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Post by beale on Jul 25, 2005 19:37:23 GMT -5
Hey Tomm,
Why don't you cut out all of that make believe stuff and rejoin the real world. If you have found as much treasure as you say you have and if you have located as much treasure as you say you have and the tunnels and caves you say that are full of gold and silver and if the GOVERNMENT is looking for you as much as you say they are, why don't you just quit posting and rejoice in all of your wealth. I personally don't believe that you have found even a gold coin. If you have found all of those gold bricks all of that jewelry go to treasuenet.com and post some pictures there. They have a Beale Treasure String there also. I just wish you and others would quit separating words and letters and making erroneous words and letters out of them that mean absolutely nothing. Post your finds. Post a receipt of where you cashed in any of this treasure. I have called your bluffs in the past. You said you could put me onto a cave or vault ------------one of many vaults you say Beale or others have stashed treasure. You say to watch out for bubby traps, snakes and government men . I don't mind any of this. Give me the gps or location of anything I will go there blow the hell out of it and prove you wrong. Enough is enough, don't you think. I just can't swollow any more of this teacher student crap. Come on, what do you say. Last time you were silent for a few months then you came back with the same crap. The way I see it, either put up or shut up.
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Post by beale on Mar 28, 2008 5:00:23 GMT -5
Rockhound is the rock specialist. You may have to wait. It takes him a while to post sometimes. Where exactly is the Russian River--------California I suppose? I have never been versed to well in geology. But, I am sure someone out there should be able to answer your question.
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Post by beale on Apr 12, 2008 7:21:37 GMT -5
Your welcome, kydave. Have you ever got to search for the cannon you once told me about? I am presently researching and writing a new book on a frontier fort built in 1756. I may get time to go down and look for your cannon sometime this summer. If you don't want to post about the cannon just send me a pm or email me. Thanks. Look forward to meeting you. Albert
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Post by beale on Apr 7, 2008 19:48:55 GMT -5
Outstanding story about Pinckneyville that you wrote for the April issue of Lost Treasure magazine Albert! Must have taken a tremendous amount of research. I do believe you have found your "Callin"! Thanks for the info! ;D ;D ;D HAPPY HAPPY ;D ;D ;DHAPPY HAPPY HAPPY HAPPY HAPPY HAPPY HAPPY ;D ;DBIRTHDAY ;D ;DBIRTHDAY BIRTHDAY BIRTHDAY ;D ;D BIRTHDAY BIRTHDAYYOU'LL HAVE TO DECYPHER ---I THINK IT IS IN CODE?
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Post by beale on Mar 18, 2008 5:08:34 GMT -5
My problem was the landowner died, his wife now does not want anyone metal detecting on the land pluse she sold a large portion of the land to the government park service. How was I to know all of this, her in Mississippi and I in Virginia unless I wanted to go there and hunt again, then I would have called.
The man was sure a whole lot easier to deal with, then they always are.
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Post by beale on Mar 16, 2008 14:18:57 GMT -5
Thanks anyway, kydave.
I got an answer from Lost Treasure Magazine. It seems the people that own the property down at Brice's Crossroads sent them a complaint about my story. They say they sold a lot of their land to Federal Park Service and that it was a $5000 fine to recover or search on the land now. They say I should have checked with them before I sent the story in to Lost Treasure. Why in the world would I care whether they sold the land or not? Seems to me they should have contacted all newspapers in this country and let everyone know they sold most of their land to the **** park service.
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Post by beale on Feb 28, 2008 19:20:39 GMT -5
By the way, kydave, there was to be another one of my stories in the April Issue, "Battle for Brice's Crossroads" Is this story in there also? It may not have my name on the story? Was my name on the Pinckneyville story? Thanks.
Also my CD's are still selling. I am sending one to Florida tomorrow, "Lost Treasury Gold"
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Post by beale on Feb 26, 2008 19:36:55 GMT -5
kydave,
If you make a trip down that way, when you leave Lockhart and go north up the west side of Broad River, on a dirt road you will see a boat dock or marina, off to the left on the hillside at the marina is a swell place to look. There is holes all over, I believe was dug by Oregon Dave when he recovered over $1 Million Dollars worth of treasure. A man in South Carolina saw over 3,600 Mexican Silver Dollars and jewelry, though he never got any for himself. Oregon Dave cashed all of this in at Houston, Texas and flew first class back to Oregon. There is a draught down that way again and it would be an excellent time to have a look around. Good luck.
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Post by beale on Feb 26, 2008 5:57:24 GMT -5
By the way kydave, you mentioned the large stone with graffiti, it wasn't by any chance on the front cover? Most likely inside the magazine? Thanks.
