain's cabin, Mr. Wise said, although little of the ship's structure remains ex- cept the keel. The display included slide photo- graphs of eight-real silver coins, the "pieces of eight" of pirate lore, but those found were heavily oxidized, blackened and eaten away as if by cor- rosion, Mr. Wise said. Diver Sees Gleaming Gold Both the ring and the first of the gold were found by Joseph Amaral, a diver who was in the search team of more than a dozen members present at the news conference. The gold gleamed in the sand, "just as you see it here, just as they came from the mint," Mr. Amaral said. In an interview, he said he had found PENNSYLVANIA Philadelphia, NEW JERSEY Wilmington Atlantic City MARYLAND Baltimore Dover DELAWARE Bay Delaware) Cape Lo May Lewes Atlantic Ocean Miles 40 Captain Drew's ring gleaming in sand as he cleared away debris using an air- lifter, a device that operates much like a vacuum cleaner. "I just saw something shining," he said. When he saw that it was a ring, he placed it in his glove, not realizing its importance, and went on looking for coins. It was not till he entered a decompression chamber, preparing to surface, that someone read the inscrip- tion and told him of its significance, he said. In addition to the gold and the ring, the treasure hunters displayed two gold brooches. They also said they had Harvey Harrington, above left, and Joseph Wise of Sub-Sal Inc., displaying gold doubloons found in wreckage of the British sloop of war De Braak, left. Engraved ring of the ship's captain, James Drew, was salvaged from the 1798 shipwreck site off Delaware. found four carronades, or small can- non, and several muskets and pistols. The news conference was held at the De Braak Inn, a waterfront restaurant whose name is indicative of the lost ship's prominence in local lore. When the De Braak went down, ac- cording to some news reports of the period, she had captured as many as three Spanish vessels, was loaded with booty and was towing one of her prizes. Over the 186 years since the ship cap- sized, many attempts have been made to salvage her and her cargo. The first were two efforts by British ships in the year after her sinking. The New York Times/Dan Miller As one after another of the attempts failed, local legends grew. Some had it that the treasure was guarded by ghosts of the sailors who went down with the ship. But then came Sub-Sal, with highly sophisticated equipment including sonar devices, and a patient search of the ocean floor following a pattern of overlapping grids. "Now," said Capt. Robert McIlvai skipper of the 70-foot salvage vessel that is being used in the operation, "this is proving to be a premier wreck. It's yielding everything it was su posed to yield." [PAGE BREAK] The Philadelphia Inquirer Special to The Inquirer / DAN MILLER e hopes, holds pirate treasure general news Treasure chest By Jack Croft Special to The Inquirer section C Sunday, July 11, 1982 A man who's spent years pursuing Blackbeard ODESSA, Del. It was almost 50 years ago that John Muth Sr. first heard the tale. A stranger told him of a time, years earlier, when he and a friend had come across a cryptic paragraph that promised to lead to buried treasure. clanged a nged against a hard object. Excit jedly, they cleared away the dirt. It was a chest. They dug frantically around the edges, until they could get under it. But just as they were lifting the chest out of the ground, a storm, erupted. Thunder and lightning shook the sky and, before their eyes, the chest sank into the hole, out of sight. Frightened, the two men ran, off, never to return, for fear of Black- beard's ghost. Not just any buried treasure, mind you. This, belonged to Blackbeard, one of the most notorious and feared pirates of all time. The two men deci- phered the Old English clues, follow-Muth believed the story. And be- ing them down the Delaware River south of Odessa, into the narrow, twisting Blackbird Creek and, final ly, to a hummock in a swamp about 1½ miles inland. There was no "X" marking the spot, but they knew they had found, the place. They began digging, and about a foot down, their shovels fore he died in 1964, he passed it on to his eldest son, John Jr. "In the year before he died, he told me all he knew about this thing he thought was there, this, pirate trea-, sure," John Muth Jr., 32, recalled last sure. His archaeological expeditions were confined to his 160-acre farm in Clayton, Del., where he and John Jr. dug for Indian artifacts. Those explorations helped equip the