The Treasure of the Falkland Islands

M. A. Nazario

Jr. Member
Jun 13, 2021
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Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
On April 2, 1863 the sloop Francis Palmer departed San Francisco with an empty hull, eager to fill it with gold and treasure.
Aboard the ship was a Dane named Wagener, on whom the small expedition depended. In the year 1853, he was on the Falkland Islands, probably engaged in the sealing trade. It was there he became acquainted with 42 year-old Copenhagen native John Johnson; though to his fellow sealers, he was called Pirate Johnson.
According to the official censuses, Johnson had been the only Dane on the islands for years. He would have found a fast friend and confidant in Wagener, the only countryman he could converse with in his native language. He revealed that he had been on a pirate vessel as a boy, and that he had helped to bury a treasure in a vault in the Falklands about 20 miles from Port Stanley. Whilst the ship was laying off the island, a Spanish man-of-war arrived; and as the pirates aboard attempted to escape, the frigate fired upon them and sank it with all hands.* How Johnson managed to become the only member of the shore party to survive with the secret was not told to Wagener, however, the pirate was adamant that he was the sole carrier of the information. He then gave Wagener the particulars of the location, intending that the younger man do the work in retrieving it, for which he would receive a portion of the proceeds.
Wagener chartered a small sloop and two hands. When they anchored in Berkeley Sound, he treated the seamen with a copious amount of alcohol and bade them to celebrate a job well done. The sailors drank in excess and became stupendously drunk, at which point Wagener felt he was safe to conduct his search. He drew the two men ashore and left them there to sleep off their revelry. With a pick and a shovel he followed Pirate Johnson’s directions, when he dug a shallow hole in the peat. The old pirate’s tale was true; the vault and its treasures were so abundant that he could not remove them by himself, and with so little time. Accordingly he returned to Port Stanley with the intention of proceeding again to the treasure with such assistance as could enable him to retrieve it, but that he was so closely watched by the authorities that he was unable to return.
On October 30 of that same year, Pirate Johnson died of alcohol poisoning. Whether his demise was self-inflicted or a deliberate act by Wagener will forever remain a mystery; but it is possible that the glint of gold was more exciting than the bond they shared. Before his death, Johnson told Wagener that if he did perish, that the secret should not be disclosed to the government or any other persons, except for his daughter, to whom his portion of the treasure was to go. Johnson’s Welsh widow Jane Herkes repeatedly entreated Wagener for the secret of the location, which the Dane would not disclose to her, seeing that her own husband had kept the particulars a secret from her. She then reported the treasure to the authorities at Port Stanley, and as a consequence Wagener shipped out of the port as a seaman.
He soon found himself in San Francisco, where he had friends among his fellow whalers. He made it known, through certain channels, that he was the sole living possessor of the secret to a hidden fortune, and that he was looking to lead an expedition to retrieve it. He had told his story to three or four different parties until he settled on the terms offered by the company which had chartered the whaler Francis Palmer. He hid inside the vessel until it shipped out, ostensibly for Valparaiso.
But Wagener was not so quiet that the British Consulate at San Francisco received the particulars of his story. Considering that treasure, if it existed, belonged to the Crown, they sent word of the Francis Palmer’s illegal treasure-hunt to the authorities at Port Stanley. Thus the ship returned to San Francisco in December, empty-handed. A second expedition supposedly departed the next month, likely with Wagener aboard. Whether or not this one succeeded is not known, as there is no further mention of it in the historical record.
Census records and the endorsements of prominent figures within the British Consulate corroborate the veracity of this legend. A settlement in Berkeley Sound, near the site of Wagener's search, is named Johnson’s Harbour after the pirate.

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Thanks for the story. I love these pirate yarns. some will be legends some will have more truth to them.


I do not know enough of the story to comment on. But definitely worth researching a little further?


Crow
 

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In March 1820, HeroĂ­na, a privately owned frigate that was operated as a privateer under a license issued by the United Provinces of the River Plate, under the command of American Colonel David Jewett, set sail looking to capture Spanish ships as prizes. He captured Carlota, a Portuguese ship, which was considered an act of piracy. A storm resulted in severe damage to HeroĂ­na and sank the prize Carlota, forcing Jewett to put into Puerto Soledad for repairs in October 1820.

Captain Jewett sought assistance from the British explorer James Weddell. Weddell reported the letter he received from Jewett as:[24]

Sir, I have the honor of informing you that I have arrived in this port with a commission from the Supreme Government of the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata to take possession of these islands on behalf of the country to which they belong by Natural Law. While carrying out this mission I want to do so with all the courtesy and respect all friendly nations; one of the objectives of my mission is to prevent the destruction of resources necessary for all ships passing by and forced to cast anchor here, as well as to help them to obtain the necessary supplies, with minimum expenses and inconvenience. Since your presence here is not in competition with these purposes and in the belief that a personal meeting will be fruitful for both of us, I invite you to come aboard, where you'll be welcomed to stay as long as you wish; I would also greatly appreciate your extending this invitation to any other British subject found in the vicinity; I am, respectfully yours. Signed, Jewett, Colonel of the Navy of the United Provinces of South America and commander of the frigat HeroĂ­na.

