TWO TREASURE SITES OF IMPERIAL CALCASIEU PARISH
© By W. T. Block
(click here for W. T. Block web page)

While there are two treasure sites near the mouths of the
Calcasieu and Mermentau rivers that most likely will never be found, it
might be well to identify them in the event the "impossible" just might
happen. One is an iron safe, containing $9,000 dollars in gold, thrown
overboard near the Cameron Parish court house during a battle between
Confederates and two Union gunboats on May 6,1864. The other is the
wreckage of the pirate ship Hotspur near the mouth of the Mermantau River,
which ran aground and wrecked in November, 1820.
In his article published in True West magazine in
December, 1979, the writer outlined other reputed treasure locations
elsewhere along the Calcasieu River - the Barb Shellbank, Contraband Bayou
and Island, and old Cidony's Shipyard. Those stories originally appeared
in the New York Herald and were reprinted in a long, 3-column article in
"Story of Laffite on the Calcasieu," Galveston Daily News, on April 25,
1895. Another long article about Jean Laffite's Mermantau River treasure
sites originally appeared in Cincinnati Inquirer and was reprinted in the
Galveston Daily News on Aug. 6, 1897. (These stories available on
microfilm at Lamar University Library.)
In April, 1864, the Mermentau Jayhawkers owned a herd of
450 stolen cattle and horses, which they offered for sale to the Union
Navy in New Orleans. Within days, two Union gunboats entered the Calcasieu
and dropped anchor in front of the writer's great grandfather's home
(Duncan Smith) at Leesburg, now Cameron. At daylight on May 6, 1864, the
entire Confederate garrison from Sabine Pass, including a battery of
artillery, attacked the gunboats, shortly before the stolen herd was to be
loaded aboard. A seesawing, 90-minute battle ensued before both the
gunboats surrendered, and about twenty soldiers and sailors were killed
and many more were wounded during the onslaught. Lt. Benjamin Loring's
(commander of U. S. S. Wave) long account of that battle, and of Duncan
Smith's involvement in it, was published in War of The Rebellion: Official
Records of The Union and Confederate Navies, Series I, Volume XXI, pages
256-259.
Soon after Lt. Loring raised a white flag above his
vessel, the Confederate soldiers watched in anguish as the Bluejackets
threw everything possible overboard, including the Wave's iron safe.
Prisoners-of-war later confirmed that the safe contained $9,000 in gold
coins, intended as payment to the Jayhawkers for the stolen cattle and
horses. For a few days, the Confederates dived for the safe in six fathoms
of water, but they soon abandoned the search because the Confederates had
to return to Sabine Pass.
The life of Captain James Campbell, Jean Laffite's most
trusted lieutenant, is perhaps the best-documented of any of Laffite's
pirates. The author's long biography of Jim and Mary Campbell and the
last, ten-months voyage of the pirate ship Hotspur were published in the
November, 1991 issue (pages 77-95) of Texas Gulf Historical and
Biographical Record (Texas Gulf Historical Society, Beaumont, Texas).
Campbell, son-in-law of Isaac and Isabel Chabineaux Crow, resided at
Crow's Ferry, Sabine Parish, La. in 1816-1817 before he joined Laffite on
Galveston Island. His privateer Hotspur (the second of Laffite's
privateers of that name) was especially-built for Campbell at Laffite's
command in Baltimore in 1818. Of special design, the second Hotspur was a
topsail or "hermaphodyte" schooner, fore-and-aft rigged on both masts as
well as square-rigged on the foremast, a vessel "with all wings and no
feet," that could sail rings around the slow Spanish galleons of that
day.
During a ten-months' voyage from February to November,
1820, the Hotspur engaged and captured a number of Spanish plate ships off
Vera Cruz and Tampico. After plundering their victims of all bullion,
coins, rum, stores, and fresh water aboard, Capt. Campbell and his men
burned the captured ships but released their captives on the nearest land.
With all fresh water exhausted, the Hotspur sailed up the Mermentau River
to Grand Chenier in November, 1820, and the youngest pirate aboard, a
14-year-old cabin boy named Charles Cronea, deserted the privateer. As the
Hotspur attempted to return to the gulf, the privateer ran aground in the
shallow water offshore. Captain Campbell and his crew were able only to
salvage a small portion of the Spanish gold and silver aboard at the time
of the wreck. When they later returned on another ship to resume salvage
operations, the wreckage of the Hotspur had disappeared into deeper water.
The sunken treasures of the Hotspur and the Wave will
probably never be found unless they are dug up during Corps of Engineers
dredging operations at Cameron or in the offshore nets of some shrimper or
fisherman. But if they should ever appear, it is at least nice to know
from whence they originated.

For the biography of Capt.
Campbell and the last voyage of the Hotspur, see Block, "A
Buccaneer Family in Spanish East Texas," Texas Gulf Historical and
Biographical Record, XXVII, #1, (1991), pp. 77-96. See also
Capt. Campbell War of 1812 Pension File #WC-30-345 in National Archives;
"Jim Campbell Memoirs" in M. B. Lamar Papers, IV, Part 2, pp.
18-24; J. Campbell Obituary in Galv. Weekly News, May 27, 1856;
Memoirs in Charles Cronea Obituary, Galv. Daily News, Mar. 6, 1893;
Cronea Memoirs in "Sailed With The Sea Rover," Galv. Daily News,
Feb. 7, 1909, p. 17. See also in Galv. Daily News, "Laffite and His
Lieutenants," Apr. 21, 1878; "Buccaneers," May 25, 1879; "Days of
Laffite," Jan. 7, 1884; and "Story of Laffite,' Mar. 3, 1907.The Battle of
Calcasieu Pass, fought at Cameron, Louisiana, is carefully outlined in
great detail in War of The Rebellion-History of the Union and
Confederate States Navies, Vol. I, Series XXI, pp.
246-260.
