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My Story:  submitted by - Tom Gidus of Sebastian, Florida

My Story:  submitted by - Christopher Shean, Florida


An underwater explorer with more than 25 years diving experience, Oviedo resident Tom Gidus is on the hunt for the queen’s jewels, and he’s more than ready to set sail. After six months of meticulous preparation, Gidus leaves next week on a romantic quest to find the lost Spanish treasure.

According to historical documents, Queen Isabella Farnese of Parma, the bride of King Philip V of Spain, refused to consummate their marriage until he presented her with New World jewelry. In response, the king ordered eight now-legendary chests of spectacular jewels, such as a 74-carat emerald ring and a rosary of pure coral, to be brought to her.

Unfortunately, they never made it. The treasure, along with 11 Spanish galleons and more than 700 men, was lost during a treacherous storm off the coast of Sebastian in 1715. It is believed that the galleons hit a series of three reefs, which tore open their hulls. It is estimated the Spanish were only able to salvage 30 percent of the lost valuables.

Despite the fact that hundreds of thousands of silver coins have been recovered by divers in the past 45 years, according to Gidus, the large quantity of gold coins and the queen’s jewels stored on the Capitana, the flagship of the 1715 Spanish Plate Fleet, have not been found. “I think the chances [of finding them] are fantastic,” Gidus said with a smile.

Gidus quit his corporate job a year ago to commit himself to underwater salvage full-time and said he couldn’t be happier with his decision. Now he can dedicate himself to his real passion - to uncover and solve the mysteries of maritime history. A self-described “weekend warrior,” he previously spent weekends and all his vacation time scouting Florida waters for treasure.

Thirteen years ago, Gidus started his own historic shipwreck and recovery company in Oviedo called Wreckovery Salvage, diving for famed treasure hunter Mel Fisher. Gidus conducts maritime historical research, maintains an extensive Florida shipwreck database and preserves artifacts.

He isn’t a diver merely for the money, he said, but rather for the thrill of discovery and historical preservation. He likens himself to Nicholas Cage’s character in the movie National Treasure - except his searches are underwater.

Gidus has also worked as a consultant since 1988 for Historical Research and Development, Inc. in Altamonte Springs, where he was instrumental in mapping and exploring an 18th century shipwreck and a submerged World War II aircraft in the company’s lease area off Vero Beach.

Shipwrecks, Gidus said, are different from other archeological sites where merely the items people have left behind or discarded are uncovered. “A shipwreck is a time capsule that went down at a very specific period in time, and everything on board describes life at that time,” he said. Recovering the treasure, Gidus added, “gives us a lot of clues into our past, and that’s why we make sure everything we do is in a good archeological manner. I have a preservation laboratory, we photograph [the artifacts], we document them [and] we make them available to other people for research.”

Through the years, Gidus has recovered jewelry, cannonballs, pottery, a 300-year-old hand grenade, rum bottles, silver coins and shoe buckles. “I found a human arm bone under a plank; there is not much wood [that hasn’t deteriorated], so it was unusual to find both. It was buried under about eight feet of sand - things that deep are often preserved.”

Gidus is particularly anxious to recover the missing treasure from 1715 Plate Fleet, because ultimately these historical links to the past will be destroyed. According to Gidus, there is very little wood to salvage from the ship itself because “the teredo worms [a mollusk that feeds on organic matter] almost immediately begin to eat away at the wood. That is why their ships were so leaky and in bad repair all the time.”

Anything metal is also at risk for corrosion, he explained. Gold, on the other hand, is a very noble metal because it doesn’t corrode. “It is just as shiny the day you find it as it was when it went down 300 years ago.” Iron can turn to iron oxide and rust, and silver can turn to silver sulfide and deteriorate.

Gidus will go to just about any length to salvage artifacts - even when sharks are lurking. “The closest encounter I had was with a Bull shark. I had received a ‘hit’ on my metal detector and was so engrossed that I didn’t notice an eight-foot shark had moved within uncomfortably close range. I refused to leave, however, until I had retrieved the artifact, which turned out to be an 8 Reale [silver] coin.”