younger Muth for the task he is undertaking. Along with his brother, Thomas, 22, and two professional salvage divers, Muth is trying to succeed where so many others have failed. He is trying to recover Black beard's treasure. Muth has been working on the project about seven years. "I'm still looking, "he said, "But I think I've narrowed it down pretty close." He has used sophisticated metal détec- tors on the site where he believes the treasure is buried, but the "iests proved inconclusivo, as did attempts week. "My father told me if 1 to find the chest with aerial, infrared can't get this, you've got to." His father never found the trea photographs. ¡Currently, his search is stalled. The hummock on which Muth be lieves the treasure is buried is owned by the estate of former state ben. James Harry David, who died in 1 18. His survivors have refused to allow Muth to dig on the site until he pro- duces some tangible evidence that the treasure is actually there. And William Moyer, director of the D-la- ware Wetlands Section, said the state could not grant Muth a permi to excavate the site without the owners' permission. Muth is attempting to locate an X- (See TREASURE on 2-C) Action Line now appear on the fifth page of the Family/Home/Fashion section on Sunday. Today it is on Page 5-H. 0% To 40% On Our Entire [PAGE BREAK] odel your home. r home, be sure to check with rt We'll do it quickly, efficiently one of the numbers listed below to your home with samples and s on the spot with no obligation. BATHROOMS rovements John ens bathrooms recreation iding aluminum casing conversions prime storm screen windows and stone fronts garages ☐ electrical wiring window Otiling painting d fiberglass patio and window t work blown-in cabinet doors. 648 Contractor's License 17076 John Wanamaker stown NJ and #35314, Deptford NJ) City of Wilmington 0005 ROOSEVELT MALL COTTMAN & BLVD. DE 2-5600 OPEN EVERY EVE OPEN SAT. LAWRENCE PARK CENTER LAWRENCE & SPROUL RD. BROOMALL OPEN SAT EL 3-7700 OPEN MON, WED, FRL EVES. CE EVER! SALE Computer ealer SAVE $550 TREASURE, from 1-C ray rischine capable of showing hummock. He remains undaunted by his sharks. "Since I ve started the project, Ive expected to have it out within two weeks." he said. "That's happened over a hundred times. We're on alter- nate plan number 227 now. This is a hobby that got out of control. I went out the first time with just a crowbar to open the chest." He should have known it would not be that casy to find Blackbeard's booty. Between 1716 and 1718, Black- beard, whose real name was Edward Teach, terrorized the East Coast. His bloody exploits ended only when he was decapitated in November 1718 during a fierce battle with British sailors off the Virginia coast. One of Teach's contemporaries, Capt. Charles Johnson, described hia in the following way in A Histo- ry of the Robberies and Murders of the Most Notorious Pirates: Plutarch and other grave histori- ans have taken notice that several great men amongst the Romans took their surnames from certain odd marks in their countenances, as Cice- ro from a mark or vetch on.his nose... So our hero, Captain Teach, assumed the cognomen of Blackbeard, from that large quantity of hair which, like a frightful meteor, covered his whole face and frightened America more than any comet that has ap- peared there a long time. "This beard was black, which he suffered to grow of an extravagant length; as to breadth, it came up to his eyes. He was accustomed to twist it with ribbons, in small tails, after the manner of our Ramillies wigs, and turn them about his ears. In time of action he wore a sling over his shoulders, with three brace of pis- tols, hanging in holsters, like bando- liers; and stuck lighted matches under his hat, which, appearing on each side of his face, his eyes natural- ly looking fierce and wild, made him altogether such a figure that imagi nation cannot form an idea of a Fury from Hell to look more frightful." Although most accounts of Black- beard's misdeeds dwell on his ravag- ing of the Carolinas, there is some historical evidence to support Muth's contention that he also hit the Dela-. ware coast. J. Thomas Scharf, in his History of. Delaware, published in 1888, wrote, "Teach, called Black- beard, was often about the Dela-a ware. According to Muth, Blackbeard, on one occasion, was being pursued down the Delaware River by a Brit- ish man-of-war, when he ducked into Blackbird Creek. About 1½ miles inland, he ran aground, and was stuck there lor a month. Enter Israel