Nuestra Señora de Atocha

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Gold coin retrieved from the shipwreckThe image above is believed to be a replaceable fair use image. It will be deleted on 2007-04-05 if not determined to be irreplaceable.  If you believe this image is not replaceable, follow the instructions on the image page to dispute this assertion.
Gold coin retrieved from the shipwreck

The image above is believed to be a replaceable fair use image. It will be deleted on 2007-04-05 if not determined to be irreplaceable. If you believe this image is not replaceable, follow the instructions on the image page to dispute this assertion.

Nuestra Señora de Atocha ("Our Lady of Atocha") was the most famous of a fleet of Spanish ships that sunk in 1622 off the Florida Keys while carrying copper, silver, gold, tobacco, gems, jewels, jewelery and indigo from Spanish ports at Cartagena, Colombia, Porto Bello in New Granada and Havana bound for Spain. The ship was named for the parish of Atocha in Madrid, Spain.

On September 6, 1622, the Atocha was driven by a severe hurricane onto the coral reefs near the Dry Tortugas, about 35 miles (56 kilometers) west of Key West. With her hull badly damaged, the vessel quickly sank, drowning every one aboard except for five survivors (three sailors and two slaves).

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[edit] Impact of the loss

After the surviving ships brought the news of the disaster back to Havana, Spanish authorities dispatched another five ships to salvage the Atocha and the Santa Margarita, which had run aground near where the Atocha sank. The Atocha had sunk in approximately 50 feet of water, making it difficult for divers to retrieve any of the cargo or guns from the ship. A second hurricane in October of that year made attempts at salvage even more difficult by scattering the wreckage of the ship still further.

The loss of the 1622 fleet had an immediate impact on Spain, forcing it to borrow more to finance its role in the Thirty Years' War and to sell several galleons to raise funds. While their efforts over the next 10 years to salvage the Margarita were successful, the Spanish never located the Atocha.

[edit] Modern recovery and legal battle

This cargo of the Atocha, valued at hundreds of millions of dollars by today's standards, lay lost beneath the sea for 363 years. American treasure hunter Mel Fisher and a team of sub-contractors, funded by investors and others in a joint venture, searched the sea bed for the Atocha for 16 and a half years. The team discovered the wreck and associated silver, gold and emeralds in 1988. Fisher had earlier recovered portions of the wrecked cargo of the sister ship Santa Margarita in 1980. It is understood by experts that the sterncastle portion of the Atocha is still missing. This part of the ship would hold most of the gold and rare Muzo emeralds still missing from this shipwreck. These and other valuable items would have been stored in the Captain's cabin for safekeeping in this rear part of the Atocha.

After the discovery, the United States government claimed title to the wreck, and the State of Florida seized many of the items Fisher had retrieved from his earliest salvage expeditions. After eight years of litigation, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of Fisher.

The mother lode was finally discovered on July 20, 1985. It was Mel's son, Kane, that radioed the news to Treasure Salvors head quarters on the Florida coast, from the salvage boat Dauntless.

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