Description: In 1987, two surfers fell off their boards one day and saw what they thought was a canon and reported it to a lifeguard. Two days later, while on his morning training swim, the lifeguard refound the canon and contacted a master mariner and marina owner, Captain Dominic Addario, who had equipment capable of recovering the find. They agreed to form a joint venture to recover it. Their initial goal was simple. They resolved to put the cannon at a museum about to open in Burt Reynolds Park, sponsored by the Loxahatchee Historical Society. During those first weeks, further discoveries were made. More cannons were identified, then . . . silver “pieces of eight.” Neither of the two partners knew at the time that the laws governing discoveries such as theirs were approaching a major change, or that the two of them could play an instrumental part in the formulation of new rules that would affect the future rights of the private sector to participate in historic shipwreck research and recovery. Captain Addario placed an Admiralty claim upon the unknown vessel in the U.S. Southern District Court on the 27th day of July, 1987. A bond was posted to the Court, and Jupiter Wreck, Inc., a newly formed Florida corporation, was subsequently named Federal Substitute Custodian of the wreck site. More cannons and artifacts were discovered. Rare coins of silver and gold were retrieved, then a 78-pound ingot of silver! The State of Florida stepped in to assume jurisdiction, claiming it was in the wreck's and public's best interest. The public didn't totally agree, neither did the Federal Courts. Jupiter Wreck's legitimate claim was upheld by the Federal Judge, but the State's rights were also recognized. The crew had to dig with their bare hands while all issues were pondered. A Spanish aviso vessel (a kind of dispatch or advice boat, that is, a vessel designed not for warfare or carrying heavy cargo, but for delivering at top speed dispatches or advice, usually to the king or his government; aviso = “advice”) met its end along Jupiter, Florida’s east coast. It is called the Jupiter Wreck. A generation before Jonathan Dickinson’s landing in 1696, (Dickinson lived 1663–1722 and was a Quaker merchant from Port Royal, Jamaica),the original Indian inhabitants of the Jupiter-Hobe Sound area experienced one of the most significant contacts with Europeans anywhere on American soil. Up to this event, the Spaniards, who held north Florida, were unable to subjugate South Florida’s native American population on this rough-weathery coast. This coin is 8 Reales Unique oportunity to own 100 % authentic coin graded by NGC From Maravillas wreck with Certificate of authenticity Coin Number : NGC6679933-006Denomination : 8 Reales Grade : VF Details Weight : 25.67 Grams
Price: 4200 USD
Location: Hollywood, Florida
End Time: 2024-09-05T17:20:26.000Z
Shipping Cost: 35 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Denomination: 8 Reales
Circulated/Uncirculated: Uncirculated
Composition: Silver
Year: 1657
Certification Number: NGC6679933-006
Grade: VF Details
KM Number: 1691
Country/Region of Manufacture: Unknown
Certification: NGC
Modified Item: No