Hands. Hands was Blackbeard's navigator." Legend has it that, on the night be-. fore he was killed, Blackbeard was asked where his treasure was buried. "Only the Devil and I know where it is, and the longest liver will take all," he reportedly replied. Muth said that he wereves manus was "the Devil" Pardoned after Pas killed Hands went to New York where Math said, be sure the mysterious paragraph of clues to raise money for a trip to his native England. Muth said that Hands did not go after the treasure himself because he was afraid of Black- beard's ghost, About seven years ago, Muth said, he got a copy of Hands paragraph Jersey. It led directly to the bu mock in Blackbird Crock. He said Event said, he has no idea what is in it. he hoping for several million do worth of gold coins but Muth sad would be satisifed if he found an thing that proved that his father w right, that Black beard actually w in Blackbird Creek. "If he put his clothes in a box a put it there, I'd be happy." Mutha SAVIN You've discovered our semi-ant A TRULY S SHO sale filled with Spring & Sur and dress fashions. 30%-4 Further reductions - Furth Further reductions Furth NATURA Hurry in for the truly sens you deserve. THE GALLERY ROOSEVELT MALL PARK CITY CEN RESHAMINY MALL DEPTFORD MALL KING OF PRU PLYMOUTH MEETING MALL ECHELON MALL CHERR MALL GRANITE RUN MALL THE COURTI USA [PAGE BREAK] Penn sentin C-pl-zc The Philadelphia Inquirer 11 July 1982 Sun [PAGE BREAK] 24 WEST NEW HAVEN REGISTER, THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1984 Private investigator searches for clues on the ocean floor of Alan Bieber is a special type private investigator. He uses black boxes with electronic fingers to ex- plore ocean bottoms. The bearded, 58-year-old Lyme resident, recently returned from a treasure ship hunt in Delaware Bay, is, technically, an ocean surveyor. Most of the time he uses side- scan sonar or underwater televi- sion to chart rivers and harbor boundaries and identify the loca- tion of metals in the ocean depths. Occasionally during the past 17 years, he also has been called on to locate sunken fishing boats, mili- tary equipment and aircraft wreck- age. Most recently, he helped lo- cate the remains of a former British warship, reportedly loaded with booty from captured Spanish ships, that foundered 186 years ago off Lewes, Del. "It's the first treasure ship I've ever been involved in," said Bieber, who donned a scuba tank and goggles himself to inspect the 85-foot HMS De Braak, which had foundered in May 1798, during a squall, some two miles from shore. The former Dutch ship, cap- tured by the British three or four years earlier and converted to a two-masted square-rigged brig, was reportedly towing a captured Span- ish ship when it went down in 100 feet of water. Some believe the pri- vateer was top-heavy, because of the earlier conversion from a sin- gle-masted sloop to a two-masted brig and foundered when caught unexpectedly in the violent wind gusts. The British apparently made an attempt to raise the ship or get to its fortune of gold bars, silver and jewels the following year, but gave up the effort, Bieber said. Among the reasons they aban- doned the project, he indicated, was the "very black water" and the "quite strong" tidal currents at the scene. The conditions "make it very difficult for Sunday divers" interested in finding and inspect- ing the wreck," the Lyme resident noted. Several other individuals and firms searched unsuccessfully for the De Braak during this century. THE WATER LOG By Richard E. Bastian Bieber was contracted as part of a recovery team to participate in the salvage effort by Sub-Sal Inc. of Reno, Nev., for an unidentified group of investors. Side scan sonar was the princi- ple search tool on the water, Bieber said, augmented by a considerable research effort of old British, Dutch and U.S.records - on land. Patience and discipline were other factors that led to the actual discovery of the wreck in late April. Later in June and July, divers recovered vintage wine and rum bottles of the late 1700s, an encrusted musket and a cannon bearing the "king's broad arrow," a symbol used for centuries to clear- ly identify property of the British crown. British records indicate that "only one British ship was lost in Delaware Bay the HMS De Braak," Bieber said. Too many treasure hunters are unwilling to devote time to a painstaking search pattern and they are easily distracted, going off in different directions, he added. Also, few people are willing to spend the