Many modern authors report this letter as representing the declaration issued by Jewett.

Jewett's ship received Weddell's assistance in obtaining anchorage off Port Louis. Weddell reported only 30 seamen and 40 soldiers fit for duty out of a crew of 200, and how Jewett slept with pistols over his head following an attempted mutiny earlier in the voyage. On 6 November 1820, Jewett raised the flag of the United Provinces of the River Plate (a predecessor of modern-day Argentina) and claimed possession of the islands. In the words of Weddell, "In a few days, he took formal possession of these islands for the patriot government of Buenos Ayres, read a declaration under their colours, planted on a port in ruins, and fired a salute of twenty-one guns."[26]

Jewett departed from the Falkland Islands in April 1821. In total he had spent no more than six months on the island, entirely at Port Louis. In 1822, Jewett was accused of piracy by a Portuguese court, but by that time he was in Brazil.

In March 1820, HeroĂ­na, a privately owned frigate that was operated as a privateer under a license issued by the United Provinces of the River Plate, under the command of American Colonel David Jewett, set sail looking to capture Spanish ships as prizes. He captured Carlota, a Portuguese ship, which was considered an act of piracy. A storm resulted in severe damage to HeroĂ­na and sank the prize Carlota, forcing Jewett to put into Puerto Soledad for repairs in October 1820.

Captain Jewett sought assistance from the British explorer James Weddell. Weddell reported the letter he received from Jewett as:[24]

Sir, I have the honor of informing you that I have arrived in this port with a commission from the Supreme Government of the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata to take possession of these islands on behalf of the country to which they belong by Natural Law. While carrying out this mission I want to do so with all the courtesy and respect all friendly nations; one of the objectives of my mission is to prevent the destruction of resources necessary for all ships passing by and forced to cast anchor here, as well as to help them to obtain the necessary supplies, with minimum expenses and inconvenience. Since your presence here is not in competition with these purposes and in the belief that a personal meeting will be fruitful for both of us, I invite you to come aboard, where you'll be welcomed to stay as long as you wish; I would also greatly appreciate your extending this invitation to any other British subject found in the vicinity; I am, respectfully yours. Signed, Jewett, Colonel of the Navy of the United Provinces of South America and commander of the frigate

 

Francis Palmer 1.JPG

Stockton Independent [Stockton, Calif.],​

Volume IV, Number 52, 2 April 1863​


San Francisco, of course, was no stranger to treasure hunts. That's what the Gold Rush was all about. Later, The City was the site for several excursions to Cocos Island.

However, any treasure hunting venture announced in the local newspaper is off to a bad start.

Good luck to all,

The Old Bookaroo
 

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Not very secret...

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Sacramento Daily Union [Sacramento, Calif.]

Volume 26, Number 3921, 15 October 1863

 

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Thank you Bookaroo and Crow for your combined research. Interestingly, the Frances Palmer was involved in another treasure story, the wreck of the Julia Ann which sunk off Scilly Island the South Pacific with ~ÂŁ15,000 of gold (part of which was later recovered and buried on Manihiki and Suwarrow). The Frances Palmer transported some of the survivors from Honolulu to San Francisco.
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Hello Bookaroo

I think this is the vessel below.

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Crow
Thank you, Crow! A beautiful ship.

Daily Alta California [San Francisco, Calif.]

Volume 22, Number 7459, 23 August 1870


Good luck to all,

The Old Bookaroo

 

I took a look at the letter from the British Consulate, found in the archives at Kew. Here are the interesting bits. The rest is postulation on which governmental body will oversee the treasure if it is found.


“My Lord,

I have the honor to enclose a copy of Declarations made before me, relative to a large amount of treasure said to be buried on one of the group of the Falkland Islands, and the departure of the American Barque “Frances Palmer” in search of it. The Barque, which is a fast sailer, left the port yesterday morning having cleared for Valparaiso, but I am satisfied the Statement in the Declaration as to her destination is correct…

It appears three or four different parties got the information from Wagener, and all intended to send an expedition, so satisfied were they of the truth of the story, but the Company who chartered the “Frances Palmer” got hold of Wagener, and concealed him until the vessel was ready for sea. The Barque sailed yesterday, and I suppose he is in her. I have been shown a letter, written by a man in Victoria, corroborative in some measure of the Statements of Wagener, inasmuch as the Writer tells his friend here that a man had just arrived there from Falkland Islands who was married to a daughter of the late Johnson, and he told the writer that he had often heard his Mother in law speak of the buried Treasure, and said that her husband had told a Dane the Secret but that the Authorities had watched him so closely that he finally left the Island and never returned. Wagener, I am told, accounts for not having before divulged the secret, by stating that he hoped to have made money enough to fit out an expedition of his own…

