🥇 BANNER 1693 HAMMERED SILVER - A PIRATES COIN! (Updated Below)

Silver Tree Chaser

Bronze Member
Aug 12, 2012
1,371
2,993
🥇 Banner finds
8
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I found this small hammered silver coin two weeks ago at an early colonial-period site dating back to the mid-1600’s. Located near Newport, RI, this productive site has offered up an Oak Tree shilling, two Spanish cobs, numerous coppers, buttons, buckles, seal spoon fragments, etc. over the past several years. For finding early colonial-period finds, this site is like Disney World for detectorists.

I was using the new 11” coil on my XP Deus when I got a high-toned signal. It gave a slight but consistent tone, though my machine couldn’t put any numbers to it. I cut and flipped a deep plug. The signal was on the dirt side of the plug. Upon probing the plug, I could discern a silver-like color to something. I was skeptical, but my probe thought otherwise, as it gave a loud signal. I removed a clod of dirt and saw a small hammered silver coin. I could see a design on the coin. I thought it was possibly a Massachusetts Silver two-pence or three-pence coin, but I couldn’t see a tree design. Perhaps it was a Spanish cob? I avoided rubbing dirt off the coin, which can be damaging. I ran to my car for a bottle of water to clean the coin. I ran into the property owner and he came with me back to the hole. I doused the coin with water, and this is what we saw.

P5040043.JPG

P5040045.JPG

Here is the cut plug. The coin can be seen on the top of the plug.

P5040055.JPG

The coin is about the size of a dime and nearly thin as a razor. Here are some photos taken when I got home.

P5040063.JPG

P5040064.JPG

I went on a fruitless search for the identity of this coin for the next week. :BangHead: The writing on the coin is Arabic. I had some thoughts on its origin, where it came from and when, but I wanted a certain and exact identification for the coin before posting it. My first insight on the coin’s true identity, a Khums Kabir coin from Yemen, came from the most unlikely of sources. Although I had never cared for any of those TV treasure hunting shows, I heard from my hunting partner that Diggers on National Geographic had dug a worn fragment of a similar coin (Mystery Coin Episode). They also had found their coin in Newport, which I knew to be no coincidence. There was a reason for all of this in the town’s history. So I watched the episode online. I don’t get the whole tree climbing routine or running around acting half-crazed after digging a worn copper, but they did find a half coin fragment further broken in two pieces that matched my find. More importantly, they correctly identified the fragment as coming from a Khums Kabir coin out of Yemen.

P5250246.JPG

P5250247.JPG

P5260250.JPG

P5260253.JPG

My online search for these specific coins produced only a few results for further follow-up; however, I did find one specialist in Islamic and Indian coins, Steve Album Rare Coins, in California. While speaking with him on the phone, I e-mailed the pictures below, and he read the inscription, with the ease of someone reading the breakfast menu at a local Denny’s.

Here is his reply (cut and pasted):

Yemen
Qasimid dynasty
Muhammad III, AH1098-1130 / 1687-1718, with the title al-Hadi
AR khumasi
Mint of al-Hadra’
Date AH1105 (began on 10 September 1693)Listed in my “Checklist of Islamic Coins” as #1138.

Stephen Album Rare Coins
P.O. Box 7386
Santa Rosa CA 95407, USA

He said that I did well by contacting him, as there were only about two people in the U.S.
who could identify my coin, he being one of them. :notworthy: He stated that my coin was in wonderful condition and had a numismatic value of $100. He added that coins from Yemen are “the most unappreciated coins on the face of the planet.” None of that mattered to me, as I value the coin much more for its provenance and history.

I was hoping for a date of 1693 or earlier. :hello2: In the 1690’s, the American colonies was carrying out brisk trade with each other, the Caribbean Islands, the west coast of Africa for the slave trade, and England, but no one was sailing to the Indian Ocean to trade anywhere near Yemen at the time for many reasons. Yemen is located along the Red Sea and the Arabian Sea with Saudi Arabia located to the North; moreover, it’s found north of the Horn of Africa on the east coast, i.e., the Indian Ocean.