While most Florida residents still cringe when they recall the hurricanes that plagued the state last summer, Gidus looks back on the storms as an opportunity of lifetime. When the two hurricanes battered the Treasure Coast, historical artifacts were probably uncovered naturally, he explained. “It’s going to be a good year,” he said. Most salvaged items are found in less than 30 feet of water. Gidus also anticipates a successful recovery effort this summer due to rapid changes in technology and the tremendous research he has dedicated to this upcoming expedition.

With the changes in mapping technology, Gidus can easily eliminate areas that have already been worked. “You can get a very detailed computerized map of everything that has been located at this site - from about the mid-’80s.”

Gidus, and his partner and financial backer Jay Miscovitch, will also take advantage of advanced satellite navigation that can guide them within three feet of any destination they mark. “We can keep returning to the same spot every single day - it has that type of accuracy,” he said. They’ll pack that technology onto a 32-foot boat built specifically for treasure salvage.

Historical research has recently revealed, according to Gidus, that while one of the ships from the 1715 fleet was being driven onto the reef by the storm, the crew tried to lighten the ship by throwing boxes of cargo and silver coins overboard. “That indicated to us there is a quantity of treasure out in deeper water,” he said.

Gidus donates 20 percent of his recoveries to the state and many of his artifacts can be seen at museums in Tallahassee and Sebastian. “Florida has very strict archeological guidelines, so a lot of people have the misconception that we are out there destroying reefs and taking the treasure like we are a bunch of pirates,” he said. “But we have strict guidelines we have to follow. When we are out there we have to keep field notes to record everything we find and where we find it - everything has to be tagged.”

Gidus said one of his most extraordinary discoveries was the striking gold ring with five dark emeralds recovered from the site known as Corrigan’s Wreck, in 1994. That same afternoon, also off Vero Beach, he found two other rings and a pair of gold studded earrings. “That was about a $150,000 haul in one afternoon,” he said.

When he uncovered the emerald ring, “there was this sense that I was seeing something for the first time that was [nearly] 300 years old, and I thought, ‘Wow, everything I had worked so hard for had paid off.’” Beyond its value, Gidus admires the craftsmanship and the detail in the jewelry - and imagines the skills required to create such a piece.

Most of the artifacts he uncovers are kept in his personal collection. He uses them in presentations to local groups, such as metal detector clubs and coin clubs.

Gidus also visits schools and said children in particular love to learn about shipwrecks and treasure. “Kids are the best and ask all the great questions - they are so curious. I still have all the nice thank-you notes they write me - they are fantastic.”

Gidus has passed on his passion for historical preservation to his five children, aged nine to 17. Each has been involved in some way with his work, he said with pride. Most recently, his two youngest children, Danny, 9, and Faye, 11, accompanied him to the educational presentation he gave for the Sanford Historical Society. The children shot photographs and video for their father and helped show off the artifacts.

Gidus added that he has taught daughter Lauren to dive, “the same way my brothers taught me to dive. She has already been out on the wreck site,” he said.

Lauren added, “This is a very cool opportunity for someone my age - to get involved in my dad’s work - exploring shipwrecks and recovering history. I don’t know of any other 14-year-old girls putting on scuba gear and a metal detector and diving for sunken treasure this summer.”

Her father couldn’t agree more.

It is most rewarding, Gidus said, “being paid for what I love to do. To be out on the ocean all day, diving, looking for history and putting together the pieces of the puzzle and unlocking mysteries. It has taken me a long time to get there - and I am very excited about it.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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I have a story to tell you. When I was 23 years old, I met Dom at the Jupiter Hilton (early 1990's). I was so excited when he let me snorkel up to the cannons under water, that I later went to his shop in the hotel.  He told me this story about loosing his graduation ring and offered me a metal detector and an underwater scooter to go see if I could find it.  Well I did not have any luck - many lead weights and pop cans. I had to return his equipment and was left empty handed. But, since that day, I have had the bug if you want to call it a bug. It's not really bugging me. It's more like a quest. This leads me to why I'm writing.

I found something of interest in the area and want to start the salvage process  I’m working on a permit for discovery. We are really short on salvage gear. How did you get this off the ground?  Looking for a boat with blowers or having to construct them. Can I rent this sort of thing?  Any help would be appreciated. Dom, thanks for lighting that adventurous spark in me, I was hoping I could tell you I found his ring, but still have not by now its under 10 ft of beach sand  Go PBC…..(Palm Beach County - sand moving business)

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