grossmusic
Sr. Member
- Joined
- Jul 19, 2013
- Messages
- 348
- Reaction score
- 445
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- Cape Canaveral
- Detector(s) used
- I detect the history: I've visited archives up & down the entire US East Coast, Bahamas, Jamaica, Kew, The Hague, etc. Have yet to go to Seville or S.American archives.
- Primary Interest:
- Shipwrecks
- #1
Thread Owner
I have very little info on this ship known to most of us as La Popa, though it goes by many aliases.
I would so appreciate your help, especially if you understand Dutch &/or Spanish protocol, to expand my understanding.
The facts as I interpret them:
QUESTIONS:
Was "Popa" really the captain's name, or a derogatory nickname (not actual name) applied to the Dutchman & his ship? ("popa" could be a derivative of "poop" or "excrement" in both Dutch & Spanish...right?)
Any clues to the ship's original name that might be documented in the Netherlands?
Any more info about the fate of the Dutch captain? Would Echeverz have arrested, compelled or killed the Dutch captain & his crew?
How small would a ship be to only require 15 crewmen?
Where is Punta Bernardo?
After the wrecks, did the Popa's cabins really wash ashore, or was that a misinterpretation of the reports that seemed to actually be referring to the top deck (superstructure) of Ubilla's capitana (per Mendez as quoted in the Haskins reports)?
i.e., Were there two ships that washed ashore enough to use the cabins for a headquarters? One for Salmon to use (Ubilla's) and one for Echeverz to use (Popa)?
Who called the ship La Holandesa &/or La Galera - 20th-c. treasure hunters or 18th-c. salvors?
I would so appreciate your help, especially if you understand Dutch &/or Spanish protocol, to expand my understanding.
The facts as I interpret them:
- "Popa" was the surname of the ship's original Dutch captain (or was it his nickname?)
- the vessel was a small Dutch merchant; possibly a galley (Dutch built?)
- Echeverz captured the ship in 1714 off Punta Bernardo (Cartagena, Colombia?)
- Echeverz had to condemn then buy the ship in Portobelo for 2,000 pesos
- Echeverz immediately renamed the ship Nuestra Señora del Carmen for his patron saint (he named many of his ships Carmen)
- Echeverz used La Popa as a patache with very little (if any) treasure aboard during the voyage from Havana toward Old Spain
- Only a few officers and a crew of 15 men were aboard (no passengers)
- After the wrecks the contemporary salvors renamed it San Miguel Nuestra Señora de la Popa in "honor" of the original captain and referred to it as "La Popa" to avoid confusion since there were other ships named Carmen and San Miguel
- Other nicknames (not clear if by modern salvors or contemporaries) include: La Holandesa (Olandesa), La Galera (galley)
QUESTIONS:
Was "Popa" really the captain's name, or a derogatory nickname (not actual name) applied to the Dutchman & his ship? ("popa" could be a derivative of "poop" or "excrement" in both Dutch & Spanish...right?)
Any clues to the ship's original name that might be documented in the Netherlands?
Any more info about the fate of the Dutch captain? Would Echeverz have arrested, compelled or killed the Dutch captain & his crew?
How small would a ship be to only require 15 crewmen?
Where is Punta Bernardo?
After the wrecks, did the Popa's cabins really wash ashore, or was that a misinterpretation of the reports that seemed to actually be referring to the top deck (superstructure) of Ubilla's capitana (per Mendez as quoted in the Haskins reports)?
i.e., Were there two ships that washed ashore enough to use the cabins for a headquarters? One for Salmon to use (Ubilla's) and one for Echeverz to use (Popa)?
Who called the ship La Holandesa &/or La Galera - 20th-c. treasure hunters or 18th-c. salvors?
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