Shipwreck Silver of the SS Japan: 1874 CC American Trade Dollar

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(Edited)

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”Blackbirds tend to like shiny things.” ~ The Bloody Raven

In memory of those who blazed the trail for my grandmother and her siblings, my deepest thank you to Ben Dalgleish for this historical treasure.

It may not be pristine, but it is a privilege to be in possession of one these historical pieces of Amerasian history highlighting the formal beginnings of commerce between the old Middle Kingdom of China and the young republic called the United States of America.

The Story of the Ship

February 20th 1865, six weeks before his assassination, President Abraham Lincoln approved a bill to establish the Pacific Mail Steam Ship Company as the conduit to formalize trade with China following the completion of the Trans Pacific Railroad. Built in New York, the four ships were commissioned for service between Hong Kong and San Francisco were the SS China, SS Great Republic, SS America, and the SS Japan. In 1868, they were the largest most impressive Sidewheel Steam ships and were the pride of the US.

Pacific Mail Steam Ship Company’s Steamer Japan, built by Henry Steers
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Courtesy of The Bancroft Library, UC Berkeley
Robert B. Honeyman Jr. Collection
ID# BANC PIC 1963.002:0954--E

San Francisco became the port of entry for an influx of Chinese laborers. These individuals desired a better life forged by their own hands and were attracted by the opportunities that the new country offered. They established Chinatown, worked the mines, build the Central Pacific railroad, worked the Napa Valley grottoes and innumerable infrastructure projects in California.

On November 18th, 1874, the SS Japan departed San Francisco on a routine scheduled voyage en route to Hong Kong China with 425 Chinese Passengers eager to return home after years of labor in California, each person carrying an average of $300 Face value in gold. Also loaded aboard and stowed away in the ship’s 28 x 5 feet treasure tank are 168 Coin boxes with $358,508 in newly minted 1874 Trade Dollars.

1874 CC American Trade Dollar
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Reverse; Eagle clutching fruited Branches and Arrows
Text; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, E PLURIBUS UNUM
420 Grains, 900 FINE, CC, TRADE DOLLAR
Mintage 1,373,200
Edge; Reeded

About midnight on December 17th, 1874, fire broke out in the coal bulkhead located a midships, adjacent to the Treasure tank. The Fire spread quickly from the Coal bulkhead, smoke and flames engulfing the wooden center structures of the SS Japan trapping many aboard. Some managed to get out jumped into the dark violent waters. In about 45 minutes the SS Japan was totally engulfed in flames.

By the next day only 151 crew and passengers survived in lifeboats and the SS Japan lost. A pair of ships from the US’s Navy’s Asian fleet arrived two days later only to find no additional survivors.

1874 CC American Trade Dollar
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Obverse; Seated Liberty holding an Olive Branch, 13 Stars
Text; LIBERTY, IN GOD WE TRUST, 1874
0.900 Silver, Weight 27.22g
Diameter 38.1mm, Thickness 2.6mm
Reference KM# 108

In January 1875, Hong Kong Underwriters dispatched a Schooner and a Steamer under the command of Captain Roberts. He searched the area for 6 months, and finally in July located the wreck of the SS Japan in under 128 feet of water. Salvage operations ceased in 1877 after about 300,000 coins were recovered leaving the remaining 58,000 unrecoverable and considered lost.

The story of the coin

Fast forward to November 2021, HK Colonial Coins, Ben Dalgleish came across a 54-coin trove of crown sized coins from a Dealer in his network. They were in varying states of poor condition having been exposed to charring, to hostile environmental conditions and sea water for some time. All of them bore the same date of 1874, most were CC for Carson City and 2 were S for the San Francisco mint.

1874 CC American Trade Dollar
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The letters “C C” Located above the D of DOLLAR
Carson City Mint, United States of America

As Sherlock Holmes would say, “The game is afoot my dear Watson.”

