Admiral Gardner Shipwreck Coin East India NGC Certified

$31.67 $52.79

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  • Price in reward points: 13039
  • 1000 Units in Stock
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  • Certification:ANA
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Admiral Gardner Shipwreck Coin East India NGC Certified
Admiral Gardner Shipwreck Coin NGC Certified
This coin is an amazing piece of history that has spent 175 years at the bottom of the sea. Each coin is a 1808 coin and is certified a genuine shipwreck coin. Please review my feedback and purchase with confidence. Check out the full story below and thanks for looking!
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Despite bitter cold, gale-force winds, and an ominous black sky, three ships owned by the East India Company—the
Brittania
, the
Carnatic
, and the
Admiral Gardner
—embarked on the long journey from London to the East Indies. The latter, a three-masted brig, was loaded with some 46 tons of copper coins struck at the Soho Mint, for the Company’s use in Madras, India.
Rounding Margate, some 80 miles from London, the winds abruptly stopped, and the progress of the ships stopped. The crews dropped anchor, to avoid drifting into the notorious Goodwin Sands. All was calm briefly, until the gale suddenly intensified. The anchors found no purchase in the shifting seabed, and after a valiant effort by the crew, all three ships sunk into the sand, just after midnight on January 25.
Although the wreck of the
Admiral Gardner
was part of local lore, no trace of the ship was found until 1984, when a passing fisherman snagged his nets on the wreckage. A year later, a team of divers salvaged some—but not nearly all—of the lost treasure, including a sealed barrel containing some 28,000 pieces. This coin is one of them.
Certificate of Authenticity
This “10-cash” coin bears the East India Company’s iconic logo on the obverse and the denomination on the reverse. The contrast of the regal coat of arms and the Mughal script hints at the breadth and scope of both the Company and the British Empire. Struck in Birmingham, England, this coin was one of the first in the world to be minted by the steam-powered coin press, an invention of Matthew Boulton and James Watt. It spent 175 years under the sea.