User:Sawyerbl/San Jose Y Las Animas/Bibliography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Rough Draft[edit]

History[edit]

This picture is an example of a Spanish Galleon similar to the San Jose y Las Animas

The San Jose y Las Animas was a merchant ship built in England in 1728 for Spain. Being part of the 1733 fleet that consisted of four warships, and eighteen merchant ships. San Jose y Las Animas was a 327-ton merchant ship carrying twenty-six guns and captained by Vristobal Fernando Franco. Leaving the port of Cuba and heading back to Spain, the shop was hit by a hurricane On July 15, 1733, and sinking off the coast of Florida. All crew were accounted for.[1]

Location of the wreck-[edit]

San Jose y Las Animas ran aground off Tavenier Key. The San Jose quickly filled with water as the crew was under the haul of the ship seeking shelter from the storm. The crew had abandoned the ship and made their way to shore on rafts. The San Jose sank in twenty-eight-foot waters making it hard for the crew to recover the items on the ship.


The San Jose was detected by treasure hunters in 1968, buried in the sand[2]. The exact location was 24 degrees North 80 degrees 29.334 W. The treasure hunters used a magnetometer to find the 135' long ballast and roughly 40' wide.[3] Also finding twenty-three cannons and two [4]anchors that were scattered around 200' from the site.[5]

Recovery of items-[edit]

The registered cargo of San Jose carried 30,435 pesos in silver and bullion, Porcelain from China, Brazilwood, Cocoa, and vanilla. The wreck was found by treasure hunter Tom Gurr and backed by the Smithsonian under Mendel Peterson.[6] They used 8-inch airlifts to bring the wreckage up from the sea. Because San Jose y las animas was within three miles of the coast, Florida wanted to enforce a 25 percent finders fee on the treasure that Tom Gurr and his crew had found. Florida stated that the wreck was a historic site state in the Florida Constitution of 1865. The case went on for years until the court sided with the state. Gurr was ordered to return what he had recovered from the wreck. Tom Gurr stated that he threw back 50,000 to 100,000 dollars' worth of bullion back at the site of the wreck making the state of Florida press charges of Grand Larceny on Gurr since a percentage of the wreck was theirs.[7] The state eventually found the coins that were still marked as registered by the state and the overseers of the project.[8]

Further Resource[edit]

YouTube video of Tom Gurr as he is returning the artifacts back to the ocean









You will be compiling your bibliography and creating an outline of the changes you will make in this sandbox.


Bibliography[edit]

Recovery of Items

Logan, P. A. (1977). The San Jose y las Animas: an analysis of the ceramic collection (Doctoral dissertation). he San Jose y las Animas: an analysis of the ceramic collection[6]

  Maiólica cups or pocillos from 1733 found on the San José y Las Anímas.[9].. | Download Scientific Diagram (researchgate.net)

1733-fleet-aw.pdf (mdhtalk.org)[10]

History

Making the Exotic Mundane: The Manila Galleon, the Flota, and Globalization [11]| SpringerLink

Discovering the Wreck

Skowronek, R. K. (2021). Making the Exotic Mundane: The Manila Galleon, The Flota, and Globalization. The Archaeology of Manila Galleons in the American Continent:[2] The Wrecks of Baja California, San Agustín, and Santo Cristo de Burgos (Oregon), 7-24.

Intellectual treasure hunting: Measuring effects of treasure salvors on Spanish colonial shipwreck sites - [4]ProQuest

Price, M. R. (2016). Intellectual treasure hunting: Measuring effects of treasure salvors on Spanish colonial shipwreck sites. [3]East Carolina University.

Rescates and Anglo-Spanish Trade in the Caribbean during the French Revolutionary Wars, ca. 1797–1804 [5]| Journal of Latin American Studies | Cambridge Core

Pearce, A. J. (2006). Rescates and Anglo-Spanish Trade in the Caribbean during the French Revolutionary Wars, ca. 1797–1804[12]. Journal of Latin American Studies, 38(3), 607-624.

Location of the Shipwreck

Skowronek, R. K. (2021). Making the Exotic Mundane: The Manila Galleon, The Flota, and Globalization. The Archaeology of Manila Galleons in the American Continent:[2] The Wrecks of Baja California, San Agustín, and Santo Cristo de Burgos (Oregon), 7-24.