What was known is that the dealer purchased these in 2007 from an individual from the coastal province of Fujian as Sea Salvage. However, under Chinese law, the finder is required to turn over these findings to the state or face criminal charges. So, it was understandable that the finder chose to forgo disclosing his find to the State and sold them to anyone who are willing to buy it as to avoid prosecution.

With these coins now under Hong Kong's Special administrative jurisdiction the disclosure laws are waived. The drawback is that it would be difficult to attribute these coins to the shipwreck in question. I don’t expect a signed, sealed Certificate of Authentication and a fancy box to put them in. We will have to rely on Ben’s astute investigative skill and numismatic experience to determine them as legitimate.

Mr. Dalgleish makes the following observations;

  1. The damage is too inconsistent and individual to be done easily.
  2. They all verify as silver. (Sigma & XRF verified)
  3. They have no Chop marks.
  4. The dates and type match the records of what went down with the SS Japan - no other ship went down with similar cargo.
  5. The other metrics are there - such as they are considering the condition. (Via statistical analysis of physical attributes versus mint specifications.)
  6. Despite the salvage operation many thousands of dollars were left behind and unrecovered.
  7. Damage is consistent with the report from the original (1875-1877) salvage divers and operators. (Ref, Sources B1.)
  8. This wreck is not well known and does not appear in any Chinese literature, numismatic or otherwise until the book was published. (B2, Sources)
  9. I have not seen other coins with similar damage and type since I have been watching the local and international market closely for the past few years.
  10. Others have been spotted in the US at coin shows.

These 10 points are explained in fascinating detail and a fine example of exercising due diligence. A good read for those into coin forensics analysis.

The Conclusion:

“Probabilities favor these coins being legitimate trade dollars, with the SS Japan representing a plausible conduit.” ~ Ben Dalgleish

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Clockwise; 1898 French trade dollar, 1902 British trade dollar, 1986 5 Yaun China - Empress of China, 1896 Japanese trade dollar with chop marks, and 1874 CC American Trade Dollar

☠️

Latest Update

Since publishing his findings, Ben has been receiving a flurry of interest in his research. The Chinese Archeological Authority in Xiamen university’s, Dr. Wu Chunming and China’s National Center for Archeology’s Xin Guangcan were charged with this project being important enough to have the Xiamen University's Research Ship, the Tan Kah Kee at their disposal.

Also, involved will be U.S. Underwater Archeologist Dr. Jim Delgrado and the National Geographic Society to document this discovery’s historical significance.
And, there’s still a lot of loot out there.

Ben, I’ll expect to see your face on the COINWEEK Magazine cover soon and I’ll want your autograph on an old American Trade Dollar with a few chop marks.

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And thank you also to Nyssacat373 for introducing me to Ben and this unremarkable damaged coin that turned out to be a historical and cultural treasure.

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Adding another Silver in my Chinese pirate coin styled stack.

Always adding Silver and Crypto to my Stack for the coming dark and stormy night!

The #piratesunday tag is the scurvy scheme of Captain @stokjockey for #silvergoldstackers pirates to proudly showcase their shiny booty and plunder for all to see. Landlubbers arrrh… welcomed to participate and be a Pirate at heart so open yer treasure chests an’ show us what booty yea got!

Other Shipwreck Silver and related Posts

1986 China 5 Yuan: The Empress of China Commemorative silver coin.
1102-1106 Norther Song Dynasty Shipwreck 10 Cash
2019 Australia One Dollar: The Batavia Shipwreck
The El Cazador’s 1774 Mexican Colonial 2 Reales silver coin.
2019 Gairsoppa 10 troy oz. Shipwreck Silver Bar

