The story appears on

Page A6

November 22, 2015

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Feature

Treasure hunter seeks gold in sunken British vessel

MORE than 250 years after Spanish forces sank the British warship Lord Clive off the coast of Uruguay, treasure hunter Ruben Collado is working to raise it from its watery grave.

Collado believes the ship may have been carrying 100,000 gold coins when Spanish cannon fire sank it in 1763, as Britain and Portugal tried to seize the city of Colonia del Sacramento during the Seven Years’ War.

The Argentine adventurer spent 14 years searching for the wreckage before finding it by accident in 2004, when the propeller of his boat struck a sunken mast as he trolled around the River Plate estuary.

After waiting more than 10 long years for authorization from the Uruguayan authorities, Collado is finally set to fulfill his dream: to haul what is left of the wreckage to the surface, repair its cracks and bring it to shore.

The 78-year-old bursts with energy as he discusses his plans, brushing aside conservationists’ calls to leave the ship where it is and skeptics’ doubts about its cargo.

“I’m a professional treasure hunter. If the ship doesn’t have any treasure, investors don’t put up any money,” he said.

This fortified city of cobblestone streets was founded by the Portuguese in 1680 and is today a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Just off the coast, in the estuary that splits Argentina and Uruguay, five orange buoys float above the remains of the Lord Clive, marking the spot where Collado and his team are at work.

Collado, who has done extensive research on the ship and its cargo, said its fatal error that January 6 was casting anchor too close to shore.

The Lord Clive, which belonged to the British East India Company, was sailing at the head of a fleet of 11 ships.

Collado believes its mission was to drop arms and equipment ashore to supply an uprising against the Spanish crown across a vast swath of South America, in hopes of winning control over the region’s commerce.

But despite its three storeys of cannon, the Lord Clive anchored just 350 meters offshore — making it an easy target for the Spanish.

Collado said he has not managed to locate the ship’s manifest to confirm its cargo.

But he believes it was carrying the gold from a Uruguay-bound cargo ship it had captured. And he has convinced investors to fund him.

He estimates his haul will total hundreds of millions of dollars — half of which will go to the Uruguayan government.

It will take two years to clear the rocks and mud covering the ship, run a huge metal lattice under it, raise it, patch it up and bring it to shore.

No one knows for sure what else lurks beneath the surface. But Collado is confident.

“You have to get out there and search to have good luck,” he said.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend