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Melvin A. Fisher, President, Treasure Salvors, Inc.
(Photo by Don
Kincaid © 1976)
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The Dream Weaver
By
Joseph B. Maclnnis
KEY WEST September 20, 1985:
MEL
FISHER
has a new
dream. You can see it
in his
eyes. On this particular evening he is outside where he
belongs, in the fresh air, away from the turmoil of
the office, under a pink cloud sky and a sun easing itself
below the western horizon.
Friday evening marks the end
of a long, hard week, and
Mel Fisher and his
staff at Treasure Salvors are hosting a party on the
sun-deck, poolside at the Ocean Key House, in Key West. More
than
200
people who have come
here from as far away as Alaska and California have come for
one reason.
“He would steal the hubcaps
off your car,”
“No one can find treasure
like he can.’ |
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“He’s unscientific. And he
doesn’t give a damn about our heritage”
“He’s given more
opportunities to more people than anyone I know’
What does Fisher think of all
this? It’s hard to tell. To see him moving through this
crowd of well wishers is to see a man at ease. He is one of
them, And they know it. Treasure is in their blood. In each
chest gathered tonight on this sundeck, including a clutch
of visiting scientists, beats the heart of a gold seeker. |
Fisher’s beginnings in the
To see The Man.
To get close to the magic,
maybe even talk to Mel Fisher,
the world’s greatest treasure
finder.
Even close up, Fisher is
like a pointillist painting a man whose outlines are hard to
make out. He is 63 years old and stands six feet, four
inches tall, The soft grey eyes look out at the world
through sun reflecting glasses; a gold doubloon hangs
carelessly around his neck. He walks through the crowd of
admirers, a Benson and Hedges not far from his lips,
smiling, shaking hands, frequently laughing. |

Atocha
gold bars, silver bars, and Columbian emeralds. |
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There is a gentle irony here.
Fisher, who has spent half a lifetime searching for
treasure, has now found so much of it that he has invited
these good people to the first annual “Mel Fisher Treasure
Hunt.” Would you like to play a game? Tucked away somewhere
in the leafy streets of Key West |
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Intricate gold chain.
(Photo by Don Kincaid
© 1976) |
or
buried under its gritty coral or submerged below its blue
waters
—
is a $10,000 Colombian
emerald and a $50,000 Spanish gold bar.
Fisher has a rough, cornhusk
sense of humor. Refreshingly self mocking. In his office is
a note pad with the inscription: “To err is human but it
sure feels great,” In an hour.
during the “official” part of
the evening, he will tell the audience: “It took an act of
Congress to chase the pirates out of Key West and they are
still here.”
Like all individuals who have
outdone themselves, Fisher is aware of his reputation. He
has been glorified and pilloried beyond the boundaries of
logic. Some samples:
“Mel Fisher is a giant, a
living legend” |
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game are now history
lie was born in Indiana. with a rusty spoon in his mouth. He
quickly learned there was no free ride. He also quickly
learned the nuts-and-bolts of entrepreneurship, the
get-in-there-and-get-your-hands-dirty stuff. There was the
SCUBA shop and school in California. The thousands of pieces
of equipment sold and thousands of divers taught. The
underwater films. The travel to faraway places. And the
first sniff of treasure. |
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Bronze astrolabe from the
Atocha's pilot.
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By
1963, Mel Fisher was in Florida and in partnership with the
late Clifford “Kip” Wagner, founder of the treasure hunting
outfit known as Real “8”. For months they dove and divined
the sea-reaches south of Cape Kennedy, peering through thee
masks for the elusive glitter.
Surrounded by friends
and his wife Deo, he dove and he built and he dove and he
schemed and he dove and then one day he hit it a carpet of
gold. Coins, thousands of them, sun hot to the eye, lying on
the sand. So many of them that when he took his wet suit off
and laid it down they covered
every square inch of
it. |
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More important than
finding the gold, he was developing a style. The Fisher
style. Gutsy. Unpredictable. Sometimes outrageous. A
highwire act of bravado and brinkmanship.
In the late
1960’s, Fisher caught the scent of the
Atocha,
perhaps the
richest Spanish treasure galleon to leave the New World for
the Old and sea smashed by a hurricane in
1622.
Fisher moved to the
Florida Keys. For 16 years he ran magnetometer lines and
sandblasted the seafloor. Every day under a blazing sun and
in an ocean that sucks up men’s ambition faster than money
disappears from a wallet, he ran hundreds of thousands of
“mag” lines and blasted away hundreds of thousands of tons
of sand. In his spare time he found investors, raised money,
repaired equipment, eluded creditors, and fought with
archaeologists and state and federal bureaucrats. |
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Diver uncovers gold bars with a hand
blower.
(Photo by Don Kincaid
© 1981)
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He was supported by a
Topsy-like circle of blood relatives, friends, associates
and staff. When things got tough they circled the wagons and
tried to
protect him from the crossfire. “There were times,
‘
say old
friend and Treasure Salvors photographer Don Kincaid, “when
the air was so thick with invective or sadness that it was
hard to breathe.” |
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In
some indescribable way, in some salute to human tenacity,
Mel Fisher and his band have managed to survive. For now the
lean days
—
when there was no
money for fuel and sandwiches, let alone salaries
—
are
over. This evening everyone is walking in sunshine. Two
months ago, on July 20th, they found the “Big Pile”
the “Mother Lode.”
Here is the
mind-numbing calculus of big treasure. Picture a wall of
silver ingots almost as high as a man. Stacked one on top of
the other. A wall six feet thick. Four feet high. Ten feet
long. Inhabited by a family of spiny lobsters on the bottom
of the Gulf of Mexico. |
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On a day that brought
champagne and chaos to his office, the world press to his
door and mist to his eye, Fisher had a neat way of summing
things up. “Lobster and silver bars are in season today.”
Finding the “Main
Pile” has brought a sea change to Mel Fisher’s life. He and
his associates are looking into themselves, trying to gauge
the future, |

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R.
Duncan Mathewson III, Fisher’s salvage archaeologist since
1973, is leading a charge to get a handle on the river— the
flood of information and artifacts streaming up from the
seafloor. Fisher, who is not wedded to conventional ideas
about the usefulness of
higher
education, is supporting him. They have asked a number of
leading archaeologists, including Walter Zacharchuk and John
T Dorwin for help in audit and control. A computer-intensive
program is on the way. |
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Before he leaves the sundeck
and his friends, Mel Fisher separates himself from the crowd
and ambles over to the teak railing that looks out to the
sea. The sun has gone down and the sky is filled with a
radiant pink. Fisher, with his open shirt and tan slacks, is
wearing the uniform not of an administrator but of an
oceangoing muse. Here is the individual, the ‘nan who
struggled for |
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four decades and makes
people believe they can succeed at anything they try.
Fisher takes a deep drag on
his cigarette and fixes his eye on the horizon. He has a new
dream. Now that he’s found his “Big Pile” he wants to get
back to the simple things. Back to where it all started. One
of the ocean’s living legends wants to go diving.
Joe Macinnis is an MD, and underwater explorer who pioneered
scientific diving in the Canadian Arctic. He is a widely
published author on shipwreck discovery and the human quest
for knowledge beneath the sea. |
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Reprinted with
permission from Seafarers,
Journal Of Maritime Heritage Volume 1
An Official Publication of The Atlantic Alliance For
Maritime Heritage Conservation
PO Box 1528
Key West, Florida 33041-1528 |

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|
Gold Rush
Off Cape Cod
A Close-up of the 1717 Pirate Wreck off the Cape Cod
Coast |
The Whydah Is For Real
An Archaeological Assessment |
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Authentic
Atocha Coins
Grade 1
Grade 2
Grade 3
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1969-70 1715 Fleet Salvaging Contracts
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The Treasure Diver's Guide
by John S Potter |
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