240px-Arabian_Sea_map.png

So how did these coins from Yemen get half a world away to Southern New England in the late 17th Century? While the Diggers TV show provided a much needed identification and mentioned the coin’s long journey from Yemen to New England, I can’t believe what they failed to recognize. They declared that the coin was the first one ever to be found in the United States, which is a doubtful claim, along with a bunch of other hype, and all the ridiculous slang words (sweet nectar, roundness in the hole, etc.). If they had researched how the coin came to Newport from half a world away in the late-17th Century, they could have made a greater and indisputable claim. These 17th Century Yemeni coins came to Newport by only one means - piracy! :skullflag: :skullflag: :skullflag:

Captain Thomas Tew of Newport, RI sailed aboard the sloop Amity from Bermuda with a privateer’s commission to attack French trade off the West Coast of Africa in 1692. Once out to sea, he gathered his men and instead proposed that they turn pirate or “go on the account” and sail for richer waters in the Arabian Sea. He didn’t have to argue the point, as they all readily agreed. They captured only took one ship in late 1693; it was all they needed. It was a rich merchantman belonging to the Great Mogul of India. Masters of intimidation, Tew’s crew took the ship despite there being 300 Indian soldiers aboard for defense. After tearing through the vessel, they hit the jackpot, recovering 100,000 pounds sterling in gold and silver. Every member of his crew earned 1300 -1500 pound sterling on the cruise, while some select crew members made a bit more. After a 22,000 mile cruise and 15 months at sea, they went home and arrived in Newport, RI where gold and silver coins along with plundered trade goods flowed into the local economy for a spending binge on eating, drinking, and carousing. :skullflag: :skullflag: :skullflag:

In this fanciful illustration by artist Howard Pyle from 1894, Thomas Tew offers good company and conversation with the New York’s governor Benjamin Fletcher after returning home from his successful voyage.

Pyle_pirate_tales[1].jpg

While Tew’s fantastic haul of looted gold and silver makes him the most likely suspect on the origins of my coin, there was a mob of other cut-throats, the Pirate Roundsmen, which followed in his wake to the rich shipping routes of the Arabian Sea - Henry “Long Ben” Every, Robert Culliford, and the unfortunate Captain William Kidd. So perhaps my coin came from one of these other pirate voyages, as most of them and their crew had New England connections. Regardless, I firmly believe that the coin I recovered has an absolute and undeniable connection with piracy in the Arabian Sea during the late 1690’s. There was no other source for such coins at this time. I’m surprised that the Diggers show overlooked all this fantastic history.

I apologize for my long, rambling post, but I don’t find a genuine pirate’s coin every day. I wanted to make a convincing case for this latest find, and I appreciate any feedback on the T-Net. More importantly, if anyone has found coins similar to what I recovered, please let me know! Don’t be surprised if someone else posts one of these amazing coins.
Two fragments of these coins were found by members of a local metal detecting club, the Silver City Treasure Seekers in Tauton, MA. Fragmented coins are not surprising, as the cutting and clipping of silver coins was a common practice among thrifty colonists. If you have recovered similar coins along the East Coast, please post a photo. You might have found a 1690’s coin for Yemen. More importantly, you might have a genuine pirate’s coin.:thumbsup:



Good Hunting
 

Last edited:
Upvote 128
Oh that's too funny about the video game. I'm not a gamer as well and I'd much rather look for the real thing and not find it than look for it in a video game! It's all about the hunt! This find has made me realize that any things possible and it out there, you just need to put in the time and research
 

great write up and find of a lifetime!
 

Great find, great research and great reading ! I would love to read more about the coins, Capt'n Every etc.
 

One just never knows what will turn up in the hobby, and the rich history behind it.
 

What an amazing find! I'm voting a second Banner! :laughing7:
SPECTACULAR!

Aureus — I’m all set — one find — one banner is good enough. Kind replies provided here on T-Net offer more than enough encouragement.

