Another suppose bury treasure is up
in Nova Scotia. It is located on Oak Island and it’s nicknamed the “Money Pit”.
I talked briefly about it in Chapter 2. The reason for the name is a lot of
money has been spent looking or it and everybody to date has come up empty
handed. There are a lot of theories to what the treasure is. Everything to the
Holy Grail to the crowned jewels of France has been proposed. Some even think
it is pirate treasure. In the late 1600’s, the famous pirate, Captain Kidd was
known to prowl the area and legend has it that he buried his treasure on Oak
Island. But, most historical researchers believe Kidd actually buried it on Gardiners
Island, off Long Island, New York, before he was hanged. Today, Oak Island is
privately owned but they do offer tours. A lot of the areas are roped off and off limits, due the
fact that there are mine shaft all over the place from previous attempts at the
treasure. There is also a small museum to look at the history and all the
progress that has happened on the island for the treasure. Not to mention, it is a beautiful part of
Canada to see.
The famous outlaw Jesse James is
suppose of have hid his money that he stole, somewhere in Arizona. All of Al
Capone’s money has not been accounted for.
If you check the internet, you will
find a legend of a buried treasure in your area to go look for. They are
located all over the United States. Treasurecache.net is my favorite. It is the
most up to date site on buried treasure. Be careful, because you might be going on
private or public land. And if you by chance do find the treasure, you will
have to give it to whoever owns the property or the state. Mel Fisher had a
lengthy court battle with the state of Florida over the treasure he found in a
sunken ship.
You can also go look for the long
lost ransom that DB Cooper when he hijacked a plane at Portland, Oregon in Nov
24 1971 and with a parachute, jumped into the Washington state forest, near
Mount St Helens. To this day nobody has seen DB Cooper or his ransom money. The
area is also a popular hiking and camping area and many treasure hunters have
taken up the hunt. The area is so dense and thick; you can easily get lost let
alone find the money. Of course this is to assume that Mr. Cooper did not
survive the parachute fall.
There is
$100,000 in gold currency, buried when Confederate soldiers robbed two wagon
trains from a Union bank in 1865 at Chennault Crossroads in Lincoln County. Legend has it that the gold was
hastily buried on the original grounds of Chennault Plantation at Washington,
Georgia, and remains there today. The plantation is under private
ownership and permission is required.
There is
also supposed to be gold buried near the site where General George Custer met
his end called Little Big Horn at South Dakota. The way the story goes was a
boat loaded with gold came up the Bighorn River to meet up with the soldiers at
Bismarck. But the captain found out about Custer and decided to bury the gold
nearby where the massacre happened and it is supposed to still be there. This
is now a national park so if you find it, the government gets it.
In
reference to Tom Sawyer and Mark Twain, I found this interesting article
at
treasurecache.net, about a legend of a treasure:
“Hannibal is best known as the hometown
of Mark Twain, or Samuel Clemens. The Clemens family moved to Hannibal from
Florida, Missouri, in 1839, when Samuel was still a boy. It was here that Twain
experienced the adventures in the cave that he later wrote about in "Tom
Sawyer." The cave, now known as Mark Twain Cave, is located about two
miles south of Hannibal and is privately owned, but it is open to the public
for an admission charge. It was originally known as Sims Cave after Jack Sims,
who found it in 1819. It was later called Big Saltpetre Cave and then
McDowell's Cave, the name by which young Sam Clemens knew it.
In the 1840s, an eccentric St. Louis physician, E.
D. McDowell, placed the corpse of a 14-year-old girl, said by some to have been
his daughter, in a glass and copper cylinder which he filled with alcohol and
suspended from a rail bridging a narrow passage in the cave. McDowell claimed
that this was an experiment to see if the limestone cave would petrify the
cadaver, but it is said that his real purpose was to create a tourist attraction.
Many tales of a treasure buried in the cave
originated during the Gold Rush in 1849. Clemens himself spent many hours
searching for treasure in the cave, probably having heard the legend that
returning Forty-Niners had buried gold there.”
Living in Florida, My family and I
like to go look for buried treasure in the state. There is a lot of lost
treasure from sunken ship wrecks but that is more difficult to go look for. We
like to look for the treasure on dry land. There is supposed to be lost confederate
gold in the Florida Everglades, but it is supposed to be on the Seminal
Reservation. Sanibel Island and St.
George Island are reported to have buried treasure on them. There is even
supposed to be the stolen loot from the notorious bank robbers, the Ashley
gang, which is said to be buried on the southern banks of Lake Okeechobee. I have been to this location and there are
plenty of spots to go look for the treasure.
So you see
there are not shortages of buried treasure to go look for. If you do decide to
go look for a buried treasure, make sure that your whole family knows the story
behind it. It makes the whole experience a lot more exciting.
The Knights of the Golden Circle, a Confederate secret society, did bury much treasure before, during, and after the Civil War. John Wilkes Booth and Jesse James were two of its most notorious members. In 1934, two Baltimore boys found 5,000 gold coins buried under an old house. While it was thought the treasure belonged to a wealthy miser, new evidence has emerged pointing towards the KGC as the source of the immense treasure. See the new book Knights' Gold on Amazon to read the amazing but true story.
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