An extraordinary collection of shipwrecked 17th and 18th century Spanish treasure discovered off the coast of Florida has sold in New York for about $2m.



US treasure hunter Mel Fisher was most famous for discovering the shipwrecked Spanish galleon Nuestra Senora de Atocha, which went down in a hurricane in 1622, laden with new world riches.

The auction house in Guernsey sold an emerald ring from the Spanish galleon Nuestra Senora de Atocha, her sister ship Santa Margarita and a fleet which sank in 1715. Photograph: The Rosen Group

To mark the 30th anniversary of his find, auction house Guernsey’s offered up nearly 40 items retrieved from the Atocha, her sister ship Santa Margarita and a fleet which sank in 1715.

An exquisite gold chalice from the Margarita was the top selling lot, fetching $413,000 at Wednesday sale, Guernsey’s said.

An emerald-encrusted crucifix from the 1715 fleet went for $119,000 and a gold bar from the Atocha for $93,750.

An emerald cross from the Spanish treasure found on a shipwrecked boat from 1715. Photograph: The Rosen Group

No information on the buyers was immediately available.

Guernsey’s said the total value of all items sold was “around $2m” in keeping with pre-sale estimates.

The Atocha was laden down with riches from the new world and headed back to Spain when it sailed straight into a hurricane.

The vessel went down with 265 people on board, of whom only five survived. It was the most famous boat of at least eight in the Spanish flotilla that sank during the storm.

After a painstaking search taking more than 15 years, Fisher located the wreckage on 20 July 1985, recovering $450m worth of treasure.

A gold frame from a Spanish treasure from the 17th century is on display at Guernsey’s in New York. Photograph: Don Emmert/AFP/Getty Images

He discovered more than $20m worth of gold and other riches of the Santa Margarita in 1980.

The shipwrecked 1715 fleet cost the lives of more than 700 sailors and lost more than 14m pesos in registered treasure, according to Fisher’s website.

The items sold on Wednesday had been the favorite pieces of Mel and wife Dolores, their daughter Taffi Fisher-Abt told AFP.

“It’s going to be kind of a bittersweet ordeal,” she said. “It’s time to let these pieces go,” she said.

A gold spoon from a Spanish treasure from the 17th century is on display at Guernsey’s in New York. Photograph: Don Emmert/AFP/Getty Images

Other unique treasure from the Fisher collection is on display at museums in Florida and have been donated to other museums across the US.

Fisher, who served with the US army in second world war, started dreaming of treasure when he read Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island as a child.

He died in 1998 and his wife Dolores passed away in 2009.