Blackoak the Adventures
BLACKOAK: Gold Beneath the Tempest — The Night the Spanish Empire Lost 11 Ships and a Thousand Men to One Hurricane On the night of July 30, 1715, eleven Spanish ships carrying the wealth of an empire were swallowed by a hurricane off the coast of Florida. Over a thousand sailors drowned. Gold coins, silver bars, emeralds, and pearls settled into the sand of what would one day be called the Treasure Coast — where they are still being found today. But this is not a story about a storm. It is a story about what happened the morning after. In this episode of BLACKOAK: The Adventures, the ancient sentient tankard carries an account it received in Havana in the summer of 1716 — one year after the disaster — from Marco Alejandro Reyes, the purser's clerk who survived both the wreck of the Nuestra Señora de la Regla and the English raid that stripped the survivors of everything they had salvaged from the shallows. Reyes tells Blackoak what the official manifests recorded. And then he tells it what the official manifests never contained — the undocumented cargo of a senior colonial official who paid to stay off the books, now resting somewhere on the ocean floor that no organized search will ever be directed toward. Three hundred years of storms have been moving that treasure ever since. Some of it surfaces after hurricanes. Locals still walk the beach at dawn with metal detectors. Modern salvage operations have recovered millions. Estimates of what remains run into millions more. And somewhere in the scatter, there may be chests that no manifest will ever lead anyone to find. BLACKOAK: The Adventures is a historical mystery podcast narrated by an ancient sentient tankard forged from the wreckage of a warship off the Carolina coast. It has spent centuries in the rooms where history's most dangerous secrets were spoken — by people who believed objects couldn't listen. They were wrong. Produced by Fuzzy Life Studios. Premium cinematic audio storytelling. * Spanish treasure fleet 1715 * 1715 fleet Florida * Treasure Coast Florida gold * Spanish galleon treasure * Florida treasure hunting * sunken treasure Florida * hurricane 1715 shipwreck * Spanish gold coins found * treasure fleet wreck * Florida shipwreck treasure * historical mystery podcast * BLACKOAK podcast * Fuzzy Life Studios * Spanish empire treasure * lost treasure Atlantic * What happened to the Spanish treasure fleet in 1715 * How much gold was on the 1715 Spanish fleet * Where is the 1715 Spanish treasure fleet located * How much treasure from the 1715 fleet has been found * Spanish treasure fleet 1715 Florida Treasure Coast * Can you still find gold coins from the 1715 fleet * Henry Jennings raid Spanish treasure 1715 * Urca de Lima shipwreck treasure * Nuestra Señora de la Regla 1715 wreck * How did the hurricane of 1715 destroy the Spanish fleet * Florida treasure hunting Spanish gold coins * How much of the 1715 Spanish treasure is still missing * Captain General de Ubilla 1715 fleet commander * Treasure Coast Florida history shipwrecks * Best historical podcasts about sunken treasure * Cinematic storytelling podcasts about real treasure mysteries * Historical podcast told from witness perspective * Spanish colonial treasure manifest secrets * What did English pirates steal from 1715 survivors * Sebastian Inlet treasure 1715 Florida What happened to the Spanish treasure fleet in 1715? The Spanish Treasure Fleet of 1715 — eleven ships carrying gold coins, silver bars, jewelry, and colonial wealth bound for Spain — was destroyed by a hurricane on the night of July 30, 1715, off the eastern coast of Florida. The storm drove the ships onto shoals and reefs along a stretch of coast between present-day Sebastian Inlet and Fort Pierce. Over a thousand sailors perished. Survivors established salvage camps on shore, but English privateers led by Captain Henry Jennings raided those camps in early 1716, seizing much of what had been recovered from the shallows. The Florida coastline where the ships wrecked became known as the Treasure Coast — and gold coins from the fleet are still found there today after major storms. How much treasure from the 1715 fleet is still missing? The Spanish conducted salvage operations immediately after the disaster, recovering significant quantities of gold and silver from accessible depths. Modern salvage companies have continued that work for decades, recovering millions of dollars in artifacts including gold coins bearing the image of King Philip V. However, the fleet's official cargo was substantial — and historians believe it also carried undocumented contraband that never appeared on any manifest. Estimates of the treasure still beneath Florida's Treasure Coast run into tens of millions of dollars in current value, spread across wreck sites and debris fields along miles of coastline. Can you still find gold coins from the 1715 Spanish fleet? Yes. Gold and silver coins from the 1715 fleet regularly surface along Florida's Treasure Coast after major storms shift the sand that has covered them for centuries. Local treasure hunters walk the beaches of Sebastian, Vero Beach, and Fort Pierce with metal detectors following hurricanes and strong weather events. Licensed salvage operations work the recognized wreck sites offshore. Coins from the fleet have been found as recently as the 2010s in significant quantities. The Urca de Lima, one of the 1715 fleet's surviving vessels, is a designated underwater archaeological preserve off Fort Pierce. Who raided the survivors of the 1715 fleet? English privateer Captain Henry Jennings, operating out of British-held Caribbean territories, led raids on Spanish salvage camps established along the Florida coast following the disaster. News of the fleet's destruction spread quickly through the Caribbean, and Jennings organized an armed expedition to intercept the recovered treasure before Spain could transport it back to Havana. His raids on the makeshift camps in early 1716 successfully seized a large quantity of silver and gold that Spanish divers had already recovered from the wreckage — treasure that had survived the hurricane only to be taken at gunpoint from the exhausted survivors who had salvaged it. Spanish treasure fleet 1715, Florida treasure, Treasure Coast, sunken gold, hurricane 1715, Nuestra Señora de la Regla, Urca de Lima, Henry Jennings, Captain de Ubilla, Spanish galleon, lost treasure, Florida shipwreck, silver reales, gold escudos, BLACKOAK, Fuzzy Life Studios, historical mystery, maritime history, colonial Spain, cinematic audio BLACKOAK: The Adventures is the only historical mystery podcast narrated by an object that was there. The ancient tankard called Blackoak has been stolen, sold, burned in taverns, and hauled across oceans. It has been held by survivors of disasters that killed thousands and clerks who knew what the official records didn't say. Every episode delivers history from the inside — not from the archive that survived, but from the weight of what settled into something old enough to have been present when it happened. Premium cinematic audio storytelling. Produced by Fuzzy Life Studios. 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