| Home | Scope | People | Academics | Research | Supporters | Links | Contact |
|
In 1978, a sport diver "discovered" what he thought was a Spanish treasure galleon in
the waters of Biscayne National Park. He began to salvage the wreck, erasing a segment of the site in a futile search for gold.
In order to identify the exact location of the wreck (which the salver did not by law have to reveal) the National Park Service's Southeast Archaeological Center conducted a magnetometer survey in cooperation with the Park Service's Submerged Cultural Resources Unit and the Florida State University. Magnetic anomalies pinpointed the location of the site. Preliminary investigations at this time did not clearly identify the wreck, as there seemed to be a mixture of British and Spanish artifacts.
In the summer of 1983 Florida State ran a field school in conjunction with the Park Service to investigate the wreck. Park Service archaeologists and University students and staff mapped the hull remains and artifactual scatter, conducted a controlled surface collection, and excavated selected portions of the wreck site. Seventy-five feet of intact structure exist, representing the starboard bilges from foreward of the mizzen mast to the foremast (ie., most of the vessel except the bow and stern). Four cannon were observed, and one was raised and transported to Tallahassee for conservation at the Florida Bureau of Archaeological Research laboratory. The cannon, 9 and 12 pounders, were the correct size for a British fifth rate vessel.
The National Park Service maintains a webpage about Biscayne National Park. A painting by William Trotter of what the Fowey would have looked like at sail.
|
![]() |
||