The Mel Fisher Connection
On August 25, 2000 I received a letter from Kerry Boren, and in this letter was information to one of the richest mines in the world...
The information came from the Happy Jack
(Ute Indian Tribal Elder of the 1800's) Journals he has in his possession , The map was
small but revealed great detail.. I studied the map and the location jumped right out at me, This was
the same location that the late Mel Fisher was searching before his untimely death. Mel had a map of the gold
mines.
Mel came to Utah and hooked up with the famous Bill Bleazard,, who as a boy grew up in Rock Creek, Bill led the expedition and Mel and Bill became great friends,, They never located the mine , but came close.. little did they know that the BLM had blown up the mine entrance a short time before, in their government stupidity and blindness, how do I know this, because when I got to the mine that was in the Happy Jack Journals in the same location it was blown up. Happy Jack described in detail the Old Spanish Mine,,
Prospector (Randy W. Lewis)
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"TODAY'S THE DAY!"(Mel's Motto)

This is the story of Mel and his family's search through the years.
Originally written by Bleth McHaley & Wendy Tucker
At 1:05 p.m. that amazing day, Mel Fisher learned from his son Kane that his greatest dream had been realized. The marine radio crackled to life in the Key West, Florida office of Mel Fisher at Treasure Salvors, Inc. "WZG9605. Unit 1, this is Unit 11." From aboard the vessel Dauntless of which he was captain, Kane told his beaming father: "Put away the charts. We've got the 'Mother Lode'!"
The dream that had consumed Mel Fisher for more than 16 years now came true
before the eyes of the world.
He
had found the "rainbow's end" including stacks of silver bars, chests of silver coins, gold,
jewels, and thousands of other unique artifacts from the Nuestra Senora de Atocha. Mel Fisher
found what adventurous souls through centuries had only dreamed of finding!
Mel Fisher's dreams of treasure began in childhood with the reading of Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island, and about pirates of the "Spanish Main". He also read about the exploits of deep sea divers in their bulky "hard hat" suits who were just beginning the exploration of the sub-sea world. There were no oceans to conquer in Hobart and Glen Park, Indiana. But at age eleven, Mel Fisher made his own first "hard hat" diving outfit to use in a mud-bottomed lagoon.
Mel learned carpentry skills from his father, Earl Fisher, and his musical talents seemed to come from his mother's side of the family. Grace Sprencel Fisher and her sisters were gifted in music and dance. Mel Fisher formed his first dance band while attending Lew Wallace High School at Glen Park, Indiana. He attended Purdue University, where he studied engineering and led his own 21-piece band. With the outbreak of World War II, Mel went into the U.S.Army. He was trained and served with the U.S.Army Corps of Engineers. Before being shipped over-seas to Europe with the Army Engineers, he studied at the University of Alabama where he was later awarded an honorary doctorate.
After the war, Mel restlessly moved to Chicago and Denver, then to Florida where he again pursued his primary interest in diving. In 1950, Mel moved with his parents to Torrance, California. They operated a chicken ranch there. Mel continued to pursue his interest in diving while he helped with the ranch and also studied animal husbandry at El Camino College. Mel Fisher opened his first dive shop in a small feed shed on the family chicken ranch. He had a small compressor and sold "breathing" air as well as scuba equipment and parts.
In 1953, a gorgeous, red-haired girl named Dolores Horton lighted Mel
Fisher's life.
She was from Montana
and a stranger to the ocean, but quickly became a mermaid called "Deo". On their honeymoon,
the handsome young couple went diving on shipwrecks in Florida and the Florida Keys. They planned to
open a store devoted exclusively to diving. To raise the money they dove commercially for spiny
lobster in the frigid California waters. This was grueling but lucrative work, and they built their
own business one wall at a time. Finally they opened Mel's Aqua Shop in Redondo Beach, California.
This was the first "dive shop" in the world.
Mel and Dolores Fisher were hugely successful in this pioneering business, training more than 65,000 novices in the science of scuba diving. An undersea pioneer, Mel made early underwater films and movies, for training, advertising and entertainment purposes. When television was still young, Mel Fisher aired his own underwater adventures on weekly TV shows. Dolores personally set a world underwater endurance record that continues through the years to stand as a woman's underwater endurance record of more than 55 hours and 37 minutes, [55:37:9.6]. Mel and Deo were the unofficial "king and queen" of the underwater world.
Five children were born to Mel and Dolores Fisher, sons Terry, Dirk, Kim and Kane, and daughter Taffi. The Fisher enterprise has always been a "family" activity. Mel personally continued to develop various types of wet suits, spear guns, including gas guns, underwater cameras, housings, and other underwater equipment.
In company with other multi-talented divers, the Fishers explored the California coast for shipwrecks, and ultimately completed several exciting treasure hunting expeditions into the Caribbean. Discoveries from these adventures were limited. But each one gave unique training to Mel and Deo.