References

1. My own pictures shot with a Samsung SM-A530W
P. Image under Pixabay
W. Wiki Commons
💀 Page Dividers by thekittygirl 🎃

Sources

L1. Numista; 1874 CC American Trade Dollar
L2. Pacific Mail Steam Ship Company’s Steamer Japan built by Henry Steers, digital image of the original 1868 Lithograph, Robert B. Honeyman Jr. Collection, The Bancroft Library UC Berkeley.
L3. Numista forum; SS Japan shipwreck US Trade Dollars hoard 1874 – find of a lifetime or Scam of the century? Solved. By Ben Dalgleish, of Hong Kong Colonial Coins
Video; Pacific Crossings YouTube Video by Robert Wells.
B1. Book 2 Series of; The Boy Travellers in the Far East; Siam & Java , by Thomas W Knox. 1880
B2. Recommended Reading: Voices from the Bottom of the South China Sea story. By Robert Wells. Link
The Tan Kah Kee Research Vessel of Xiamen University.

The background for these photographs is a chart by Rigobert Bonne, a French Cartographer in 1780, Published in “Atlas de Torurtes les Parties Connues du Globe Terrestre, Dresse pour l’Histoire Philosphique & Politique des Establishments & du Commerce des Europeens dan les Deux Indes” by G.T. Raynad. Size 9 ½ x 16 5/8 inches.

“Et lux in tenebris to serve laboro, sum sicarius” “I work in the shadows to serve the Light, I am an Assassin.”

"Ahh ains nae bluudy Financial Advisor!"



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62 comments
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5 years this has been happening to me, it started here, around people that are still here. Homeland security has done nothing at all, they are not here to protect us. Dont we pay them to stop shit like this? The NSA, CIA, FBI, Police and our Government has done nothing. Just like they did with the Havana Syndrome, nothing. Patriot Act my ass. The American government is completely incompetent. The NSA should be taken over by the military and contained Immediately for investigation. I bet we can get to the sources of V2K and RNM then. https://peakd.com/gangstalking/@acousticpulses/electronic-terrorism-and-gaslighting--if-you-downvote-this-post-you-are-part-of-the-problem

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So this is what you cashed in those Dogecoin for? Yu cwazy, but a good move. Nice original Trade dollar collection @kerrislravenhill , I take that you are planning on collecting the new Trade dollars too?

PD

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As the wise & ancient Chinese god once said, "Nothing wong with taking some Crypto profits off the Mah-Jong table."
Only seems fit to have the old with the new wealth.

Have a !BEER PD.

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I'm amazed how you get all this information. I enjoy reading this fascinating documentary on the Shipwreck Silver. And the Trade Dollar are nice to collect !

Posted using LeoFinance Mobile

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I keep in contact with the Researcher since getting my first Chinese silver piece from him. I am part Chinese and have been looking into this part of my family roots for the last year.
I jumped at the offer to get one of these Shipwreck coins before it was authenticated and it paid off! My tribute to Ben, of HK Colonial Coins, is this post. A trusted and Reputable dealer!

Thanks for the comment @olympicdragon

20220512_161611.jpg
2021 St Helena Trade Dollar

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You make alot of research and that's amazing
Am sure you can't use those Coins in this current day

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I spent two weeks writing and rewriting this post.
Having direct contact with the Researcher saved me a lot of information gathering time, it was a matter of putting this into a Hive Post format with a balanced blend of technical and lay person's language.
The value of this coin is beyond the value of the silver and the price I paid for it. This old burnt and corroded coin represents the spirit of why my Grandmother and her siblings came over to North America and a part of my family history.

Thanks for commenting @prechidi

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My wife accused me of being immature.
I told her to get out of my fort.

Credit: lofone
@kerrislravenhill, I sent you an $LOLZ on behalf of @stokjockey
Use the !LOL or !LOLZ command to share a joke and an $LOLZ.
Delegate Hive Tokens to Farm $LOLZ and earn 110% Rewards. Learn more.
(2/4)

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Amazing story!
Okay...
Stack on, my sis! 🤗❤️😍
!LADY

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(Edited)

A story based on true history. I've been putting most of my energy into this post all week. Double checking facts, dates and people. Writing and rewriting. There is a much more to this story and the research is ongoing with site excavations planned and the search for descendants of the SS Japan survivors to document personal accounts.
As you said, I'm now a Numismatist and not just a Stacker.

