RENO, NEV.- Decades after unique California Gold Rush sunken treasure artifacts were retrieved from the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, the exquisite gold jewelry, vintage clothing, Wells Fargo treasure shipment box and other historic items from the 1857 sinking of the fabled Ship of Gold, the S.S. Central America, will be available for the first time in a public auction on December 3, 2022.
Some collectors have been waiting for these extraordinary items to come on the market since the legendary, submerged ship was located in 1988 and Life magazine proclaimed it Americas greatest treasure ever found, said Fred Holabird, President of Holabird Western Americana Collections.
Nearly 300 never-before-offered 1850s-era artifacts will be in the auction that will be conducted at the Reno, Nevada Convention Center and online by
Holabird Western Americana Collections on Saturday, December 3. A second auction of hundreds of additional one-of-a-kind artifacts retrieved from the famous shipwreck will be offered in February 2023.
Clothing items include the important discovery of what is described as the million-dollar jeans: the oldest known Gold Rush-era heavy-duty work pants jeans with a button fly that may have been made by or for Levi Strauss in his early years in business. The pants and early Brooks Brothers undershirts with the companys famous emblem that will also be in the auction were in the first-class passenger trunk of merchant and Mexican-American War military veteran John Dement of Oregon.
Mens and womens 1850s clothing items are also offered from the recovered trunk of maritime provisions supplier Ansel Easton of San Francisco.
Ansel and Adeline Easton were San Francisco royalty on their honeymoon trip to New York. She survived in a lifeboat; he clung to debris in the water for hours after the ship sank until he was rescued by the crew from another ship, explained Holabird.
The auction also features recovered gold jewelry including dozens of rings, stickpins, and cufflinks, some of them from shipments that were intended for East Coast jewelers, as well as several recovered pocket watch cases and covers.
The jewelry from the S.S. Central America includes an extremely rare medal/badge presented by the Order of Saint Maurice and Saint Lazarus, the worlds second oldest order of knighthood. Bestowed by the House of Savoy in Italy, the medal is a white-enameled cross representing the Order of Saint Maurice and a green-enameled Maltese cross of the Order of Saint Lazarus. It was retrieved from the bottom of the ocean in 1991 and kept in secure storage for decades.
The S.S. Central America was carrying tons of Gold Rush treasure from San Francisco and the northern California area when she sank 7,200 feet deep in the Atlantic off the North Carolina coast in a hurricane while on a voyage from Panama to New York City in September 1857. Recovery from the shipwreck site occurred in several stages between 1988-1991 and again in 2014, said Holabird.
The auction also offers a recovered gold coin and 1850s paper money from the Pursers safe; cargo treasure boxes including the lid from a Wells Fargo gold shipment box; gold miners pokes (small satchels or pouches usually made of buckskin); an 1849 Colt pocket pistol; and S.S. Central America bottles, tableware, and dining utensils.
Other intriguing artifacts include the Pursers keys to the gold treasure room as well as other keys and locks; passenger luggage tags and ticket receipts; ships hardware; a navigational sextant (octant); and daguerreotype photographs retrieved from the fabled ship during the scientific recovery missions.
These incredible artifacts give us a glimpse of daily life for the passengers and crew in the 1850s, said Dwight Manley, Managing Partner of the California Gold Marketing Group of Brea, California, which owns the recovered items. They are a time capsule from the California Gold Rush.
Some of the unusual, recovered artifacts in the auction include an illustrated 1849 edition of the famous novel, The Count of Monte Cristo; 1850s-era personal grooming items; a chastity belt; and a feminine hygiene kit.
Seemingly ordinary items from the passengers and crew today give us extraordinary insight into the everyday lives of the people who traveled on the steamship, said scientist Bob Evans who was on each of the recovery missions.
The tragedy of the S.S. Central America sinking took the lives of 425 of the ships 578 passengers and crewmembers, and the loss of the gold cargo was a major factor in the economically devastating financial Panic of 1857 in the United States.
Insurance claims for the loss were paid in the 1850s and the company that discovered and retrieved the treasure starting in 1988 settled with the insurers and their successors in 1992. With court approval, California Gold Marketing Group acquired clear title to all of that remaining treasure in 1999 as well as all the items recovered in 2014.