Treasure of Pisco

marticus

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Sep 16, 2013
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NSW
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CTX 3030
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Primary Interest:
Cache Hunting
[h=1]The Church Treasure of Pisco[/h][h=2]Tuamotu Archipelago, French Polynesia[/h]



The year was 1859. Four unsavory characters were serving as mercenaries for the Peruvian Army. A Spaniard (Diego Alvarez), an Irishman (Killorain), an Englishman (Luke Barrett) and an American (Brown). They figured there had to be a way to make better money and were looking for opportunities.

One of the men ran into a renegade priest named Father Matteo. The priest told the man of a treasure hidden and guarded at a church in the town of Pisco. The four came up with a plan, deserted from the army and made their way to Pisco.

Alvarez and Killorain were both Catholic and started to attend mass regularly. They became model parishioners. After some time they went to the local priests with a terrible story. They had found out that a renegade priest by the name of Father Matteo knew about the treasure and was gathering up a large group of bandits to come and steal the treasure.

The Priests believed the story. These men could know nothing of the treasure on their own. Father Matteo must be up to something. Alvarez came up with a plan to save the treasure. They could load the treasure onto a ship and move it to the safety of Callao. Alvarez and his three friends would gladly donate their services as guards.

image003.jpg

The church at Pisco, Peru


So it came to pass that the priests loaded the following on a ship in the tiny harbor of Pisco:
14 tons gold ingots
7 great golden candlesticks, studded with jewels
38 long diamond necklaces
A quantity of jeweled rings
A quantity of jeweled bracelets
A quantity of jeweled crucifixes
1 chest uncut stones
1 chest Spanish doubloons
Various other jewels and ornaments


The ship set sail for Callao with some of the priests, the ships crew and the four guards. Once out to sea, the Captain, crew and priests were killed. Alvarez figured that they could hide the treasure, scuttle the ship, row ashore in Australia and claim shipwreck. This way no one would ever suspect them of the murders and theft. They could then go back with another ship and retrieve the booty.

The four men set a course for Tahiti for supplies. Once they were stocked up the sailed into an area with many small islands and atolls. In December of 1859 they landed on a small coral atoll in the Tuamotu group. They atoll had no harbor, so they off loaded the treasure onto a small boat and made many trips until most all of the treasure was secreted on the atoll.

Alvarez made a map but did not know the name of the atoll they had used. They crossed over to Katiu and Alvarez asked a local the name of the atoll. The man told him they had been on Pinaki. Alvarez did not want this information to get out so he pulled his gun a shot the man. This understandably upset the natives and the four men had to flee the area in a hurry. Alvarez never did find out that the man was thinking of a different atoll and they were never on Pinaki.

They scuttled their ship off the coast of Australia and rowed ashore. Their story was believed and they lived well off the part of the treasure they carried off with them, too well, apparently. When the time came to put together an expedition to retrieve the treasure, they were a little short of funds. They tried to raise money by telling potential investors they had found a treasure map. It didn’t work and they needed some quick funds.

They went to work in the Palmer gold fields. Alvarez and Barrett were killed in an altercation with natives. Then Killorain and Brown killed a man in a brawl. They were convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison. Brown died while serving his sentence.

In May of 1912, Charles Howe was in his house near Sydney. It was a rainy night and he received a knock at the door. He opened it to find a tramp looking for a handout. He was “altogether the most frightful looking little dwarf that ever escaped out of a picture book”. He fed the man, let him dry off and was generally kind to him. The tramp moved on.

Four months later, Howe was called to the Sydney hospital. The old tramp was very ill and had to talk to someone. He told Howe his name was Killorain, that he and three others had buried a large treasure, that he had spent most of his life in prison and was never able to go after it. He gave him the map Alvarez had made and explained the whole story to him. He asked him to retrieve the treasure.

Howe left and started to check out the old man’s story. He found that there had indeed been a theft from the church in Pisco and that four men arrived in Cooktown in February of 1860 after being shipwrecked. He returned to the hospital to talk to Killorain, only to find he had died.

Howe sold everything he owned and set sail for Tahiti. From there he booked passage to the small atoll, Pinaki. He set up residence on the atoll in February of 1913. He systematically searched the island by digging trenches in grids. Howe spent 13 years searching the atoll. Finally he went back to Tahiti. Howe asked some of the natives about the Bosun Bird, the ship that originally sailed from Pisco with the four sailors. They told him that the ship did not anchor near Pinaki but at a different atoll.

Howe set off to the new location with his map in hand. Within three days he had found the jewels and doubloons. The only thing left was the gold. According to Alvarez map the gold was at the bottom of a pear-shaped pool. He probed the pool and came back with some pieces of wood. This convinces him he had found the location of the gold.