Always, with love 🤗🌺❤️

And the story began with this ship,
20220512_162250.jpg
1986 China 5 Yuan The Empress of China

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I knew you were not a stacker, as much as you love very old ship coins and anything related to them such as the history (possible history) of the coins. There is so much to discover, sis... which is so mind boggling!
Hehehe, good luck, sis.

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The recovery back in those times must have been so difficult, and that makes them even more valuable.

Posted Using LeoFinance Beta

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Difficult if not downright dangerous with the rudimentary diving gear at the time, The book, "Voices from the Bottom of the South China Sea story." By Robert Wells has this illustration of the Salvage operations.

Deep diving crew 1875.jpg

Cool huh?
Thanks for Diving in, @tbnfl4sun

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They were some brave men going in the deep water with that equipment for sure. I bet that canned lobster wasn't so bad though.

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Apparently, their dive broke a depth record, so there could be medical reports of the Bends somewhere in Captain Robert's log.
And, I haven't come across and reports of lead poisoning nor that of any bottles of wine found to wash that Lobster down.

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Love those old coins. If they could only talk… great show Raven

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I think I found another passion that inspires to invest the energy to write these kinds of posts.
There could be some interest in producing a movie from the collected personal stories in the Robert S Wells book, "Voices from the Bottom of the South China Sea story." And, the search for the descendants of the SS Japan survivors begins in Hong Kong.

Thanks for coming aboard @silverd510

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It’s amazing when we think about
How much more is at the bottom of the Sea. Treasures upon Treasures…

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It's not just the cargo of American Trade Dollars but the payrolls of each of the victims in this disaster. Each emigrant worker had an average for $300 in gold coin specie tucked into a leather or cloth bag closed by a drawstring. Then hung around their necks for safe keeping.
You can see this scenario is developing into a problem with the lack of personal floatation devices. With the proper equipment we can find plenty of California gold coins down there too.

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A true treasure find and a very cool interesting historical piece! How awesome to have that in your collection! Thanks for sharing and for researching the history making it even more interesting, sis! Take care! !LADY🤗💜🌻

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Interesting still is that my Grandmother's origin links with the Toishan people of Guangdong. One of the significant Labor groups that came over by the Pacific Mail Steam ships the generation earlier.
I'm getting too addicted to trade dollars.

Thanks for the comment @elizabethbit
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1902 British Trade Dollar Chinese Obverse
!LUV

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It's always amazing to read stories of how people would pack up all their worldly possessions, an immigrant to a new country in search of a better life!
"In memory of those who blazed the trail"......for your Family, and mine as well, coming from the "Old Country"!😀
Very, nice 1874 CC American Trade Dollar @kerrislravenhill !🤗

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I find that I am related to the Toishan of Guangdong as claimed by my Grandmother about two generations after the original Toishan returned to China but plenty stayed in the US and made it their home.
This coin represents their Sojourner's spirit in my family's past. And, that made me excited about writing this blog.

Thanks for the Support @silvertop

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Ohh... @kerrislravenhill That's definitely a keeper, something to be passed down to your children awesome my friend! 🤗

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You've got some history in your hands. And that quote by Sherlock Holmes is a best fit.

Usually, salt water erodes silver and other metals harshly, in some cases leaves small erosion scales on the surface, which I don't see on those coins. The black spots are due to oxidation process, if kept in a humid space unprotected, such marks appearance is common.

Anyway, they are silver and verified, so keep stacking up and above. :D

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Even with my untrained eye that this coin have some cleaning performed by the original finder. 😩
I can understand the effects of corrosion as in this excerpt discussed among Ben's colleges...

