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1733 fleet in the hurricane.
Painting courtesy of William Trotter
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On Friday, the thirteenth of July 1733, the New Spain
Fleet left Havana harbor on its return voyage to Spain.
Commanded by Lieutenant-General Rodrigo de Torres aboard
the 60-gun navio, El Rubi, the flota consisted of three
other armed navios, sixteen merchant naos, and two smaller
ships carrying supplies to the Presidio of St. Augustine.
The following day, after the vessels sighted the Florida
Keys, the wind shifted abruptly from the east and
increased in velocity. Lieutenant-General Torres, sensing
an approaching hurricane, ordered his captains to turn
back to Havana and to sail as close to the wind as possible,
but it was too late. By nightfall of the fifteenth,
all or most of the ships had been driven westward and
scattered, sunk, or swamped along eighty miles of the
Florida Keys. Four ships made it safely back to Havana.
Another vessel, the galleon El Africa, managed to sail on to Spain undamaged.
Survivors gathered in small groups throughout
the low islands and built crude shelters from debris
that had washed ashore. Spanish admiralty officials
in Havana, worried about the fate of the fleet, sent
a small sloop to search for wrecks. Before the sloop
could return, another boat arrived in the harbor and
reported seeing many large ships grounded near a place
called "Head of the Martyrs." Immediately, nine rescue vessels loaded with supplies, food, divers, and salvage equipment sailed for the scene of the disaster. Soldiers were on board to protect the shore camps and the recovered cargo.
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A Spanish salvors chart showing
the locations of the 1733 Plate Fleet shipwrecks |
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