money needed for a legi- timate search effort, said Bieber, who has been asked "fairly often" to take part in treasure hunts. They always with the exception of the Reno salvage firm- back off when he describes the costs in- volved: $1,200 to $2,000 a day. "That's like buying a Lear jet be- fore learning to fly," he said. "Once in a while you get very lucky though," Bieber said, recall- ing his own search for a military plane that crashed off the Califor- nia coast in the early 1970s. The Navy, which had been unsuccess- ful in its search effort called in Bieber, who found the plane im- mediately after turning on the so- nar for a test. a Earlier this year he found sunken fishing vessel off Block Is- land in a relatively short time, but he acknowledges that "this doesn't happen very often.' Bieber, who has searched for gravel deposits in the Arctic Circle and Russian mines off the Egyp- ment for an American firm inter- tian coastline, the latter assign- ested in exploring for oil, considers underwater archeology a fascinat- ing profession. "Its unmapped ter- ritory and you see all different things out there, he said." The first warning gun went off at 11 a.m. Saturday and the last boat in Milford Yacht Club's 16th annual invitational race finally crossed the finish line more than nine hours later. That pretty much explains wind conditions on the course. "We were out there, it seemed forever, and thought it would nev- er end," observed Bev Clarke, head of the race committee waiting on the finish line. And waiting. "It was the first time we came in with the running lights on," she added. A former electronics technician Only 11 of the 61 boats entered in the Navy, Bieber has worked for in the race managed to cross the oil drilling firms, Ocean Systems line before the race officially end- in Washington and was a partner ed, shortly after 8 p.m. in Ocean Ocean Surveys, based in Old Saybrook, before deciding four years ago that he wanted more in- dependence and created his own business, Alan Bieber Associates, operating out of an attic office in his Lyme residence. □ □ □ The gentle 5-knot breeze at the start of the race some experi- enced 12 knots on the first leg to Middle Ground, Stratford Shoal faded to 1 knot and then zero wind in the final hours, with cur- rents alone propelling boats and crews toward the committee boat anchored off Charles Island. Nancy Young won the Madison Beach Club's annual Roger W. Pape Memorial Race last Sunday in very light airs. The rescheduled Included in the 50 that did not race, which requires skippers to ex- complete the 19-mile race were all change boats before the start, is of the spinnaker boats in classes B, named after a young Madison sail- C, D and E. Those that finished or who perished in 1960. Young included four cruising class boats was sailing a Lightning owned by (class F) in a shorter 12-mile Jim Deephouse, who took second course and seven of the large spin- place in the event. naker boats in class A. Taking first place in the Blue Jay race series was Chip Walz, Winning first place in the cruis- with Liz MacGonagle as crew, sailing class was Vic Zigmont of ing Max Grant's 14-footer. Rob Trumbull in Moonshadow, a Cal Erda and Jim James, his crew 25. Second was Glenn Elia in Is- member, were second in Walz' land Song, a Cal 25. Third was Gordon Donley of Trumbull in Sa- bre Dance, a Sabre 28. Blue J. The J-22 race was won by Dr. Bill McCullough, with Jack Nelson second. John Johnstone leads the series at midyear. Tying for second place in the series, within one point Johnstone, were: Bill McCullugh, Jack Nelson, Dick Gifford and Dr. Charles Scholhammer. The next event at Madison is a moonlight race Friday with an 8 o'clock start. Kevin Dailey of Setauket, N.Y. was first in Class A, for large spin- naker boats, in R-Wave, a Morgan 45. Ben Hall and Roger Lowlicht of Guilford were second in Dark Star, an Evelyn 32. Third was Dick Rohnan, also of Setauket, in JARD Loose, a C&C 41. Butch Clark of Milford won the weekly Star Class races Sunday. Photo by Richard E. Bastian Alan Bieber, oceanographer, examines a chart in his office. E [PAGE BREAK] Plot, 22 NOV 1984 Jounal & Courier, Haven, Con Thursday Shipwreck yields gold By CHARLES HILLINGER Los Angeles Times Service LEWES, Del. - Veteran deep- sea diver Harvey Harrington slipped the heavy gold band off his finger to show its inscription. "I get very emo- tional about this ring,' "he said, his voice breaking. Harrington is the first person to wear the ring since it went