In 1962, returning from the Caribbean through Florida, Mel had a meeting with a treasure hunter named Kip Wagner. Wagner had been attempting to salvage remains of the ten shipwrecks of the 1715 Spanish Plate Fleet lost in a hurricane off Florida's East Coast. Ill-equipped, with his crew unable to devote full-time to the project, Wagner invited Mel to join him on a 50-50 basis.
Mel, along with a hand-picked team of seven people, agreed to move to Florida
and work for one year without pay while searching for the big bonanza.
After
360 days of "no finds", the team was testing a device Mel invented called the
"mailbox". This is a tube which is lowered from the vessels stern over the propellers while
the boat is securely anchored. The engines are then put in gear and the prop wash sends a layer of
clear water from the surface downward to the bottom so the divers can see. But it did more than bring
clear water to the bottom so that the divers could see. The "mailbox" also dug a hole in the
sand and revealed 1,033 gold coins. Mel Fisher exclaimed "Once you have seen the ocean bottom
paved with gold, you'll never forget it!" They were hooked. The team continued salvaging the 1715
Fleet for another decade.
During the winter months, it was impossible to dive and salvage the 1715 Fleet because of storms and rough waters. Around 1969, Mel shifted his focus from the 1715 sites to the tropical waters of the Florida Keys in search of the Spanish galleon Nuestra Senora de Atocha which he had read about in Potter's Treasure Diver's Guide. It was a royal guard galleon with 40 tons of gold and silver aboard which sank in a devastating hurricane along with others in 1622. Mel had found a new goal worthy of this greatest effort. The hunt had begun.
One of Mel's projects was to operate a floating treasure museum. Mel searched in Europe and purchased an old ship in 1967. It was brought across the Atlantic Ocean and converted into a full size reproduction of a Spanish galleon which served as a floating museum and headquarters for Mel's operations.
In 1980, Mel Fisher topped his previous glories as a treasure hunter to discover more than 20 million dollars worth of gold and other riches of the Santa Margarita, a sister ship of the Atocha lost in the same storm of 1622. However, finding priceless treasures and artifacts is only the beginning. They must be conserved, studied, restored, recorded, and, to share them with the world, exhibited. Mel's "Ship Museum" sank in the early eighties, so, in 1987, with part of his share of treasure, Mel bought a former Key West Naval Station building to permanently house the non-profit Mel Fisher Maritime Heritage Society Museum, with research center, education and conservation laboratories, and Mel's own private headquarters.

It took years, cost lives, and challenged all who served as members of Mel's loyal crew. Mel Fisher made a commitment of his greatest personal effort to find the Atocha, believing every day that the elusive lady was ready at last to reveal her lavish secrets. Lesser men would have failed. On July 20, 1985, after more than 15 years, Mel's dream was achieved, and the Atocha's mother lode was located. Thousands of artifacts, silver coins, gold coins, many in near mint condition, period and earlier amazing Spanish objects and wares, exquisite jewelry set with precious stones, gold chains, disks, a variety of armaments and even seeds (which later sprouted!) were recovered. These and more discovered by Mel Fisher and his "Golden Crew" reflected the richest treasure find since the opening of King Tut's tomb in the 1930's. The lives of Mel and Dolores Fisher, their family and all their crew were lifted onto the world's stage as people who truly contributed to the priceless historical and cultural heritage of the world.
In the 1990's, the Mel Fisher Center, Inc. was opened in Sebastian, Florida. It primarily serves to conserve and exhibit many of the new discoveries from wrecks of the 1715 Fleet still being worked and recovered by Mel's children and other sub-contractors decades after their initial discovery. While daughter Taffi manages the Mel Fisher Center, sons Terry and Kane operate search and recovery vessels, presently on the Atocha and Margarita sites. Many gorgeous emeralds and other precious items are still being discovered weekly. Son Kim manages the worldwide traveling treasure exhibit. Work of the Fisher teams will continue through the turn of the century.
For Mel Fisher, the glory is in the quest, wherever in the world it may take him. Beyond the 1622 and 1715 treasure galleons, Mel continues to lead expeditions all over the world. Working with associate Pat Clyne and others, they have been conducting research and developing new treasure hunting techniques. One of particular significance is a high-resolution video remote-sensing package to assist in pinpointing and isolating possible underwater search targets from the air. "We're constantly doing state-of-the-art work to develop long-range density imagery systems for discriminating gold," says Mel. "We're way out ahead; we really are. We have always been on the leading edge of undersea technology and detection systems."
Thousands of people: students, scholars and interested persons: come from all over the world to see the educational, cultural and historical treasures that have been raised from oblivion by Mel Fisher and his crews.
Whoever comes to see Mel Fisher also comes to share in the glory of discovery. For those who dream and persevere like Mel Fisher, "Today" is always "The Day".