PhipsFolly
Hero Member
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2005
- Messages
- 639
- Reaction score
- 614
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- Treasure Coast, Florida
- Detector(s) used
- Minelab Sovereign Elite & Sovereign XS, Minelab Equinox 800 and Aquapulse AQ1B
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
- #1
Thread Owner
Ok, let's try this find...
Here are a few pics of one of my recent beach recoveries from the area between Frederick Douglas Beach and John Brooks Park, in Fort Pierce... Inshore from the 1715 Fleet shipwreck believed to be the Nuestra Señora de Los Nieves. As far as I am aware, there has not been anything found from any of the 1715 Fleet sites to enable us to say definitively which ships are which... We all have our thoughts and educated guesses on this, but nothing written in stone...
Well, my recent find is this silver 17th century medallion (with broken bale unfortunately)...
Its not an earthshaking recovery, but I found it to be interesting none the less due to the inscription on the backside of the medallion! After much research, it is my understanding that it is a representation of "La Nuestra Señora de Las Nievas" and has "Nieva" inscribed on the back! Is this just a coincidence that this medallion with this inscription representing this personage be recovered in this location? What are your thoughts, anybody?
Here are a few pics of one of my recent beach recoveries from the area between Frederick Douglas Beach and John Brooks Park, in Fort Pierce... Inshore from the 1715 Fleet shipwreck believed to be the Nuestra Señora de Los Nieves. As far as I am aware, there has not been anything found from any of the 1715 Fleet sites to enable us to say definitively which ships are which... We all have our thoughts and educated guesses on this, but nothing written in stone...
Well, my recent find is this silver 17th century medallion (with broken bale unfortunately)...
Its not an earthshaking recovery, but I found it to be interesting none the less due to the inscription on the backside of the medallion! After much research, it is my understanding that it is a representation of "La Nuestra Señora de Las Nievas" and has "Nieva" inscribed on the back! Is this just a coincidence that this medallion with this inscription representing this personage be recovered in this location? What are your thoughts, anybody?