|
Home/History/Golden
Galleons Golden galleons are off Valley's coast
by
C. M. Robinson III

Remember the movie Underwater, where Richard Egan, Jane Russell and Gilbert
Roland were bringing up tons of gold from a treasure galleon? How about old Lloyd Bridges'
occasional treasure finds on the TV program Sea Hunt? Then there was The Deep,
where Robert Shaw, Jacqueline Bissett and Nick Nolte found an unrecorded Spanish treasure
shipment in Bermuda.
Just about all of us have dreamed of finding some treasure galleon, particularly after
former chicken farmer Mel Fisher become one of the richest men in the world when he
discovered the wreck of the Nuestra Señor de Atocha, off the Florida Keys.
Jeff Burke of Rio Hondo has lived that dream. Not only that, his treasure galleons were
not off the coast of Florida or along the Spanish Main, but right here along our own Padre
Island. The ships were wrecked just north of the Port Mansfield Cut in April 1554, and
remained lost for more than four centuries.
"I was instrumental and lucky enough to be one of the guys who found them,"
Burke commented. He described the adventure at a meeting of the Pearl Harbor Survivors
Association in La Feria.
For many years, people had known that a Spanish fleet was wrecked on the island. After
storms, coins from the mid-1550s would wash up on the beach along a five-mile strip
running north from the Port Mansfield Cut. A Spanish priest, one of two survivors, left an
account which was first published in English in the 1930s. Several local books had
mentioned it by the time Burke and several associates started looking for it.
"We had a rough idea from research by my friend Jack Haskins, in the archives in
Spain, and theorized we were looking for the right wreck," Burke said. "There
were coins on the beach from the 1550s. The only flota (treasure fleet) at that
time was this 1554 little flota."
Four ships sailed from Veracruz on April 9, 1554. Three were wrecked on Padre Island.
Although most accounts say the ships were lost in a hurricane, Burke contends it was the
wrong time of year.
"It had to be a norther, because it happened in April. You know how wild the Gulf
can be in a norther," he said. "The only ship that survivedheavily
damagedand reached Tampico for repairs, was commanded by the only one of those ships
with a captain who had made the trip before."
Burke believes the ships were caravelsthe small, ocean-going transport/warships
which evolved into the later galleons of stories and movies. Because of the design of the
ships, the area where they went ashore, and the condition of the wrecks, he said they were
literally beated to pieces in the surf.
"The caravels were high-sided, flat-bottomed, and very unwieldy," he
explained. "In 18 feet of water, they got caught in those swells that slammed them
down on the bottom."
Three hundred survivors made it ashore. But only two, the priest, Fray Marcos de Mena,
and an ordinary seaman named Vasquez survied. Vasquez opted to stay with the wreck, and
was later picked up by a rescue ship. The other began the long march south along Padre
Island, in the direction of Tampico.
"The Indians came down to the shore and gave them fish," Burke said.
"They seemed friendly." Then, however, they retreated into the dunes and,
"for some unknown reason," began shooting arrows at the Spaniards. During the
first part of the trek, the Spaniards were able to hold off the Indians with three
crossbows, which Burke call "very effective weapons at that time." But on
crossing one of the waterwayeither Brazos Santiago Pass between Padre Island and
Boca Chica or the Rio Grandethe makeshift raft carrying the crossbows overturned and
the weapons were lost.
Indian attack, hunger and privation slowly reduced the 300 survivors to 25, including
Fray Marcos, the priest, who had an arrow wound in his neck. Being too weak to carry him,
the others buried him in the sand, leaving his face exposed so he could breathe.
Eventually he recovered enough to walk and continued south, where he found the bodies of
the others on the beach. Just a few miles outside of Tampico he was recued and returned to
civilization.
Burke and his associates began looking for the fleet in the spring of 1965, using
magnetometers and a converted name LSMa twin-screw, 40-foot landing craftowned
by Billy Kennon of Port Isabel. Finding nothing, that year, they did not look in 1966.
In 1967, the search resumed and on September 11 they found one of the wrecks at what
they called the 2.8 site because it was 2.8 miles north of the cut. "Hurricane Buelah
fouled up our salvage efforts for about six weeks," Burke said, after which they
found more wreckage at what the call the 5¼ site because of its location in relation to
the cut.
"These are the oldest Spanish wrecks ever found on the U.S. coast," Burke
said. "They were found on the 413th year after their sinking." The wrecks lie
from about a quarter of a mile north of the cut, up to 5¼ miles, Burke said. "They
are about a quarter of a mile out in 18 to 22 feet of water. Part of the hull was actually
under the second bar." There was no visible wreckage. "All you see is bottom,
because they tended to sink into the sand," Burke explained. "In Florida, the
wrecks rest on a reef, so you can locate them by cannons or piles of ballast rock. Here
the top of the ballast pile is approximately six feet under the natural bottom."
There is almost nothing left of the ships themselves, except what appears to be part of
the bottoms buried in the sand. "It's hard to delineate since they used 30-inch
timbers and the toredo worms have done a pretty good job of eating it," Burke said.
The water itself was murky because the waves so close to the beach keep the bottom
stirred up. We used the `hunt and peck' system of divingfeeling and bringing things
up to your face to see them," Burke said. "Sometimes we could see over three to
seven feet on really good days."
The wrecks were excavated using propeller deflectors which forced the wash from the
LSM's props straight down to blast the sand away. But the most efficient means was to
vacuum the bottom with airlifts. The problem with prop deflectors is they require much
shallower water than 22 feet although it does clear away some of the overburden and makes
it easier to do airlifting.
"We salvaged gold, silver, artifacts and a breech loading cannon," he
continued, but at that point the Texas Legislature passed an antiquities act giving the
state sole possession of offshore wrecks. The state then blocked Burke and his associates
from working on the wreck and seized everything they recovered. "The state shouldn't
have gotten anything. Mel Fisher proved that," Burke said. He noted Fisher won his
fights with Florida through every appeal, and ended up the sole owner of the treasure from
the Atocha.
With the Padre Island wrecks, however, it was a different story. Commenting on his
fight with the state of Texas, Burke said, "They have lawyers running out of their
(behinds), getting paid not telling what kind of salaries. We just couldn't keep up the
fight."


|