…As I understand the problem of low density applied to silver coins salvaged from sea water wrecks, the problem should always be anticipated to some degree. Electrolysis of reactive metals in sea water is commonplace and a silver copper alloy can itself act like both the anode and cathode in the reaction. The silver being less reactive is not removed in this way but the copper is. This means that microscopic copper grains that form in the alloy when it is cooled will leach out of the alloy starting at the surface first. The longer the item remains in sea water the deeper the effect will go. Hundreds of years in salt water can result in leaching that permeates deeply into the coin. This does depend on a number of factors in the environment – temperature, salinity and the presence of other elements.
The result of such corrosion often is a coin which yields a higher silver and lower copper content when testing using XRF. XRF is only a surface reading but it is indicative of the loss of copper…

My coin specimen is 25.85g compared to the original 27.2g so there is a marked loss in weight. I also have two coins from the El Cazador ship wreck and the leaching traits have some similarities.
The discussion also mentions comparability with coins from the El Cazador too.

Payton xray report.jpeg

I appreciate the comment @emaxisonline 👍

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I agree on the cleaning performed, specially the rim looks very choppy, it felt like the coin has lost some weight due to untrained cleaning, also I see a bit of hammering on sides.

Silver is indeed less conductive than copper, so maybe it had survived harsh conditions being packed in a water-tight chest.

It is as precious as it was no doubt.

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(Edited)

Wikiravenhill strikes again. Thx! I like a bit of background of the older coins. Seriously!

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And you won't find a Wiki entry about the fate of the SS Japan. Yet.
So you read about it here first.
I got a whole bunch more Shipwreck trivia sprinkled all over my comments section of this post.

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That's an amazing addition to any collection a coin off a ship wreck! I hope in the future I can get one, thanks for sharing with us

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Oh, I hope to acquire a coin from the Wreck of the San Jose. There is currently an international legal battle over the rights to the huge treasure not long after the wreck was discovered.
In the midst of battle with a British squadron, the San Jose alone engaged the British buying time for the outgunned Spanish fleet to flee but she inexplicably blew up taking it's treasure down into Davey Jone's locker.

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That would be really cool to get but I imagine it might be quite expensive once it goes on sale

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Great story behind.

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(Edited)

As more research capital comes to bear we may know more as the survivor decendant's come forward with stories and what archeologists find on the site. I will be keeping tabs for the National Geographic society to get their say.

Thanks for dropping in @tazi

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wow awesome historic coin

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I am so lucky to get this coin.
This wreck was almost forgotten.
The original records were lost in the great San Francisco fire, yet this ship played a vital role in the trade relations. These coins will bring back to the light the spirit of the Chinese Sojourners that helped build California.

Thanks for the Support @urun

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Sunken treasure? How cool! 💖

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As a Stacker I like to collect fantasy and replica Pirate money but every once in a while I'd like to score a genuine shipwrecked coin in my travels. "This is the real deal." as claimed by one of Mr. Dalgleish's colleges.

Thanks for visiting @katrina-ariel

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Always a pleasure. You have such an amazing collection, I enjoy learning about it.

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Didn't even know Carson City minted coins back in the day, sweet treasure there Nurse Raven.

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(Edited)

Minting silver coins from 1863 to 1893, mainly from silver of the Nevada Comstock Silver lode. I think it's now a museum.

Thanks for the comment @enginewitty 😄
!PIZZA

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Anytime, you got the most interesting history lessons on chain 😍😘🤗

!LUV
!WINE

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Staying in touch with the researcher to compile this information is a great gift to Hive! I love that now I know about this niche part of history, and appreciate being able to see these historic coins! Wow, I had never thought of collecting for personal reasons before reading your post yesterday. I mean, it's an obviously cool thing to do now that I am aware of it though !LOLZ

The damage to the coins makes them more beautiful when you know the story, I think. After reading I went back and looked at them all again !LUV

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So far, about 100 of these coins have been found, most making there way into the Western markets in the hands of collectors. I am so fortunate to own one and plan to pass these to my children as an heirloom.
It's still early in the process but I should check the National Geographic website to see if any progress is made on the SS Japan.
❤️

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