to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean with its owner 186 years ago. Then it was worn by Capt. James Drew, the 47- year-old skipper of the British man- of-war De Braak, which sank in a storm on June 10, 1798. Today it is a symbol of Harring- ton's success in locating the ill-fat- ted sloop, which for almost two cen- turies had eluded treasure hunters seeking its rumored horde of gold pillaged from Spanish ships. Divers from Harrington's com- pany, Sub Sal Inc., discovered the wreck last April about 1½ miles off Cape Henlopen. But until they read the inscription on James Drew's ring, they could not be sure they had found the De Braak. "In memory of my brother, Capt. John Drew, drowned 11 January 1798, aged 47," it reads, recounting the death of the skipper's twin four months before his own. "I have dived on at least 100 shipwrecks and have never found gold coins," said diver Joseph Amaral, who scooped up the ring in late August with a handful of doblas. "I didn't really think all that much of the ring when I sent it up in the goodie bag with the coins. "It wasn't until I was in the de- compression chamber later and heard the crew screaming and yell- ing that I found out the ring was an even greater discovery than the coins. The crew on the ship had gone completely crazy." 11 Since July, seven divers working around the clock in 80 feet of water have brought up tons of artifacts, in- cluding more than 100 18th- century escudo pieces, doblas and pieces of eight. Each coin is worth [AD] $1,000 to $5,000, and Harrington hopes to find enough to make a profit on the $500,000 that the Neva- da company has already poured into the search. Under Sub Sal's contract with the state, Delaware will get 25 percent of the wreck's salvage value, after expenses. With 27 persons including seven divers and a securi- ty force working on land and aboard the salvage vessel Mariner, those costs have been enormous. But the lure of untold riches has made the project seem worth while. "It was the British government's initial reaction to the sinking of the De Braak that has triggered contin- uous and intensive interest in this particular wreck for nearly 200 years and why I came here," Har- rington, 51, said. Britain sent an expedition to Lew- es within days after word was re- ceived in London that the De Braak had sunk. When that expedition failed to salvage the contents of the ship, whose 95-foot main mast stuck out of the water for several years, another expedition was mounted results. with the same negative The De Braak was towing a Spanish ship it had captured. Surviv- ing crew (18 perished in the wreck) and Spanish prisoners told residents of Lewes that the De Braak had been loaded with chests of gold and silver taken from a number of Spanish vessels that it had inter- cepted in the Caribbean. Harrington said his records show that the De Braak raided 16 ships. Harrington believes that the near- perfect condition of the gold coins found so far indicates that they were being transported from mints in Mexico City and Lima, Peru, to Spain. [PAGE BREAK] NEW HAVEN REGISTER, TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1986 Ship's raising signals start of treasure hunt Associated Press LEWES, Del. A British ship targeted nine times by treasure hunters finally has been raised from Delaware Bay nearly 200 years after it sank, but it could be weeks before the HMS deBraak's wealth can be captured. While archaeologists clean the remains, the salvors who raised the deBraak Monday night plan to spend the next two to three weeks scooping up the sediment beneath the wreck in hopes of finding what they think could be up to $500 million worth of booty. "The deBraak has come home!" said Kevin McCormick, project manager for the salvage firm, Sub- Sal Inc. of Reno, Nev. "This is the first step in a long process. About 40 small boats bobbed nearby, ringing their bells while passengers cheered. According to lore, the deBraak was laden with treasure plundered from Spanish and French vessels in the Caribbean when it sank in a squall in May 1798 as it headed for the Delaware coast. The de Braak, under the com- mand of Capt. James Drew of the Royal Navy, was a Dutch cutter before it was captured by the Brit- ish in 1795. Estimates of the treasure the ship carried range from $5 million to $500 million. Since the latest salvaging effort began two years ago, about 600 gold and silver coins have been re- covered, as well as historical artifacts. The state of Delaware, which has provided security for the