We James Mander, Frank Gell, William Hanfod & Michel Burke, all residents of this City of San Francisco do solemnly and sincerely declare that a man named Wagener a Dane, has made statements at different times to us, of which the following comprise the main facts.
That said Wagener in or about the year 1853 was in the Falkland Islands, that whilst there he was acquainted with a man named Johnson, known as "Pirate Johnson,” that said Johnson told him in sheer confidence that he had been on board a Pirate Vessel when a boy, that the treasure taken by the Pirate was deposited in a vault in one of the Group of the Falkland Islands about 40 miles from Port Stanley – that at the instance of the said Johnson he went to the place designated by Johnson in a small sloop – that according to Johnson's directions he made the two men who accompanied him as seamen in said sloop, drunk, and having put them ashore near the place where the money was stated to be buried, he proceeded alone to the place with a pick and shovel, and that he dug a shallow hole in the peat, and discovered the vault, but found he could not remove the treasure alone, that he accordingly returned to Port Stanley with the intention of proceeding again to the Treasure with such assistance as could enable him to retrieve it, but that he was so closely watched by the Authorities at Port Stanley that he was unable [s-en-e-ey] to return – that soon afterwards Johnson died, but before his death, he made said Wagener declare that he would not disclose the secret to the Government and that if he secured the Treasure, he would give a large potion of it to his, said Johnson's daughter – that the widow of said Johnson made a report to the Authorities at Port Stanley about the Treasune, on finding that said Wagener would not reveal to her the secret and in consequence Wagener shipped as a seaman for the port, and arrived several years ago – that said Johnson accounted for his being the only possessor of the secret by stating that whilst the Pirate Vessel was laying off the Island he, Johnson, being on shore, a Spanish ship of war arrived, and that the Pirate Vessel was sunk with all aboard when attempting to escape.

We further state that we know that the American Barque "Francis Palmer" has been chartered by certain parties in San Francisco, to proceed in search of the Treasure referred to by the said Wagener, who is to go in her…”
 

Some more background on the story. Note the spelling of "Frances" - the newspapers of the day used both "Francis" and "Frances." The newspaper sailing cards use "Francis," so I'm inclined to believe that is correct.

It's an important lesson for those conducting newspaper research - a good example is the several spellings of "Tayopa."

Francis Palmer 7.JPG

Francis Palmer 8.JPG

Stockton Daily Independent [Stockton, Calif.]

Volume V, Number 98, 24 November 1863


Good luck to all,

The Old Bookaroo
 

One more:

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Daily Alta California [San Francisco, Calif.]

Volume 15, Number 5037, 13 December 1863

Thanks Bookaroo!

This clipping may be all that exists of the second expedition -it’s the only one I’ve been able to find.

The Stockton Independent story offers a lot of interesting new information, but I cannot help but notice the inaccuracies in calling Johnson a Swede and mixing up Johnson and Wagener.

Interestingly it says that the pirate vessel was wrecked, rather than destroyed by a Spanish man-o-war.
 

Thanks Bookaroo!

This clipping may be all that exists of the second expedition -it’s the only one I’ve been able to find.

The Stockton Independent story offers a lot of interesting new information, but I cannot help but notice the inaccuracies in calling Johnson a Swede and mixing up Johnson and Wagener.

Interestingly it says that the pirate vessel was wrecked, rather than destroyed by a Spanish man-o-war.

The newspaper cutting in Post #6 also mentions the treasure is in a wreck.

Good luck to all,

The Old Bookaroo
 

That is the trouble with such stories in each retelling the detail change. Even in spelling of names progressively over time the story become confused.

The claim 19 million? seem more newspaper sensationalism. than fact. But said in among misspelling of names or mixing up of facts by various reporters. there was a story there. That is why we need to find the earliest source to get closer to the truth.

The Falklands for me is the fascinating left overs from history.

Crow
 

That is the trouble with such stories in each retelling the detail change. Even in spelling of names progressively over time the story become confused.

The claim 19 million? seem more newspaper sensationalism. than fact. But said in among misspelling of names or mixing up of facts by various reporters. there was a story there. That is why we need to find the earliest source to get closer to the truth.

The Falklands for me is the fascinating left overs from history.

Crow
Agreed, Crow, the best documents are those nearest to the actual story, especially from official documents, like the letter from the Consulate.

Apologies for the poor quality, but I have attached screenshots of the Falkland census records from 1841 and 1853. They corroborate that Pirate Johnson did die in 1853. It also names his widow, Jane Herkes.
 

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Agreed, Crow, the best documents are those nearest to the actual story, especially from official documents, like the letter from the Consulate.

Apologies for the poor quality, but I have attached screenshots of the Falkland census records from 1841 and 1853. They corroborate that Pirate Johnson did die in 1853. It also names his widow, Jane Herkes.
Did you get this pirates first name. my eyes are bad to begin with to blurry for me.

Crow
 

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