I have known several cases in which treasure lost by piracy or
shipwreck has been recovered after a century or more. Some years ago a
company of men from Boston made two cruises to the shoals of the Silver
Key on the Bahama Banks, a spot noted for shipwrecks. They had some
clue to a treasure-laden ship which had foundered there long ago. The
first trip was unsuccessful, but on the second voyage the wreck was
found. Divers, armed with modern apparatus, spent several days in the
quest, but in vain, until, finally, just as the last diver was about to
give the signal to be drawn up, he leaned against what seemed only the
barnacle-encrusted end of a beam; but suddenly it gave way, and numbers
of golden doubloons rolled out at his feet. Considerable sums rewarded
further search in the sand-filled and decaying carcass of the old ship;
but exactly how much was realized is known only to the discoverers, who
kept the matter secret, and thus evaded paying a great part of the
share due to the British crown, in whose dominion the treasure was
found.
To Boston also belonged, some two centuries ago, the celebrated
treasure-hunter, William Phips.
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