sal- vage operation, will receive 25 per- cent of the profits. McCormick and his crew lowered a 15-ton cradle to the ship on Sunday. Monday night, they lifted what was left of the hull, a 70-foot section of the starboard side and its keel and stern, to the surface by hauling the cradle up with a steel cable attached to a crane. The deBraak hung suspended from the cable, sihouetted by floodlights, before the salvage crew hoisted it onto a barge to be taken to a warehouse where archaeolo- gists will inspect it. "Everybody's going to get a good look at it," McCormick said. Claudia Melson, a state curator, has spent the past year cleaning, restoring and cataloging items al- ready taken from the wreckage. "I've been keeping inventory and doing basic conservation, which means getting the artifacts into fresh water to get the salt out," said Melson, who watched as the wreck was lifted above the surface. "It was very dramatic to see it here at nighttime with all the ghostly qualities the legend de- serves," she said. McCormick and his crew, who located the wreck by sonar, made the ninth salvage attempt on the vessel. The first was made by the Brit- ish Navy shortly after it sank. Although the salvaging will con- tinue, no treasure can be claimed until a federal lawsuit against Sub- Sal is settled. [PAGE BREAK] Divers Ready to Raise Ship Said to Hold Treasure By WILLIAM K. STEVENS Special to The New York Times LEWES, Del., Aug. 11- As expecta- tions built up, divers today completed preparations for raising the wreck of the 18th-century British warship H.M.S. deBraak from the bottom of Delaware Bay, where she has lain since sinking in a squall in 1798. The raising was delayed by winds and waves but salvagers were optimis- tic. In her time, the deBraak preyed on Spanish ships in the New World. When she sank here off Cape Henlopen, it is said, sailors who survived paid for their rooms ashore with gold doubloons. Ever since, the sunken two- masted brig has been the object of treasure speculation. The salvagers hope to find gold, sil- ver and jewels once the remains of the 85-foot hull of the deBraak come to the surface. But if they do not, they say, their $2 million operation will still have been worth it. Philadelphia PA. Wilmington NEW JERSEY Delaware Bay Dover DELAWARE Lewes MARYLAND Atlantic City Site of Sunken Ship CAPE HENLOPEN Atlantic Ocean 0 Miles 30 The New York Times/Aug. 12, 1986 British ship has lain on bottom since going down in squall in 1798. Among the most intriguing are a gold A Historical Treasure ring belonging to James Drew, the The find is already considered a ship's captain; a man's wig made of major historical and archeological human hair, complete with 18th-cen- treasure by maritime historians. And tury queue; all the ship's 18 cannon; china from the officers' table; two shire, a principal investor in the ven- that, said Robert Steuk of New Hamp-black-glass bottles full of very aged ture, "is our salvation." rum; a long-barreled pistol; a scab- bard; two styles of shoes, one with buckles and one with laces; toothbrush- es, minus bristles; pulleys from the rigging; a bootjack; a scrub brush; hundreds of buckles; a pewter spoon engraved with the nickname Mitch, and a small glass bottle marked Ketch- up. "The only sure way it pays is if we come up with a good collection of arti- facts that tells a story," Mr. Steuk said. Already, divers employed by the sal- vage concern Sub-Sal Inc. of Reno have brought up hundreds of artifacts from the wreck that are said to amount to perhaps 20 percent of all the salvagers expect to recover. room extract that was put on meat, ac- cording to Claudia Melson, a Delaware state archivist who for the last year has been helping preserve and catalog the artifacts. "What's fascinating," she said, "are all the things that made up everyday life.' State's Share Is 25% comes up," said Mr. Steuk, "the story really begins." How any treasure will be divided after Delaware receives its share is the subject of a lawsuit in Federal District Court in Wilmington. Worldwide Sal- vage Inc. of Rhode Island contends in the suit, filed in 1984, that it helped Sub- Sal and its president, Harvey Harring- ton, to locate the deBraak. Worldwide says that once the wreck was found, Mr. Harrington broke an oral agree- ment to share the treasure and formed a new company to salvage the de- Braak. Worldwide seeks punitive dam- ages and a share of any treasure found. So there was great anticipation here The deBraak, originally a single- today as, with a