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Spanish Galleons

Florida is famous for its fabled
Spanish treasure galleons. Florida's coastline is dotted with more
colonial Spanish wrecks than any other state in the nation,
primarily because of three treasure fleet disasters. In 1622, 1715,
and again in 1733, Spain suffered horrible economic blows when the
treasure fleets or flotas entered Florida waters and were
destroyed by hurricanes. The 1622 fleet was scattered across the
lower Florida Keys and the Dry Tortugas. The 1715 fleet wrecked
along the Atlantic coast of southern Florida, on what is now known
as the Treasure Coast. And finally, the 1733 fleet met its fate
along the upper Florida Keys, from modern Grassy Key to upper Key
Largo.
The 1622, 1715, and 1733
flotas of Spanish galleons were an integral part of an economic system that had
developed early in the three centuries of Spanish rule in the New
World. A pattern of trade, controlled strictly by the Spanish crown,
had evolved based on the policies of the day. Spain's policy was to
establish a monopoly, keeping her colonies dependent on her. This
monopoly was eventually challenged successfully by English and Dutch
traders, but by law Spanish colonials could trade only with the
authorized Spanish merchant flotas. As early as the 16th
century a law was passed by the Casa de Contratacion, or
"House of Trade," which called for the periodic sailing of fleets
from Spain to the Caribbean twice a year (though they hardly ever
sailed on schedule). The fleets carried manufactured goods for sale
to the citizens of the New World, and were then filled with the rich
treasures of the Americas for transport back to Spain.
The typical fleet consisted of
several types of ships. Heavily armed galleons served as protection
for the bulk of the fleet, merchant naos. The only difference
between the nao and galleon was the amount of armament
carried. Several pataches, small reconnaissance vessels, also
accompanied the fleet, as well as resfuerzos or supply
ships.. The fleet was led by the Capitana, or flagship, and
the Almiranta, or vice-flagship.
The fleet of Sapnish galleons would leave Spain
(first from Seville and later Cadiz), sail down the coast of Africa
until the reached the Cape Verde Islands. Here they sailed west with
the prevailing tradewinds until they entered the Caribbean. At that
point the ships split into two separate fleets, the Nueva Espana
flota and the Tierra Firme flota (after 1648 it was
called Los Galeones). The first fleet sailed to Mexico (Nueva
Espana)'s port of Vera Cruz, while the second fleet visited the
South American mainland ports of Cartagena, Nombe de Dios, and Porto
Bello.
In these ports, the ships traded
manufactured goods for the wealth of the Indies, such items as gold,
silver, emeralds and other gemstones, hides, exotic woods, copper,
tobacco, sugar, cochineal, indigo, and other valuables. In additions
to these goods, another Spanish fleet called the Manila Galleons
crossed the Pacific and sent treasures from the Orient to Acapulco
and then to the Caribbean flotas. These commodities included
such materials as ginger, cowrie shells, porcelains, silks, velvets,
damasks, drugs, pearls, and ivory.
The great flota system of Spanish
galleons reached it
height between 1590 and 1600. Then, over the next century the system
began to slowly decline. Spain's leadership weakened and her debts
increased, colonial mines produced less precious metals, privateer
attacks increased, and other European powers began to colonize the
Caribbean and break the Spanish trading monopoly. At the end of the
16th century, the average number of ships in the flota was 100; this
was to degrade to 55 by 1610 and to 25 by 1640. At home, Spain
suffered general economic and industrial decline and began to lose
its shipbuilding industry, as attested to by the fact that by 1650
more than two thirds of the flota ships were of foreign
construction. The Spanish navy was so weak by the end of the 17th
century that often foreign warships (usually belonging to the nation
that Spain owed the most money to) escorted the flota home. The loss
of the 1715 and 1733 treasure flotas were a tremendous blow to Spain
in the early 18th century. Finally, the last flota to make the
transatlantic run sailed in 1778, and Spain officially declared free
trade among its colonies.
We will supply you with
underwater metal detectors. Happy hunting!
Spanish Wrecks
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El Capitana
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El Infante
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El Almiranta
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San Francisco ("Craig Wreck")
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Chaves
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Herrera
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El Lerri (San Felipe)
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San Pedro
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Sueco de Arizon
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Tres Puentes
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San Jose
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Angustias
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Nuestra Senora del Populo
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Atocha and her
sister ship, Santa Margarita.
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