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Post by beale on Feb 24, 2008 7:27:39 GMT -5
kydave,
That was a marble monument erected to signify where the Pinckneyville Courthouse stood in 1791. All of that graffiti was placed there by "devil worshipers" they had been using the monument as an alter I suppose.
I am glad you enjoyed the story. There was a lot of research involved-------Senator Charles Cotesworth Pinckney's writings---Official Records of the War of the Rebellion-------Antebellum South Carolina----Shipping records of the ports of Charleston and others in the South also books on the Erie Canal ---- Rise and Fall of the Confederacy by Jefferson Davis----- Two books by Helen Seabrook Neapreav about Secretary of the Treasury, George Alfred Trenholm, "Battle of Brown's Mill" by Williams, a writer in Greenville South Carolina, an article he wrote in "Treasure Magazine" years ago. There were scores of other sources but mostly the bulk of the story came from the OR. I sure wish I could scuba dive I would be under the Broad River with my metal detector. Somewhere near that monument is where the "Vaults" of "Fort Knox of the Confederacy" were built. Off towards the northeast from the monument is a headstone marking a grave of "Bobos Cocos" and about one hundred graves marked by white quartz stones. This is where the Battle of CSA General Butler and Yankee General Palmer took place. Williams sent me emails lately on the treasurenet forum saying the words, "Bobos Cocos" were two different foreign words having something to do with the KGC and telling where the vaults are located. I DON'T KNOW. I haven't gotten back down that way, but if someone is lucky I wish they would at least give me one coin from their finds?
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Post by beale on Feb 23, 2008 14:58:32 GMT -5
Thanks, kydave. How is it the March Issue just came out and you have read the April Issue? I have not seen the April Issue yet, is it on line at www.losttreasure.com ?
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Post by beale on Jan 20, 2008 11:24:46 GMT -5
I found a machine that can do what I said above. It cost about $1250. plus you have to have a deep seeking detector about $650. and a lap top computer with software. Maybe $3500. to $5000. Well worth the price if it works? I will check it out. If someone likes they can purchase my machine a MLL inground resistivity meter for $2100. It shows something is in the ground, where and how deep but does not tell you the size of target? Anyone need a machine that will go 130 feet deep to locate gold and silver for them check out the MLL or Mother Lode Locator, I have mine still for sale at $2100. I would like to purchase one of the newer and more costly models made in Germany probably $16,000. How about it anyone want to purchase mine shipping is on me to anywhere in the continental USA. See the same machine made by kellyco at www.kellycodetectors.com/gpl/ground.htm List for $9,995. On Sale $6,450. Mine is a steal at $2,100.
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Post by beale on Aug 5, 2007 18:35:30 GMT -5
My research on the Jonathan Swift silver mines has led me further West. When John Swift said it was a considerable distance West of the Forks of the Big Sandy River and on a river that he did not know the name of, I expanded my research to go a considerable distance farther than everyone generally believes the mines to be located. My research has paid off, I located an area where Jonathan Swift owned over 10,000 acres of land, he was a silver smith in Alexandria and he was married to Desiree Ann Swift. The only problem I have encountered is that this Jonathan Swift did not go blind and did not die around 1805, he lived until the 1830's.
I think the Swift Silver Mine's stories a lot of them were fabricated from the true story. John Filson wrote the autobiography of Daniel Boone and Jonathan Swift. I have located copies of the Daniel Boone but I can not find a copy of the Jonathan Swift version? Does anyone out there have a copy? I can also verify that silver was found in the area surrounding where Jonathan Swift owned the 10,000 acres of land. Jonathan's other partners also became large landowners in the States of North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee as well as in the State of Kentucky. More later, got to go.
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Post by beale on May 27, 2007 17:46:55 GMT -5
Yep the have some high tek instruments out there. I have seen the ads for the 15 to 20 thousand dollar stuff but it's whatever one can afford i guess or how sure you are that the treasures there. The shipwrecks would never have been found without the right equipment. All you gotta do is find one treasure to make it worth while! You are correct, kydave, 15 to 20 thousand dollars for a machine to locate and recover a treasure is cheap compared to the benefits of the find. The treasure in Danville, Virginia left by the CSA Government is worth over 2 Billion dollars maybe as much as 10 or 20. I am going to some how get one of those machines? I haven't got to go check out the Swift Treasure site yet but I will soon. Good talking to you, see you later.
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Post by beale on May 16, 2007 20:27:05 GMT -5
I found a machine that can do what I said above. It cost about $1250. plus you have to have a deep seeking detector about $650. and a lap top computer with software. Maybe $3500. to $5000. Well worth the price if it works? I will check it out.
If someone likes they can purchase my machine a MLL inground resistivity meter for $2100. It shows something is in the ground, where and how deep but does not tell you the size of target?
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