thunderstorm brew-masted Dutch cutter built in 1781, was ing, the time for raising the remaining in the harbor at Falmouth, England, in 40 percent of the deBraak's hull ap- 1795, when the Dutch aligned them- proached. selves with France, with whom Britain was at war. The state, which has cooperated in the salvage operation that began to bear fruit in 1984 when Captain Drew's ring was found, has laid an uncontested claim to 25 percent of whatever arti- facts and treasure might eventually be recovered. But the cold front kicked up waves high enough to delay the final attach- ment of eight cables under the hull that are to be rigged to a crane capable of lifting 300 tons mounted on a barge. The hull is to be raised from its grave, 90 feet down, at a rate of one and one-half feet per minute so that nothing washes out. If there is treasure, it most likely will lie in a huge "concretized" mass, fused together by chemical ac- tion over the years, in the after part of the ship, according to Kevin McCor- mick, the project manager. Or, he said, it may have spilled out of the hull and lie on the bottom of the bay, as has often been the case with treasure ships. Lawsuit Over Treasure It might take two weeks to know whether there is any treasure, and if In those days ketchup was a mush- | so, how much, he said. "When the hull N.Y. Times Tuesday 12 Any 1986 The British took over the ship, con- verted her to a two-masted brig and fit- ted her with new armament. Some of the cannon on display here, in the shed of a former seafood processing plant, bear the symbol of the switch: the royal insignia of George III. The mouth of Delaware Bay is a treacherous place. More than 100 wrecks that lie at the bottom off Cape Henlopen, and as the deBraak was en- tering the bay on May 25, 1798, with most of her sails furled, a sudden squall struck. The crew had no time to put on the extra canvas that might have ena- bled her to run ahead of the storm. Captain Drew, a Royal Navy officer, went down with the ship along with the harbor pilot, about half the ship's 38- man crew and several Spanish pris- oners. [PAGE BREAK] 1998 an Page? N=Y_Rest? State to prosecute treasure hunters First use of historical-items law ANNAPOLIS (AP) The state will press charges against three treasure hunters accused of using metal detectors on his- toric property, the first time any- one has been prosecuted under the Maryland Submerged Ar- chaeological Historical Property Act of 1988. The three were caught Oct. 22 looking for treasure in the South River, just off the historic Lon- don Town House & Gardens, a 1760 Georgian mansion desig- nated as a National Historic Landmark. They were spotted working in wet suits from a small boat offshore, officials said. William D. Roessler, Anne Arundel County deputy state's attorney, said action was taken in this case because the treasure hunters were so blatant. "Excavating on historical property is like stealing silver- ware from Mount Vernon or dig- ging up parts of the Gettysburg Battlefield," he said. "They chose to dig directly in front of an his- torical property, clearly on his- torical land, and ignored the authorities who told them not to do it." Coins and metal objects dat- ing from the mid-1700s were confiscated from the men, in- cluding two George II half- pennies from the mid-18th cen- tury, an 18th-century knee buckle, a pre-1860 musket ball, a late 19th-century brass penknife and an artilleryman's uniform button dated to the War of 1812. The Maryland Submerged Ar- chaeological Historical Property Act forbids the use of metal de- tectors at underwater historic sites and protects anything be- low the mean high-water mark. It also prohibits treasure hunt- ers from digging up artifacts more than 100 years old and bans collectors from sites designated or eligible as National Historic Landmarks or on the National Register of Historic Places. John J. Reichenberg Jr., 49, of Edgewater and Paul G. Mueller, 42, and Robert I. Boyer, 39, both of Riva, were charged Thursday in Anne Arundel District Court with criminal excavation of sub- merged historical property. If convicted, each could be sen- tenced to 30 days in jail and fined [AD] $1,000. Mr. Mueller said Friday he didn't know he was doing any- thing wrong. "We were under the impres- sion the people of Maryland have the right of way up to the high- water mark. We offered to metal detect there and give them any- thing we found. But they won't have any of it. So the stuff is just sitting in the ground, rotting away," he said.



