COIN BEACH 1953
Another nor'easter has
cast a new hoard of 18th century vintage coins on
the beaches
just a few miles south of
Rehoboth Beach at Coin Beach and the residents hereabout know
when
to set out a search.
The coins are copper
pieces minted during the reigns of King George II and King George
III
of England but it is debatable as to where they came from, ever since the first discovery
by beach
combers more that a quarter
century ago. Many agree that they are from some windjammer vessel
that has foundered during
the savage coastal storms on these shores.
The latest 'find' , the
1953 hoard of copper coins, is said to have been found by a real
estate agent who did not
wait for the nor'easter to
abate, Peck Pleasanton, and his Rehoboth school teacher friend,
Barbara
Boyce, who picked up 13
coins from the sand in less than a hour which had been cast into the
dunes
by the strong surf.
True, many are defaced by
rust and sandy water fricton, but one is clearly dated 1775, one
side
inscribed with “Georgius
III”, and the other side with “Britannia” . This same day,
an unidentified
man gathered 29 pieces.
Another successful collector, Colonal Wilbur S. Corkran , who
reported he gleaned 30 coins. Lesser numbers continue to be
discovered.
There are no reports of
finding any silver or gold coins this time but they have been found
in the same area. Other
copper pieces found have been inscribed “Hibernia”. French and
Spanish
have also been picked up.
One, a large silver coin, bearing the head of Louis XV, King of
France
and Naverre, minted in 1756,
found in 1938 in Dewey Beach, a few miles north of Coin Road.
One of the largest
collectors of the copper coins is an artist, Fred Vogel, of Dewey
Beach who has over 300 of them.
The popular theory as to
the origin is that they came from the wreck of the Irish vessel,
“Faithful Stewart”
which sank at Indian River 1785, or, the wreck of the “deBraak”
off
Cape Henlopen 1798. A
officer of the Delaware Historic Society , Judge Richard Rodney,
hopes
to prove the “Three
Brothers” a ship load of coins to the colonies is the source.
Coins are not the only
treasurers jettisoned by the nor'easter's, there are hundreds of
live
'conchs, rare shells.
Conch shells are a pretty rare commodity on Rehoboth beaches.
Source: The Morning Call
of Allentown, Pennsylvania, Thursday 26 November 1953.
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