Knowledge

El Cazador (ship)

Source đź“ť

42: 94: 140:. To be more precise, she was loaded with silver Spanish coins, mostly 8 reales, “Pieces of Eight,” It carried 400,000 silver pesos and another 50,000 pesos worth of smaller change, of various dates. At one ounce to the peso, and 12 troy ounces to the pound, that's 37,500 pounds of silver. King Carlos III enlisted his most trusted captain, Gabriel de Campos y Pineda, to command the ship. On 11 January 1784, she sailed for 123:
in 1784. In the 1770s the Spanish Louisiana Territory’s economy was faltering due to paper money that was not backed by silver or gold. Carlos III, King of Spain, decided to replace the worthless currency with valuable Spanish silver coins. On 20 October 1783
163:'s net hung on a snag. When the crew hoisted the net and dumped the contents on the deck, they found the net was filled with silver coins. The coins bore markings from the Spanish mint in Mexico, along with the date 1783. 170:. In December 2004 the Executors of the Reahard estate hired Jonathan Lerner of Scarsdale Coin to appraise the coins. This appraisal was completed in February 2005. 360: 324: 385: 375: 310: 380: 336: 144:, and was never heard from again. Spain’s attempts to locate the ship were unsuccessful and in June 1784, 98: 284: 182: 246: 166:
Treasure from the ship was originally housed in a safe at the old Grand Bay State Bank building in
21: 156: 263: 137: 129: 365: 125: 17: 8: 234: 167: 133: 159:, was fishing in the Gulf of Mexico fifty miles south of New Orleans. As it fished, 128:
sent her on a mission to bring much-needed hard currency to the Spanish colony of
370: 120: 354: 141: 93: 311:
The Life and Times: Researching and Writing American Local History
16:
This article is about the Spanish ship. For the Chilean ship, see
288: 116: 204: 136:, Mexico, where she was loaded with approximately 450,000 97:
1777 8 Reale coin from the El Cazador Shipwreck graded by
205:"8 Reales, The Coin that Could have Started Another War" 132:
in order to stabilize the currency. The ship sailed to
314:, Cookeville, TN: History Works Publisher, 2009, p.22 199: 197: 173:It is now administered through the Franklin Mint. 352: 194: 258: 256: 224: 148:was officially listed as missing at sea. 92: 253: 353: 337:1784 Spanish Ship is Found in the Gulf 155:, Captain Jerry Murphy and home port 38: 227:The Shipwreck that Changed the World 183:www.elcazador.com (Official website) 151:Then on 2 August 1993, the trawler 13: 14: 397: 176: 361:Shipwrecks in the Gulf of Mexico 40: 285:"El Cazador (Official website)" 330: 317: 302: 277: 218: 1: 188: 7: 10: 402: 386:Maritime incidents in 1784 376:Age of Sail ships of Spain 115:in English) was a Spanish 15: 323:National Parks Magazine, 70: 33: 29: 22:Cazador (disambiguation) 381:Merchant ships of Spain 327:, National Park Service 157:Pascagoula, Mississippi 71:General characteristics 20:. For other ships, see 102: 79:Two-masted brig of war 96: 126:Charles III of Spain 18:Chilean ship Cazador 168:Grand Bay, Alabama 103: 66:Wrecked early-1784 308:Carpenter, Will, 264:"El Cazador 1784" 229:. PMT Publishing. 119:that sank in the 91: 90: 393: 344: 334: 328: 321: 315: 306: 300: 299: 297: 296: 287:. Archived from 281: 275: 274: 272: 270: 260: 251: 250: 244: 240: 238: 230: 225:Jacob Laurence. 222: 216: 215: 213: 211: 201: 48: 45: 44: 43: 27: 26: 401: 400: 396: 395: 394: 392: 391: 390: 351: 350: 347: 343:, Dec. 19, 1993 335: 331: 322: 318: 307: 303: 294: 292: 283: 282: 278: 268: 266: 262: 261: 254: 242: 241: 232: 231: 223: 219: 209: 207: 203: 202: 195: 191: 179: 46: 41: 39: 25: 12: 11: 5: 399: 389: 388: 383: 378: 373: 368: 363: 346: 345: 341:New York Times 329: 316: 301: 276: 252: 217: 192: 190: 187: 186: 185: 178: 177:External links 175: 138:Spanish reales 121:Gulf of Mexico 89: 88: 85: 81: 80: 77: 73: 72: 68: 67: 64: 60: 59: 54: 50: 49: 36: 35: 31: 30: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 398: 387: 384: 382: 379: 377: 374: 372: 369: 367: 364: 362: 359: 358: 356: 349: 342: 338: 333: 326: 320: 313: 312: 305: 291:on 2009-03-10 290: 286: 280: 265: 259: 257: 248: 236: 228: 221: 206: 200: 198: 193: 184: 181: 180: 174: 171: 169: 164: 162: 158: 154: 149: 147: 143: 139: 135: 131: 127: 122: 118: 114: 110: 109: 100: 95: 86: 83: 82: 78: 75: 74: 69: 65: 62: 61: 58: 55: 52: 51: 37: 32: 28: 23: 19: 348: 340: 332: 319: 309: 304: 293:. Retrieved 289:the original 279: 267:. Retrieved 226: 220: 208:. Retrieved 172: 165: 160: 152: 150: 145: 112: 107: 106: 104: 56: 366:1780s ships 325:Winter 2006 269:January 17, 243:|work= 142:New Orleans 57:El Cazador 355:Categories 295:2009-11-03 189:References 146:El Cazador 113:The Hunter 108:El Cazador 245:ignored ( 235:cite book 210:April 19, 130:Louisiana 111:(meaning 134:Veracruz 161:Mistake 153:Mistake 87:90 feet 34:History 84:Length 371:Brigs 47:Spain 271:2013 247:help 212:2018 117:brig 105:The 76:Type 63:Fate 53:Name 99:NGC 357:: 339:, 255:^ 239:: 237:}} 233:{{ 196:^ 298:. 273:. 249:) 214:. 101:. 24:.

Index

Chilean ship Cazador
Cazador (disambiguation)

NGC
brig
Gulf of Mexico
Charles III of Spain
Louisiana
Veracruz
Spanish reales
New Orleans
Pascagoula, Mississippi
Grand Bay, Alabama
www.elcazador.com (Official website)


"8 Reales, The Coin that Could have Started Another War"
cite book
help


"El Cazador 1784"
"El Cazador (Official website)"
the original
The Life and Times: Researching and Writing American Local History
Winter 2006
1784 Spanish Ship is Found in the Gulf
Categories
Shipwrecks in the Gulf of Mexico
1780s ships

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