There is still so much more to this story. Capt. Joseph Farro of the Portsmouth Adventure sailed to the Red Sea with four other pirate vessels from the American Colonies in late-1694 to early-1695. They all joined company with Henry Every agreeing the share and share alike in the plundering of any rich trade vessels. Henry Every and his crew owing to various circumstances took the lion’s share of the plunder from the Gunsway. Capt. Farro of the Portsmouth Adventure made no captures of rich vessels, yet when Every sailed for the Bahamas to made a getaway, Capt. Farro goes with him. Why? Capt. Farro gave up his command to provide transportation for Every and his fugitive pirate crew to the colonies or all the way back to England for those who didn’t want to start a new life in America. In exchange for his services, Farro and a few select men taken from the Portsmouth Adventure received shares of plunder from the Gunsway. After landing Every off the coast of Ireland in late-June of 1696, Farro sails back to the American Colonies aboard the Sea Flower, a slave ship purchased by the pirates back in the Bahamas to make their next voyage. Their old ship, the Fancy was scuttled, much like bank robbers will burn a getaway car to destroy evidence. Henry Every had purchased slaves in the Mascarene Island (Indian Ocean), to mask their identities by posing as slave traders. The slaves were taken to the Bahamas, reloaded aboard the Sea Flower, and offloaded in Newport. Some of the pirates stayed in Rhode Island with their ill-gotten plunder, including a small portion that would be lost and later recovered by detectorists over three centuries later.

A time line from Every's arrival in the Bahamas to his arrival in England is seen below.

HF.JPG

I haven’t been able to determine what happens to Farro or the fate of the Sea Flower, but I wish to find out more. I even have a possible reference for one of Every’s crew members (William Downs mentioned earlier in this thread) living out the rest of his days in nearby Bristol, RI. I may send PM’s to the super sleuths dream-team :read2::read2::read2: They gave invaluable assistance to Rodgerdodger’s thread (Bottle with Note). Perhaps they might be interested in applying their talents in finding out more. How about it guys? :help:
 

As mentioned in my last post on this thread from December, I mentioned a possible reference for one of Henry Every’s crew members, William Downs, living out the rest of his days in nearby Bristol, RI, after "escaping” from jail. Dedication to good government by the local sheriff is doubtful; he married off his daughter to a pirate that also sailed with Henry Every. William Down's adopted home in Bristol is only 15 miles from Newport, where I recovered the Arabian silver coin from 1693 - a genuine pirate coin from one of the greatest robberies during the Golden Age of Piracy. I've been corresponding with a descendant of William Downs of Bristol, who has come to the same conclusion regarding his ancestor's pirating past. Pirate Downs is the 7th great-grandfather of Scott Fisher, a genealogist and host of Extreme Genes - America's Family History Show. I'll be speaking this weekend on the radio show discussing the arrival of Every’ crew from the pirate ship Fancy in 1696 and the modern recoveries of pirate plunder by detectorists, including fellow members of T-Net. If anyone wants to listen to the show, here’s a link to the show schedule:

http://extremegenes.com/find-us/

It can also be heard on in the internet – I-Tunes, iHeartRadio, etc.

WILLAM DOWNS DISCUSSION ON EXTREME GENES.jpg

For now, good fortune attend ye… Arrggg! :skullflag::blackbeard::skullflag::blackbeard::skullflag:
 

As mentioned in my last post on this thread from December, I mentioned a possible reference for one of Henry Every’s crew members, William Downs, living out the rest of his days in nearby Bristol, RI, after "escaping” from jail. Dedication to good government by the local sheriff is doubtful; he married off his daughter to a pirate that also sailed with Henry Every. William Down's adopted home in Bristol is only 15 miles from Newport, where I recovered the Arabian silver coin from 1693 - a genuine pirate coin from one of the greatest robberies during the Golden Age of Piracy. I've been corresponding with a descendant of William Downs of Bristol, who has come to the same conclusion regarding his ancestor's pirating past. Pirate Downs is the 7th great-grandfather of Scott Fisher, a genealogist and host of Extreme Genes - America's Family History Show. I'll be speaking this weekend on the radio show discussing the arrival of Every’ crew from the pirate ship Fancy in 1696 and the modern recoveries of pirate plunder by detectorists, including fellow members of T-Net. If anyone wants to listen to the show, here’s a link to the show schedule:

http://extremegenes.com/find-us/

It can also be heard on in the internet – I-Tunes, iHeartRadio, etc.

