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Post by Rebel KGC on May 3, 2005 16:29:56 GMT -5
Yo! Rebel here: Yeah... I know about that "strong signal"... so does Jeff of PA "Treasurenet.com" Ha! U know the KGC sometimes moved the "Super" else- where if pp got too "nosey'... HA! why so many EMPTY HOLES around here... was it found? or... just... MOVED? HA! Well... time will tell... Mexico... OR south of Bedford, AFTER... the WAR... HA!
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tjb
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Post by tjb on May 3, 2005 19:09:47 GMT -5
I will tell you the truth, Rebel about the KGC treasure. A large shipment of gold and silver left Danville, Virginia on the 8th of April 1865. The treasure train with Captain Parker and the Cadets had already left on the 6th of April. Edward Sixtus Hutter and Ferdinand, Edward,'s brother, a high ranking paymaster in the Confederate Treasury Department was among the men that escorted this shipment. It was bound for Lynchburg via through Rocky Mount, Roanoke and through Montvale, Bedford City and eventually to Lynchburg. However about 15 miles West of Danville they had been alerted by scouts that General George Stoneman was approaching from the Greensboro Area. They concealed and buried the treasure and went back to Danville. Check the records and you will see that an alert was sent out on April 8th, 1865 that the Yankees were approaching from the West and possibly the North. All of the batteries and gun pits were manned waiting for the attack, that never came. When, Jefferson Davis personal aide, Burton Harrison, arrived in Danville from escorting Jefferson Davis' wife and children to Charlotte, North Carolina. He said he didn't know what all of the calmity was about and that he had seen no Yankees on his journey from Greensboro to Danville. Burton said Stoneman and his raiders were headed towards Salisbury, North Carolina, with the best of information that he could gather. So, why the Yankee report. That was so the money could be cancelled at a place called "Burnt Chimney" I will let you figure out where that is, but be careful there are two of them. I have been picking up a treasure signal from that area for years. I could never figure out what it was, but this is the answer. The landowner is dying and he won't permit me to see what is buried on his property either. Maybe one day.
They published an article of mine in "Treasure Cache" magazine about part of this story. I did not reveal the entire story, you will have to fill it in. albert_hunter@yahoo.com
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Post by Rebel KGC on May 3, 2005 19:28:21 GMT -5
Yo! Rebel here: ;D And now... for MORE Civil War History... (things, they NEVER taught u in school... LGA!) ; Yep... tjb... yer correct... about the 2 Burnt Chimney(ies)... I think I read about it re. Rebel escape from Yanks... it is NOT... the Burnt Chimney in Franklin County, south of Hales Ford Bridge at SML... AND... I think it was a Reb Cannon buried for future use in the new C.W. GEEZE!
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tjb
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Post by tjb on May 3, 2005 19:30:31 GMT -5
Rebel,
To answer your post though, you can not have a strong signal from a treasure that is not there or has been removed. If you want to check out the KGC check out Ferdinand Hutter, he signed the first check for General Robert E. Lee. Jerry Falwell now lives in his house. KGC is just now coming to life. Look out Rebel you may run into it. albert_hunter@yahoo.com
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Post by Rebel KGC on May 3, 2005 19:33:28 GMT -5
Yo! Rebel here: ;D KGC? ALREADY have... ha! ha! ha!
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tjb
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Post by tjb on May 3, 2005 19:40:00 GMT -5
Rebel,
As much fun as we are having we may finish that Petersburg Tunnel and dig it all the way to Richmond?
I have about ten letters from a man that lived in Greenville, South Carolina to our Governor here in Virginia. He tells of 15 million dollars in gold bars buried in an iron box just before the CSA left good ole Virginny. He told our Governor he knew exactly where it was buried. He said his grandfather helped to bury it and drawed it up in minute details about it's wherabouts.
I had a contact with one of this man's 2nd cousins. He died about a month ago. I got his brother's phone number on the day of the funeral and told him I was going to call him about three weeks after the funeral. I am still looking for that phone number. This may be the big KGC. He said the gold bars were sent over here from good ole England. What ye think, Rebel? albert_hunter@yahoo.com
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Post by Rebel KGC on May 3, 2005 20:21:14 GMT -5
Yo! Rebel here: Geeze... this is FUN! Yep, tjb... I have the same info... not only Brits... BUT French AND Mexicans were in on it... that is why, there was a Reb Conclave/Community in Mexico after the WAR... AND probably where Buck Wright took his family, to escape paying U. S. Taxes... if he left Bedford "poor" (not really...) he became wealthy enough there to come back to Bedford County to build old Ladies Home... probably widows of C.S.A. fighters... dunno...
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tjb
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Post by tjb on May 8, 2005 18:43:50 GMT -5
Rebel,
Talk to some of the old timers in and around Bedford. See if you can find any leads as to the wherabouts of any treasures that have been hidden in and around Bedford. I heard of one up there that was buried by the Dooley brothers that fought at Yorktown. They said they stole Cornwallis gold and brought it back to Bedford and buried it. They tell me that is where the whole story of the Beale Treasure came into existence. They said the two brothers buried it. One of them came back and moved it to another location. When the brother looked for the gold to get him some of it, he found it all gone and accused his brother of stealing it. Before, his brother could give him an answer the other brother shot and killed him. They say later this mans son made up the story of the Beale treasure to help him recover it by someone else finding it. I don't know about this story's being true, but the men that were telling it were a couple of millionaire farmers and landowners that live in Montvale. It could be true. Maybe what we are trying to find is Lord General Cornwallis' Treasure. albert_hunter@yahoo.com
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tjb
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Post by tjb on May 10, 2005 17:26:09 GMT -5
Rebel,
Buck Wright was not the man that went to Mexico. You can find his name in Peter Viemeister's book, "A History of a Mystery."
BucK Wright was at one time a member of the Jesse James Gang. He went down into Buchannon every now and then to get supplies with his little pack mule. Buck Lester, Tolar Ranson and Walter Innis were three of the earliest hunters for the Beale Treasure. After George and Clayton Hart of course. albert_hunter@yahoo.com
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tjb
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Post by tjb on May 10, 2005 17:29:54 GMT -5
Rebel,
I'm sorry I made a mistake. I said Buck Lester, I meant Buck Wright. Buck Lester, was a sniper in Southern West Virginia during the Civil War. He stole an Union Army payroll and was killed by my Great Great Uncle, Samson Estep and another man by the name Sweeney.
Sorry about that sometimes the information leaks over into places it's not suppose to be. albert_hunter@yahoo.com
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Post by Rebel KGC on May 10, 2005 18:36:18 GMT -5
Yo! Rebel here: That is ok, tjb... it happens to me, too... u mentioned Wright, et al... looking for B. T. I think that Wright was just CHECKING on it... when he found out that "nosey pp" were getting too close to it... I think he REMOVED or MOVED it... like the "good old boys of the KGC, sometimes did... LGA!
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Post by TOMm on May 15, 2005 22:32:04 GMT -5
hears a hint the words second deposit SECOND= DECONs
First FRIST
connect the dots
TOMm
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Post by Rebel KGC on May 16, 2005 7:15:56 GMT -5
Yo! Rebel here: ;D Have u found it, then?
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Post by Rebel KGC on Jan 23, 2011 9:23:58 GMT -5
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