Many accounts of the discovery of the alluring blue tanzanite have found their way into print, most of them quite misleading or simply wrong.
The stone, which was the first new gem of commercial importance since the discovery of alexandrite in April 1834, was found on July 7, 1967 by Manuel de Souza.
De Souza, known as Mad Manuel due to his overwhelming passion for prospecting in the African bush unarmed and on foot, began his prospecting adventures on the Lupa Goldfields of western Tanganyika, India in 1939. But when it became unprofitable to mine gold after World War II, he moved to Dar es Salaam.
As there were no minerals to seek in the coastal region, de Souza departed for the Shinyanga diamond fields but Tanzanian prospecting licences for diamonds were nearly impossible to get, due to the monopoly of the Williamson Diamond Mines.
Following a period in the region of Lake Victoria, de Souza moved to Arusha to try his luck in the Kilimanjaro area.
On Easter weekend in 1967, his feet got particularly itchy and he hired a pickup and driver to drop him and his equipment at a destination he had selected southeast of Arusha.
Not having anticipated how bad the roads were, the driver refused to go further than a village called Mtakuja, deep in Maasai country. There, tens of miles short of the agreed-upon destination, de Souza was unceremoniously off-loaded from the vehicle.
He didn't know it yet but such serendipity had brought him to a spot about four miles from the future tanzanite find.
Jump forward to June 7 when de Souza, accompanied by four men he had hired in Mtakuja for mere shillings a day, stumbled across a transparent blue stone sitting on the surface of the ground.
From its colour he thought it sapphire but dismissed this when he tested its hardness.
Back in Arusha, he consulted the only reference book on mineralogy in his possession and decided that olivine (also known as peridot) was the closest match to his stone.
He registered it as such on July 25, 1967 - a move prompted by the Tanzanian law that required prospectors to specify the minerals before registering a mining claim.
It did not take de Souza long to discover that the gem was not olivine, but he remained at a loss as to its actual identity. Some said it was dumortierite, others argued cordierite. Swahili-speaking prospectors fittingly-labelled it Skaiblu, meaning sky blue.
Around this time, de Souza sent samples to the Gemological Institute of America (GIA), perhaps the only lab with the equipment at the time to identify zoisite.
Ultimately, however, it was a Tanzanian government geologist named Ian McCloud who eventually identified the mysterious sky-blue gem as tanzanite, though the gem wasn't named until samples reached Tiffany and Company vice president Henry Platt.
Platt appreciated the beauty of the material and subsequently coined the name tanzanite, in reference to its country of origin.