Intellectual treasure hunting: Measuring effects of treasure salvors on Spanish colonial shipwreck sites - [4]ProQuest

Price, M. R. (2016). Intellectual treasure hunting: Measuring effects of treasure salvors on Spanish colonial shipwreck sites. [3]East Carolina University.

Rescates and Anglo-Spanish Trade in the Caribbean during the French Revolutionary Wars, ca. 1797–1804 [5]| Journal of Latin American Studies | Cambridge Core

Pearce, A. J. (2006). Rescates and Anglo-Spanish Trade in the Caribbean during the French Revolutionary Wars, ca. 1797–1804[12]. Journal of Latin American Studies, 38(3), 607-624.

Who found the Shipwreck

san jose - Newspapers.com[8]

STATE OF FLORIDA VS GURR, JOEL THOMAS[7] (unicourt.com)

References[edit]

  1. ^ Allen, Tony (March 2010). "Wrecksite San Jose Y las animas".
  2. ^ a b c Skowronek, Russell K. (2021), "Making the Exotic Mundane: The Manila Galleon, the Flota, and Globalization", SpringerBriefs in Archaeology, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 7–24, ISBN 978-3-030-71523-6, retrieved 2023-09-14
  3. ^ a b c Buscaglia, S; Alberti, J.; Álvarez, M (2016-04-28). "Techno-Morphological and Use-Wear Analyses of Gunflints from Two Spanish Colonial Sites (Patagonia, Argentina)". Archaeometry. 58: 230–245. doi:10.1111/arcm.12237. ISSN 0003-813X.
  4. ^ a b c Buscaglia, S; Alberti, J.; Álvarez, M (2016-04-28). "Techno-Morphological and Use-Wear Analyses of Gunflints from Two Spanish Colonial Sites (Patagonia, Argentina)". Archaeometry. 58: 230–245. doi:10.1111/arcm.12237. ISSN 0003-813X.
  5. ^ a b c PEARCE, ADRIAN J. (2006-07-19). "Rescates and Anglo-Spanish Trade in the Caribbean during the French Revolutionary Wars, ca. 1797–1804". Journal of Latin American Studies. 38 (3): 607–624. doi:10.1017/s0022216x06001180. ISSN 0022-216X.
  6. ^ a b Logan, Patricia (1977). "The San Jose Y las Animas: An analysis of the ceramic collection".
  7. ^ a b Mincheva, Lyubov; Gurr, Ted Robert (2013-01-03). Crime-Terror Alliances and the State. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-13211-8.
  8. ^ a b Arabit, Luis; Lira, Leonard; Johnston, Jennifer; Anastasovitou, Lina; Ma-Kellams, Christine; Hambrook, Kyle; Tivana, Ravneet; Tsau, Theodore (2023-03-09). "The Perceived Impact of Faculty-in-Residence Programs on Faculty Development". Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice. 20 (3). doi:10.53761/1.20.3.06. ISSN 1449-9789.
  9. ^ "Supplementum Epigraphicum GraecumAthens. Inscribed cups found in Rhodes". Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum. Retrieved 2023-09-14.
  10. ^ Levleva, E. V.; Mosolov, V. V. (1975). "[Properties of immobilized trypsin and alpha-chymotrypsin and their use for purification of proteinase inhibitors from potatoes]". Prikladnaia Biokhimiia I Mikrobiologiia. 11 (3): 427–432. ISSN 0555-1099. PMID 1733.
  11. ^ Skowronek, Russell K. (2021), "Making the Exotic Mundane: The Manila Galleon, the Flota, and Globalization", SpringerBriefs in Archaeology, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 7–24, ISBN 978-3-030-71523-6, retrieved 2023-09-14
  12. ^ a b PEARCE, ADRIAN J. (2006-07-19). "Rescates and Anglo-Spanish Trade in the Caribbean during the French Revolutionary Wars, ca. 1797–1804". Journal of Latin American Studies. 38 (3): 607–624. doi:10.1017/s0022216x06001180. ISSN 0022-216X.

Related Pages:

Florida Canal Yields Treasure Diver Said He Dumped in Ocean - The New York Times