View attachment 1620956

For now, good fortune attend ye… Arrggg! :skullflag::blackbeard::skullflag::blackbeard::skullflag:

Very cool Jim! When will you be on air? I’ll try to tune in. Any chance of me getting my hands on a copy of the colonial news letter that your article is in? I’d gladly pay for it!
 

Very cool Jim! When will you be on air? I’ll try to tune in. Any chance of me getting my hands on a copy of the colonial news letter that your article is in? I’d gladly pay for it!

Ross - For your area, check out WRKO-AM 680 - The Voice of Boston tomorrow from 1pm - 2pm; you can listen to the broadcast online. Check out the link in my last post for other station times, or you can just go to Extreme Genes online on Monday, as the interview will be archived and available. Did you get the electronic copy of the article I sent? Please send me a PM, and we can discuss it.

Also, two more Arabian silver coins have been found in New England since publication of the study a year ago, and one has been positively identified as another comassee coin dating just before Henry Every's capture of the Gunsway off the coast of India. A possible third specimen is seen in a video by Aquachigger (found someone he was detecting in the southeastern US. I need to contact him about it to inform the finder of the coin's history. Screwynewy also found an Red Sea pirate coins down in North Carolina, but that area was beyond the scope of my study and presented a solitary find at the time. Perhaps there are more coins to be found in North Carolina from other pirates returning home after going on the account in the East Indies?
 

The Providence Journal (Rhode Island's largest newspaper) has a detailed story running tomorrow in their Sunday edition on the latest research and additional coin recoveries from 2018. The online format is available now :icon_thumleft::icon_thumleft::icon_thumleft: if anyone is interested in reading up on metal detecting finds connected to one of the greatest robberies in the history of piracy, Henry Every's capture of the Mughal treasure ship Gunsway in 1695. :skullflag::blackbeard::skullflag::blackbeard::skullflag::blackbeard::skullflag:

Here's the link:

https://www.providencejournal.com/news/20190705/pirate-tale-unearthed-by-amateur-historian-from-warwick
 

That's a cool find. It is not uncommon to find ancient foreign coins in the US. Earlier this year I dug a 14th to 15th century silver Germanic coin about 125 miles from where I live. We found Spanish silvers with it and coppers, pus more modern stuff. The year before I found a Spanish half blanca on an old Indian trail, now a paved road. History tells us the Spaniards visited during the last quarter of the 16th century. The blanca was from the reign of Phillip II.

When I was with some guys hunting coastal NJ a couple years ago I found two Roman coins (small ones), and a Spanish city states copper from the 16th century.

Back in 1990 or so I was in Charleston, SC and the guy with me found 2 Roman coins and I found a quarter size Byzantine coin. In the Charleston example, we think a long gone plantation owner collected coins and when the house burned, they were never recovered. Pirates, yes, but also coin collectors and ballast from ships coming back from WWII, especially those coming back from Italy or North Africa. Ships' captains routinely kept souvenir coins from places they had been to. There are lots of ways old stuff gets here. I hadn't heard to the ballast being dumped until about a year ago. In the sand they scooped up, they also picked up the coins.
 

That's a cool find. It is not uncommon to find ancient foreign coins in the US. Earlier this year I dug a 14th to 15th century silver Germanic coin about 125 miles from where I live. We found Spanish silvers with it and coppers, pus more modern stuff. The year before I found a Spanish half blanca on an old Indian trail, now a paved road. History tells us the Spaniards visited during the last quarter of the 16th century. The blanca was from the reign of Phillip II.

When I was with some guys hunting coastal NJ a couple years ago I found two Roman coins (small ones), and a Spanish city states copper from the 16th century.

