Treasure Quest
For more than a decade, American Robert Graf has combed the waters of a Seychelles island for a multimillion-dollar booty stashed by pirates nearly 300 years ago
- By Michael Behar
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2004, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Graf says he narrowed his search by trying to reconcile the La Buse papers with the markings on the rocks, which led him to the spot where he constructed his lagoon. "I tried to get into the mind-set of the pirates," he says. "I had this dream, and every single morning for two or three weeks I'd wake up wondering 'What does this single dot on the rocks mean?'" There were dozens of similarly puzzling clues. La Buse had advised readers to be "fixed by the ecliptic plan," and also wrote: "Let Jason be your guide and the third circle will be open to you."
Kevin Rushby, author of Hunting Pirate Heaven: In Search of the Lost Pirate Utopias of the Indian Ocean, told me that the Seychelles aren't the only place people are seeking La Buse's stash. "Treasure hunters have been scouring Réunion for the treasure for years," he says. "They even sacrifice chickens on his grave there."
Graf isn't daunted. At his excavation site on Mahé, we scramble over weathered boulders that jut from the beach like giant stone fingers. He points out at least two dozen carvings and symbols etched into the rocks. Each of these markings, Graf takes pains to explain, is related to a comment in La Buse's writings. Later, for four hours back at my hotel, he shows me PowerPoint slides on his laptop, including aerial photographs of the excavation site. One picture, he says, reveals a sequence of seemingly random holes that mirrors a constellation of stars referred to in one of the letters. That's not the only evidence he might be on the right track. Years ago, Reginald Cruise-Wilkins had found a domino with handmade inlays showing a six and a two not far from the place where Graf is now digging. La Buse's papers, it turns out, contain a reference to the number 62.
Today it's thought that La Buse's share of the Cabo heist could be worth $200 million, but Graf says that figure varies depending on who you talk to. He's heard sums as high as $500 million. "But even if it's only $5 million," he says, "that's still a lot of money." Though under Seychelles law, he tells me, half of any earnings must go to the government. Yet time is running out. Graf's excavation permit is due to expire in April 2005, and Cruise-Wilkins is standing by, ready for a third assault. "I know what we have to do, and it will be pretty fast," says Cruise-Wilkins, whose home is just down the road from the excavation site. "I was working on a tight budget, but now I have the funding. Graf was supposed to move out and I was supposed to take over on October 1, but the government's technical adviser visited the site and gave him six more months." Cruise-Wilkins says that his former partner, now rival, is merely stalling and will run out of time before finding the treasure.
As Graf and I stood at the edge of his lagoon after a dive, he insisted that he was closer than ever to a narrow channel that he says will lead him to the vault that La Buse alludes to in his papers. It'll require just ten days of dredging to reach the vault's entrance, he claims. And what if it takes longer?
When I telephone Graf a few weeks after returning to the States, he tells me that the ceiling of the so-called channel has begun to collapse. He'll have to dig out part of the ceiling to prevent a cave-in—a setback that will cost him at least a couple of more months. In the meantime, he'll have to persuade his wife to hold out a bit longer. "She's sick of it," he says. "She wants to go to the States so I can take a 9-to-5 job. But I won't do it. I've got five different letters that point to the same spot. The treasure has been sitting there for 300 years, and I've only got a couple of feet to go."
Later, getting ready to leave the island, I tell Graf that his story is a bit hard to believe. Then again, by now I've learned that to be a treasure hunter—to slog away for years in the heat, grit and grime—takes a certain amount of blind optimism. As he starts to drive off, Graf pokes his head out the car window and shouts: "You'll believe me when the treasure comes out of the ground!" Optimism perhaps—or maybe just pirate fever.
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Comments (10)
Anyone interested to find out about La Buse's treasure? Please let me know I have a lot of concrete information
Posted by Liz Englert on January 14,2013 | 05:35 AM
Don't be fooled the name in the forest was made by a crazy guy to divert people from looking at the right spot. The treasure is where the Bel Ombre site is near the beach, where they found the skeletons
Posted by Marisa on June 1,2012 | 10:18 AM
How do you get authorised to look for treasure? I too am interested in Mauritius.
Posted by Ryno Swart on December 29,2011 | 02:31 AM
I think I have an idea of where Le vassue hid its treasure. The treasure is not at Bel Ombre as was originally through but its somehwere in the forest. I have evidence that Olivier Le Vasseur visited the place because his name is engraved in a large boulder.
All famous pirates used to do this. Furthermore, the cryptogram is more than just a few letters to decipher. Its actually a map hidden in the words. Why do you think L:e Vassue said, he who can understand can find my treasure???
I will be going for the hunt because I have already seen a few other areas where potential hidden treasure can be found.
Posted by Eddy on June 18,2011 | 03:28 PM
I understand totally the frustration Graf feels concerning finding the treasure of La Buse. My Grandfather native of Mauritius also ruined himself looking for the treasure in Mauritius.
Posted by Jean Francois L'Homme on March 13,2011 | 06:19 PM
My maiden name was LeVasseur so this pirate may be a distant relative. My ancestors came from Paris, his homeplace. I think a tidal wave did a lot of damage to the area during the time of this search. Has anything more been done to find the treasure?
Posted by Charlotte McDaniel on February 8,2011 | 03:01 PM
Why hasn't anyone decided to build walls in the water around the area where the openings are to the caves? Sealing the area off from the water will make the digging so much easier, and the pumping of the water out of the caves would only take a few months more. I really do think this adventure can turn out a worthy one, provided the markings and papers give a very positive reason to build and dig through the muck and suck out the water. Come on, you say you have the funding. Now you need to talk the Seychelles government into accepting your new plan to build and drain the land. Do you need a certified open water diver to help?....I know one!...lol call me!
Posted by kevin richardson on March 15,2010 | 10:04 PM
The article is very interesting. I think the Smithsonian should support him in his jounery,to find this treasure. Just think $500million thats a lot of money Even if it is only 5million its still money and histroy!Just wanting to be found we all spend money on junk. This seems more worth wild to invest in.
Posted by jack pistole on March 15,2010 | 06:49 PM
No he didnt the treasure is still out there. he was looking in the wrong spot.
Posted by hellen on June 1,2008 | 08:10 AM
What was the final outcome of the search by Robert Graf as written up in the Decenber 2004 issue of Smithsonian ?At the time of the article, he felt he was very close to a discovery. Did he succeed ??
Posted by Richard Sweetser on February 28,2008 | 01:09 PM
I just re-read the article Treasure Quest in the 12/04 Smithsonian. What was the outcome of Robert Graf's treasure hunt?
Posted by Charles Silverson on January 24,2008 | 03:34 PM