Getting 14 tons of gold out of a lagoon was not going to be easy. Also, Howe did not want anyone to know he had found anything. The locals knew what island he was on and that he had spent years searching for something. He reburied the chests with the doubloons and jewels. He took only a small amount of the treasure with him and feigned failure to the locals.

Howe went back to Australia and got a group of adventures and investors together. They would make to arrangements and all would go and retrieve the treasure. While the logistics were being worked out, Howe went out to the gold fields for some prospecting in 1932. He kept in touch with those making the plans for a while. Then nothing. Howe was never heard from again.

In January of 1934, the group arrived in Tahiti. They searched for the right atoll, and believed they had found it. After working to get at where they believed the gold to be and searching for the buried chests, they ran out of funds. The money people backing them refused to sink any more money in a lost treasure hunt and the team was force to leave. The story ends there. The 14 tons of gold, the jewels and doubloons have apparently never been recovered.

Here’s what we know of the location. The island is located near Katiu and Makemo. It was an uninhabited island in the days of Alvarez, Howe and the 1934 expedition. There is strong surf by the reef. There is no anchorage or entry for a ship. It was the third island visited by the expedition form Tuanake. They found the correct spot in 1 day. There is a coral pinnacle on the eastern side of the atoll. There is a pass just to the left of the pinnacle. There is a pear shaped pool about three miles from the pass with seven coral blocks nearby.
 

Now that is a damn fine yarn right there my man! You were bringing the dang heat son!
(You actually told a story with a Irishman, a Englishman, a Spaniard a American and a Priest named Matteo and no one walked into a bar?!?!? Awesome...lol!)
 

marticus:

Thank you for posting that! Is that your own work?

Good luck to all,

The Old Bookaroo, CM
 

marticus:

Thank you for posting that! Is that your own work?

Good luck to all,

The Old Bookaroo, CM
Hey Bookaroo.
No its not. I only just came across the story and wanted to share it on. I did also come across another page tossing up with the possiblity that this maybe a different version of the loot of lima story

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I guess it is the Story written by George Hamilton "" The Treasure of the Tuamotus"" 1939:laughing7:
 

great story, but seems like fiction to me.

Re-bury what he recovered? Not have enough for a return trip?......

I'm going to research that book.
 

I guess it is the Story written by George Hamilton "" The Treasure of the Tuamotus"" 1939:laughing7:
No. But he does have a version.
A bit of fact checking. Killomore was around. Howe was around and died in the time frame. Cooktown was around but not established as a town. But a settlement. The palmer goldfields did have a boom and where easy travel from cooktown. If its a made up story. They did their homework

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Cant say i am. But a boy can dream.
I guess it wouldnt be hard to check his story out. There are alot of simularities to this story and the loot of lima. Perhaps the same story told from another point of view. After all every story has 2 sides

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And here is me thing Pisco was cocktail drink?:laughing7:

Here is a picture of George Hamilton searching for the treasure. The book is very hard to get hold of. one of the websites said the guy was Australian Irishman decent. Another website claims he was a descendant of Hamilton.

Did he get some extra information from Hamilton before he died?

51f04xUECKL._SY379_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg
 

And here is me thing Pisco was cocktail drink?:laughing7:

Here is a picture of George Hamilton searching for the treasure. The book is very hard to get hold of. one of the websites said the guy was Australian Irishman decent. Another website claims he was a descendant of Hamilton.

Did he get some extra information from Hamilton before he died?

View attachment 1399907
Like a cold case. This is going to interesting digging into. I have only just started looking into this story. I posted it not long after i came across it to see if anyone had any information. Being in Aus i might have better access to track down some of his old records. Although Aus isnt like the rest of the world. We dont seem to hold onto alot of our old historic docs. Unless family members do. I have encounted many problems on that front before trying to track down 100+ year old docs

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Here is another link Tahiti Lost Treasure

Have fun.

Mal
Have to do some more digging of the records here. I have found a record of howe here in aus. So ill do some digging to try and match the pair together. I also found several articals from the expedition made to look. Which involved french officials. Engineers and such. The expedition was true

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May have tracked down a copy of the book also. The place is closed for xmas for a few more weeks. So ill have to wait

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Very interesting story that I once discussed with the old pirate Crow here.

Not sure that the treasure, if indeed there was any to begin with, was as large as was claimed.

Howe claimed that he'd "verified" that a "great treasure had been taken from the church in Pisco" and the four rogues had been in Australia "in about 1860." It would be very interesting to confirm how all of this had been looked into by Howe. There was an expedition to the Pacific region alright by the Hamilton group; but I wouldn't read too much into it at this stage...

