NEW ORLEANS, May 14, 2008

Sunken Treasure: Rare Gold Coins Recovered

Steamship Carrying Coins That Predate Paper Money Wrecked On Louisiana Coast 162 Years Ago

    • This photo, provided by the Numismatic Guaranty Corporation, shows the face side of a $5 gold coin struck at the New Orleans Mint in 1844. It is among a trove of gold and silver coins recovered in 2006 by four Louisiana residents from the SS New York, a side-wheel steamship that sank in the Gulf of Mexico in 1846, coin experts announced in May 2008.

      This photo, provided by the Numismatic Guaranty Corporation, shows the face side of a $5 gold coin struck at the New Orleans Mint in 1844. It is among a trove of gold and silver coins recovered in 2006 by four Louisiana residents from the SS New York, a side-wheel steamship that sank in the Gulf of Mexico in 1846, coin experts announced in May 2008.  (AP Photo)

    • This photo, provided by the Numismatic Guaranty Corporation, shows the reverse side of a $5 gold coin struck at the New Orleans Mint in 1844. It is among a trove of gold and silver coins recovered in 2006 by four Louisiana residents from the SS New York, a side-wheel steamship that sank in the Gulf of Mexico in 1846. The New Orleans mint mark, a large letter

      This photo, provided by the Numismatic Guaranty Corporation, shows the reverse side of a $5 gold coin struck at the New Orleans Mint in 1844. It is among a trove of gold and silver coins recovered in 2006 by four Louisiana residents from the SS New York, a side-wheel steamship that sank in the Gulf of Mexico in 1846. The New Orleans mint mark, a large letter "O," is visible on the back of the coin just above the denomination, "FIVE D." (AP Photo/Numismatic Guaranty Corporation)  (AP Photo)

    • This undated artist's drawing released by the Mariner's Museum of Newport News Virginia, shows the SS New York that sank in the Gulf of Mexico off Cameron, Louisiana in 1846. Four Louisiana residents recovered a trove of historic gold coins in 2006 from the sunken ship, coin experts announced in May 2008. (AP Photo/The Mariner’s Museum of Newport News, Virginia)

      This undated artist's drawing released by the Mariner's Museum of Newport News Virginia, shows the SS New York that sank in the Gulf of Mexico off Cameron, Louisiana in 1846. Four Louisiana residents recovered a trove of historic gold coins in 2006 from the sunken ship, coin experts announced in May 2008. (AP Photo/The Mariner’s Museum of Newport News, Virginia)  (AP Photo)

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(AP)  A steamship that sank off the Louisiana coast during an 1846 storm has produced a trove of rare gold coins, including some produced at two largely forgotten U.S. Mints in the South, coin experts say.

Last year, four Louisiana residents salvaged hundreds of gold coins and thousands of silver coins from the wreckage of the SS New York in about 60 feet of water in the Gulf of Mexico, said David Bowers, co-chairman of New York-based Stack's Rare Coins.

"Some of these are in uncirculated or mint condition," Bowers said, predicting the best could bring $50,000 to $100,000 apiece at auction.

Of particular interest to coin experts are gold pieces known as quarter eagles and half eagles, which carried face values of $2.50 and $5 in the days before the United States printed paper currency.

Those coins were struck at Mints in New Orleans; Charlotte, N.C.; and Dahlonega, Ga. The Charlotte and Dahlonega Mints operated from 1838, when the first significant U.S. gold deposits were found in those areas, until the start of the Civil War in 1861, said Douglas Mudd, curator of the American Numismatic Association's Money Museum in Denver. Neither reopened.

The Dahlonega Mint produced 1.38 million gold coins, while 1.2 million were minted in Charlotte. Tens of millions of gold coins were minted in the United States before the federal government confiscated those held by individuals, banks and the U.S. Treasury in 1933 and melted them into gold bars as the country abandoned the gold standard.

"Relatively speaking, they are rare," he said of the Charlotte- and Dahlonega-minted coins. "The Mints were set up to take advantage of the resources there."

The treasure also includes $10 gold pieces, known as eagles, that were minted in Philadelphia and New Orleans, Mudd said.

The New York was a 165-foot sidewheel steamer built in its namesake city in 1837. By 1846, it was making regular commercial runs between Galveston, Texas, and New Orleans. Seventeen of the 53 people aboard were killed when the ship sank in the Gulf; the others were rescued.

Four hobbyists who enjoyed looking for sunken vessels discovered what was left of the SS New York around 1990. After making several trips and bringing up a handful of coins at a time from mud that nearly covered the ship, they invested in a full-scale salvage operation in 2007.

"What we've found is varied, a little of everything," said Craig DeRouen, who is on a leave from his job as a mechanical engineer in the oil industry. "There are different denominations from different years, silver and gold."

DeRouen, along with fellow New Iberia residents Avery Munson and Gary and Renee Hebert, have ownership of the coins after obtaining title to the wreck from a federal court.

Mudd said that although the coins are worth much more today because of current gold prices around $900 an ounce, that's only part of their value.

"The collector value may be three, five, eight thousand dollars more, depending upon their condition," he said. "It depends upon the individual piece and its individual rarity."

John Albanese, a rare coin dealer in Far Hills, N.J., since 1978, appraised about 200 of the gold coins. "This is the most impressive Southern-minted gold I've seen in my lifetime," he said.

Mudd said $100,000 might be possible for an exceptional coin, and that $8,000 to $16,000 wouldn't be unusual for a coin in high-grade condition.

"Historically, they are interesting. These are the first coins produced by gold from the United States," he said. "The California gold rush didn't occur until about 1850."

Gold resists saltwater corrosion, and mud that had collected on the coins was removed with a chemical compound that does not affect the metal, Bowers said. The silver coins are etched by the seawater, giving them a "shipwreck effect" that is popular with collectors, he said.


© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by acolton1 May 15, 2008 12:46 PM EDT
BETTER LOOK OUT

Spain is going to file a law suit and try to claim this treasure also.
Reply to this comment
by cfin5 May 15, 2008 11:46 AM EDT
I say that if something like this has been laying in the Ocean for 150 years,.....finders keepers. They earned it!
Reply to this comment

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