Vergulde Draeck:Gilt Dragon (1653-1656)


Summary:

Where built: Holland

Registered: Texel

Rig type: jacht

Hull: wood

Tonnage: 130 lasten ( 260 tonnes)

Length: 41.8 metres (137.3 feet)

Breadth: 9.8 metres (32.0 feet)

Depth: 4.1 metres (13.5 feet)

Port from: Texel

Port to: Batavia

Date lost: 28 April 1656

Location: 5.6 kilometres west of coastline, Moore River area

Chart number: DMH 087

GPS position:

· Latitude 31° 13.3600 ' S

· Longitude 115° 21.4800 ' E

Finders: G., J. and A. Henderson, J. Cowan and A. Robinson (14 April 1963)

Protection: Historic Shipwreck Act 1976 (gazetted 1973)

Unfinished Voyages, volume 1:25-7, 29, 31, 41, 65, 252

MA file number: 585/71, 9/72 & 424/71

ASD number: WA 380

Significance criteria: 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7

  

A beardman jug from Vergulde Draeck (Green, 1977)


The vessel

Vergulde Draeck was a jacht with a cargo capacity of 130 lasten. The vessel was purchased by the Amsterdam Chamber of the Dutch East India Company in 1653, and its first trading voyage was between Holland and the East Indies. On 4 October 1655 Vergulde Draeck, under the command of Pieter Albertsz, set sail for Batavia. Aboard was a crew of 193 men, eight chests of silver coin worth 78 600 guilders and a cargo of trade goods worth 106 400 guilders (Green, 1973:267).

Following the Brouwers route, Vergulde Draeck left the Cape of Good Hope with the intention of making use of the trade winds to cross 5000 miles of Indian Ocean before turning north toward the East Indies. However, without the ability to establish longitude and distance with any accuracy, the vessel struck a reef off the Western Australian coast north of Yanchep, near Ledge Point, on the morning of 28 April 1656.

The wreck event

The vessel began to break up immediately. Two of the ship's boats were launched but only 75 of the crew were able to make it to shore, along with a few of the provisions and stores. Seven of the crew were immediately dispatched to seek assistance in Batavia, while Albertsz and the rest of the crew remained behind (Green, 1973:267). Forty-one days later, with news of the wreck, the jacht Goede Hoop and the fluit Witte Valke left Batavia in search of survivors. Several other expeditions were mounted in the following year, but all failed to turn up any of the missing crew, although some wreckage was noted in the region of Fremantle.

Site description

The wreck site covers an area 50 metres long by 40 metres wide, bound on one side by honeycomb reef. The shallowest part of the reef is less than 1 metre at low tide. The maximum depth over the site is 8 metres. The site itself lies scattered throughout a complex cave system. An inspection of the site in 1972 provided the following description:

The only wreck material noticeable on the site is overgrown (with weed) and a heavily concreted cannon and anchors [sic], most of the site being covered with a light seaweed and algaeNumerous small, yellow bricks are scattered over the site, and a closer examination may reveal pottery and brass candle-stick (Green, 1977:72).


A mortar from Vergulde Draeck (MA 294)


Statement of significance

Historical

This site is significant in the early European exploration of Australia and parts of the Western Australian coast. It demonstrates the difficulties of early navigation and the inability to establish accurate measures for longitude without the aid of a chronometer. Dutch commercial activity and the development of trading routes across the Indian Ocean meant that several other vessels including the seventeenth-century Batavia were wrecked on this coast. They represent a unique aspect of inter national maritime trade. Their wrecking led to further expeditions in search of survivors and encouraged the mapping of the little known Western Australian coastline, that was hitherto regarded as The Great Southland.

 Rediscovery

The English translation, in 1859 and 1899, of the documents relating to the Vergulde Draeck gave rise to much speculation as to the whereabouts of the vessel and its valuable cargo. In 1931 A. Edwards discovered 40 silver coins in the sand-hills just north of Cape Leschenault (Green, 1973:272). The wreck was not found, however, until 14 April 1963 by a group of spear fishermen.

Site location

The site is located just north of Moore River on a reef 12 kilometres south-south-west of Ledge Point, 5.6 kilometres west of the coastline.

Legislation

Together with the discovery of the seventeenth century Dutch wreck Batavia the significance of these wreck sites led to the enactment of legislation through the mechanisms of the Museum Amendment Act 1964. This deemed sites of wrecks that occurred prior to 1900 in Western Australian waters, to be archaeological sites. This protection was amended by and transferred to the Maritime Archaeology Act 1973 (Western Australia). The Dutch Government as heirs to the VOC have transferred their rights of ownership to the Dutch vessels wrecked in Western Australia to the Commonwealth Government, through the Australian Netherlands Committee on Old Dutch Shipwrecks. These are contained in the Separate Schedules of the Historic Shipwrecks Act 1976.

Excavation and artefacts

Following the discovery of the wreck the first material raised and recorded was an elephant tusk (African) and some ballast bricks. However, the wreck site was not protected at this time and the details of the artefacts are only gleaned through contemporary newspaper references. Reports of blasting at the site encouraged State Government intervention and the responsibility for the excavation and protection of the wreck site was vested in the Museum.

Exposure of the site to the Indian Ocean swell made any work undertaken on Vergulde Draeck hazardous. However, in early 1972, a full expedition was mounted to systematically excavate the remains of the cargo and ship's fittings. Little remained of the vessel's structure and stratigraphy had been disturbed by the action of looters. Over several months a quantity of artefacts was recovered including beardman jugs, ceramic masks and medallions, clay tobacco pipes, bronze and brass utensils (e.g. a bronze mortar with the inscription Amor Vincit Omnia (Love Conquers All), shown below), tools and accessories, glass bottles, a tool-box, various armaments and much organic material.


References

Green, J. N., 1973, 'The wreck of the Dutch East Indiaman the Vergulde Draeck, 1656', International Journal of Nautical Archaeology, 2.2:267-89.


1977, The AVOC Jacht Vergulde Draeck wrecked off Western Australia 1656, British Archaeological Reports, Supplementary Series 36, Oxford.


1983, 'The Vergulde Draeck excavation 1981 & 1983', Bulletin of the Australian Institute for Maritime Archaeology, 7.2:1-8.


1985, Treasures from the Vergulde Draeck, Western Australian Museum, Perth.

 


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