Crow mentioned a legend he'd come across about some pirates who operated off the coast of Peru near Pisco and an old ruined church which may have been connected to this story. Or, this story could have simply been garbled with the "Loot of Lima" legend.


IPUK
 

Very interesting story that I once discussed with the old pirate Crow here.

Not sure that the treasure, if indeed there was any to begin with, was as large as was claimed.

Howe claimed that he'd "verified" that a "great treasure had been taken from the church in Pisco" and the four rogues had been in Australia "in about 1860." It would be very interesting to confirm how all of this had been looked into by Howe. There was an expedition to the Pacific region alright by the Hamilton group; but I wouldn't read too much into it at this stage...

Crow mentioned a legend he'd come across about some pirates who operated off the coast of Peru near Pisco and an old ruined church which may have been connected to this story. Or, this story could have simply been garbled with the "Loot of Lima" legend.


IPUK
So far i have now come across 3 stories all with relation to a treasure from peru to the pacific islands. All slightly different but still similar. Perhaps 3 different versions of the same story.
Not sure if the venture was the hamilton one or before. Its backers where from london with the aid of a man from melb Australia. I did come across a few names of the party. Yes this would be up crows and knackis ally. Both of them seem to be floating around the french ploys. They might have a bit more to add. But havnt heard from them in a fair while. Prob after my treasure lol

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So far i have now come across 3 stories all with relation to a treasure from peru to the pacific islands. All slightly different but still similar. Perhaps 3 different versions of the same story.
Not sure if the venture was the hamilton one or before. Its backers where from london with the aid of a man from melb Australia. I did come across a few names of the party. Yes this would be up crows and knackis ally. Both of them seem to be floating around the french ploys. They might have a bit more to add. But havnt heard from them in a fair while. Prob after my treasure lol

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Yep, the Crow-Meister and Kanacki have not been posting. More than likely busy with other things.

I discussed another legend concerning a ship in the Pacific and a treasure (that was more than likely recovered), with Amy (aka Corporate Investigation) about a ship that was sunk near Tonga and a large treasure recovered in the 1990s and sold to a billionaire Japanese businessman who was a War Criminal who had an interest in treasure hunting.

The Pacific is huge and between South America and New Zealand/Australia, there is a fair few island locations to 'hide' something if one so wishes.

But with regards to this Pisco story, there is too many gaps and improbabilities for me. As an example, how did the four rogues overpower and murder the officials and guards said to be accompanying the treasure? The church wasn't silly - they'd have sent a fair number of their people with any treasure. How did the four manage to navigate the vast distances involved without a proper crew and have sufficient resources? If any treasure really was taken, what steps did the church/ authorities take to recover it?

More questions than answers...

Crow told me another story about a treasure taken from South America to the Mariana Islands. The Trio had researched that one and it was documented...:laughing7:


IPUK
 

Yep, the Crow-Meister and Kanacki have not been posting. More than likely busy with other things.

I discussed another legend concerning a ship in the Pacific and a treasure (that was more than likely recovered), with Amy (aka Corporate Investigation) about a ship that was sunk near Tonga and a large treasure recovered in the 1990s and sold to a billionaire Japanese businessman who was a War Criminal who had an interest in treasure hunting.

The Pacific is huge and between South America and New Zealand/Australia, there is a fair few island locations to 'hide' something if one so wishes.

But with regards to this Pisco story, there is too many gaps and improbabilities for me. As an example, how did the four rogues overpower and murder the officials and guards said to be accompanying the treasure? The church wasn't silly - they'd have sent a fair number of their people with any treasure. How did the four manage to navigate the vast distances involved without a proper crew and have sufficient resources? If any treasure really was taken, what steps did the church/ authorities take to recover it?

More questions than answers...

Crow told me another story about a treasure taken from South America to the Mariana Islands. The Trio had researched that one and it was documented...:laughing7:


IPUK
Interesting. The mariana islands was one of the 3. My theory is. Like the game chinese wispers. Every time the story gets told it varies slightly. So we could have 3 stories that all relate to the same original story. Pure theory of course. One would have to look into all 3.
As for the idea of 4 survivors. Thats a valid point. But given the right circumstances it could be done. Like say get the entire crew to turn on the priest and his men for the sake of the treasure. Thats possible. Then slowly take out a member at a time. All while encouraging the remainder that they split increases everytime. It could be a posibility.
I have located a copy of hamiltons book. Im going to get a photo copy of it. It may have some further clues.
But think too. These guys have 1930s tech. Think how far we have come since then. They could have been on the wrong island entirely.
Marticus

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