The 1715 Treasure Fleet was a Spanish treasure fleet returning from the New World to Spain. In the evening of July 30, 1715, seven days after departing from Havana, Cuba, eleven of the twelve ships of this fleet were lost in a hurricane near present day Vero Beach, Florida. Because the fleet was carrying silver, it is also known as the 1715 Plate Fleet (plata being the Spanish word for silver plate).Some artifacts and even coins still wash up on Florida beaches from time to time.
Around 1,000 sailors perished while a small number survived on lifeboats. Many ships, including pirates, took part in the initial salvage. Initially a privateer, Henry Jennings was first accused of piracy for attacking such salvage ships and claiming their salvages.
Colombia: 1706 2 Escudos
Peru: Charles II Lima Mint
Lima, Peru, cob 2 escudos, 1701H, Posthumous Charles II, very rare. Choice pillars-side details with bold date (far superior to the stat of Florida collection specimen, which may be the only other one known), full butt slightly off-center cross with king’s ordinal II in legend, lustrous Mint State with dark orange sediment in crevices, desirable certificate. From the Corrigans site of the 1715 Fleet.
Peru: Charles II Cuzco Mint
Peru: Philip V Lima Mint
Viceroyalty of El Peru, Lima 1712 M eight escudos. Large planchet, boldly struck, great color and luster, wonderfully centered. Choice Mint State NGC MS 62 1715 Plate Fleet. Legend date reads ANO 711.
For some reason when in 1712 the Lima Mint resumes adding a second date in the legend, the die cutters (talladores) had a very difficult time correctly spacing ANO 712. In one well known variety they ended up punching the crown over the 2. In another variety they tried to wedge a half-size 2 between the 1 and crown. In this case the blunder was even worse. Initially the tallador punched in ANO 721. That had to be corrected, despite the fact that re-graving weakened the die. The tallador polished out the misplaced 2 and punched a 1 over it. Unfortunately, he mis-angled the 1 and positioned it too far to the right. At that point he realized that there was not going to be enough space to cleanly erase the (already partially erased) final 1 and replace it with a 2. More re-engraving may well have caused the die to fail. So the tallador had to quit at this point and hope that the tesorero or assayer Melgareojo or someone in the Viceroy’s office didn’t notice his little “ANO 711” mistake.
Finest known Peru Escudo. This 1703 is the only one graded of the 344 minted.
Mexico: Charles II
Viceroyalty of Nueva Espana, Mexico City MXo L 4 Escudos (169)5. From the 1715 Fleet.
A choice mint state Box-end Cross design with an exceptional Hapsburg Shield and crown. NGC MS 61 1715 Plate Fleet. This media onza was one of the stars of grandest Real 8 auction, Spanish Galleon Treasure, conducted in November 1972 by Hans Schulman. As lot 38 and (mis)dated 1693, it was touted as the earliest Mexican four escudos recovered from the Fleet. Alas, we know now it is not the earliest- a 1694 has surfaced- but it is one of only five datable Mexican media onzas from the entire Carlos II era (1679-1701). Second 1695 has also surfaced (Tauler 84), struck from the same dies as the present coin. A three digit date can be read on that coin, 695, confirming the somewhat weak 5 on this example.
It is remarkable that any mint state Carlos II media onzas have survived, all salvaged from the Nieves site of the 1715 Fleet. Someone was probably returning to Spain after 20 years of colonial service. Gold coins he had been setting aside since the 1690’s were traveling with him, but then a July 1715 Florida hurricane put paid to those plans. Before the Fleet salvages, only the XF specimen was known to Lopez-Sanchez in his monograph on the series. This minty 1695 is certainly one of the finest Carlos II media onzas. It shows the Hapsburg-style crown and a nearly complete shield on a lustrous, large, well centered planchet.
Mexico: Royal Coinage 8 Escudos
Finest of 2 KNOWN (Philip V)
Mexico: Philip V 1713 MXO J
Mexico City, Mexico, Cob 1 escudo, 1711J, “1712 style” reverse, Royal-like, from the 1715 Fleet, NGC MS 65, Finest known specimen.
Unusually broad flan, nearly round and with full inner details (shield and oXMJ, cross with “ears” -style ornaments in quadrants) and bold full date, much crown and legend. This coin features prominently in a famous photo by John De Bry of an example of a military decoration known as the order of the Holy Spirit that HRD recovered in 1988.
Viceroyalty of Nueva Espana, Mexico City Mxo J 1713 One Escudo. From the 1715 Plate Fleet. Cross with crosslets design (1711-13).
Well struck and lustrous, with coral and a reddish toning so often found on 1713-14 Mexican escudos recovered from Douglas Beach (the Nieves site). Gold was often transported in heavy leather sacks which slowly decayed in the ocean leaving a reddish-orange film on the coins from their tanning acids. Orignally sold by Real 8 in their biggest auction, Schulman’s Spanish Galleon Treasure, November 1972, lot 279. Conservatively graded by NGC as MS 62 1715 Plate Fleet (none higher).
No accurate census exists yet of the surviving 1713 Mexico one escudos. The Florida State Collection has three. The Gold Cobs census records four in the marketplace, but probably others exist. An estimate of a half dozen collectible dated specimens cannot be far off the mark. The cross-with-crosslets design began in mid-1711 to replace the ornate crosses of 1711 and in turn gave way in 1714 to the simplified standard cross.
Viceroyalty of Nueva Espana, Mexico City Mxo (1702 L) One Escudo. From the 1715 Fleet.
A choice mint state example of the box-end Cross style of the Mexican one escudo, struck from 1700 to 1710. A beautifully centered Bourbon shield pairs with an almost complete Box-end tressure and cross, better by far than any in the Florida State Collection. By style and from the base of the last digit at 11 o’clock, we can be sure of its attribution to 1702, which was the first year Mexico City struck coinage in the name of Philip V. NGC MS 63 1715 Plate Fleet.
The Box-end Cross design appeared suddenly in 1700, replacing the jeweled and Plain Cross issue that had been struck since 1679. It is a conspicuous design change for which we have no explanation beyond the obvious fact that the Box-end Cross design is simpler to engrave. Instead of framing the crossbars within a right-angled tressure (as on the previous issue), the crossbar are now attached to the tressure, forming four rectangles at the ends of the cross arms. The simple Box-end design was abandoned in 1711 in favor of two much more elaborate cross designs, which lasted only three years before Mexico City reverted to the simple cross and a new Spanish-style tressure of 1714 through 1732.
Mexico: Philip V 1714 MO J
1714 date with “J” punch for the “1” in the date. Finest Known
Normal 1714 date
Mexico: Philip V 1715 MO J
Before and after conservation (Obverse)
Before and after conservation (Reverse)
(17)15J Mexico 4 Escudos, Coral encrusted as from the 1715 Fleet.
1715 Rare Date (Philip V)