Back in 1990 or so I was in Charleston, SC and the guy with me found 2 Roman coins and I found a quarter size Byzantine coin. In the Charleston example, we think a long gone plantation owner collected coins and when the house burned, they were never recovered. Pirates, yes, but also coin collectors and ballast from ships coming back from WWII, especially those coming back from Italy or North Africa. Ships' captains routinely kept souvenir coins from places they had been to. There are lots of ways old stuff gets here. I hadn't heard to the ballast being dumped until about a year ago. In the sand they scooped up, they also picked up the coins.

Yes and no. Agreed - there are all sorts of explanations for distant circulation of coins, but the piracy connection to the Arabian coins found in New England over the past several years is beyond all doubt. These coins all traded in Red Sea, where the American Colonies had no trade presence at the time. The majority of the coins came from Yemen, where the Gunsway took aboard its huge load of gold and silver, which was later seized by the King of Pirates, Henry Every. All the coins date through the 17th century, but none of them date after the capture of the Gunsway in 1695. Nearly all he coins were recovered from the context of a 17th century site.
 

Yes and no. Agreed - there are all sorts of explanations for distant circulation of coins, but the piracy connection to the Arabian coins found in New England over the past several years is beyond all doubt. These coins all traded in Red Sea, where the American Colonies had no trade presence at the time. The majority of the coins came from Yemen, where the Gunsway took aboard its huge load of gold and silver, which was later seized by the King of Pirates, Henry Every. All the coins date through the 17th century, but none of them date after the capture of the Gunsway in 1695. Nearly all he coins were recovered from the context of a 17th century site.

Hi Jim, I emailed you about possibly making a connection between William Downs and Wellfleet where I found the coin. Maybe the coin I found once belonged to Downs?
 

Hi Jim, I emailed you about possibly making a connection between William Downs and Wellfleet where I found the coin. Maybe the coin I found once belonged to Downs?

Ross: There's always that possibility, but not much probability. I've checked the numbers more that once and after deducting those who went to Carolinas, Fisher Island (NY), and the Caribbean Islands, there's approximately 37 pirates from the Fancy who settled in the Philadelphia area & New England. One of the coins found last summer was recovered at an archaeological excavation in Glastonbury, CT, which is about 10 miles southeast of Hartford, CT. Well, I recently learned that one of the pirates from the Gunsway heist, mariner Richard Smithsend, later settled and stayed in Glastonbury. He presents a likely source for the Glastonbury coin; however, William Downs remained in Bristol, RI, and never settled on the Cape. Regardless, the coin you found is consistent with all the others as genuine pirate plunder. No one in the American Colonies was trading in the distant Red Sea in the late 17th century. By the way, it appears that this latest coverage in the newspaper has resulted in another reported coin recovery in Deerfield, MA. This will be coin number 14 if identification is consistent with the rest. I'm waiting for the finder to send pictures. .
 

Ross: There's always that possibility, but not much probability. I've checked the numbers more that once and after deducting those who went to Carolinas, Fisher Island (NY), and the Caribbean Islands, there's approximately 37 pirates from the Fancy who settled in the Philadelphia area & New England. One of the coins found last summer was recovered at an archaeological excavation in Glastonbury, CT, which is about 10 miles southeast of Hartford, CT. Well, I recently learned that one of the pirates from the Gunsway heist, mariner Richard Smithsend, later settled and stayed in Glastonbury. He presents a likely source for the Glastonbury coin; however, William Downs remained in Bristol, RI, and never settled on the Cape. Regardless, the coin you found is consistent with all the others as genuine pirate plunder. No one in the American Colonies was trading in the distant Red Sea in the late 17th century. By the way, it appears that this latest coverage in the newspaper has resulted in another reported coin recovery in Deerfield, MA. This will be coin number 14 if identification is consistent with the rest. I'm waiting for the finder to send pictures. .

Good stuff Jim, thanks for your time!
 

amazing! awesome research and story to go along with it! congrats!
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top