'49er Treasure Chest Found

PESKEYBOBCAT

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May 27, 2011
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Way out West Cal.
I remember when this story happened think it was around Dec 1999 I remember reading this in the news papper.. Mind you now it was only 20 years before they had the manson gang running thees hills you should of seen the way the park service handled them selves with this case it was rude to say the least. So when I found out it was fake and the park service had made a ass of them self I was rolling on the ground.. This was the day I made up my mind it did not pay to report..

'49er Treasure Chest Found in

Death Valley Cave is Bogus
By Bob Katz



The National Park Service says that a chest apparently discovered in a Death Valley cave was not left by a member of the Jayhawker party of emigrants who gave Death Valley its infamous name. Items contained in the chest included gold and silver coins, photographs, a pistol, holster, powder horn, ceramic bowls, a hymnal and a hand-written letter.

The chest was turned over to the park service in early January by Jerry Freeman, a California history buff who said he discovered it in late November while scouting in the Panamint Mountains what he believes is the path the '49ers took out of the valley. He continues to insist that the trunk was left there by William Robinson, one of the gold seekers who took an ill-advised detour across Death Valley in 1849.

But after several days of examination, testing and consultation by experts from the Western Archeological and Conservation Center and the Smithsonian Institute, the National Park Service, announced that the letter was a fake and that other items in the trunk came from time periods later than 1849.

"At this point we know that the chest isn't from the '49ers era," said NPS spokesman Tim Stone, "and whoever wrote that letter, we know it's not real. At present, we have no idea whether (Freeman) put it there or not. We're continuing to follow up" Stone added, then listed a number of instances which indicated that the artifacts were not genuine.

Glue on three items contained 20th century polymers.
Two photos in the chest were tintypes, a photographic process that was not patented until 1856.
A manufacturer's stamp on the bottom of one of the bowls dated from as late as 1914.
Pieces of leather had been recently treated and could not have been drying in Death Valley heat for a century and a half.
Bits of adhesive from a price sticker were found on the bottom of one bowl.
"If it's a fake, I can't dispute it at this point," said Freeman. "They say they found glue, and some things that couldn't have been from that time period. I can't argue with them. But I will go to my grave believing William Robinson left his things in the desert so long ago," Freeman said in a statement he prepared after the park service informed him of its findings.

"Death Valley" History
In December 1849, a group of prospectors heading for the California gold fields via Utah decided to take a southern route through the desert after learning that the direct route through the Sierra Nevadas was impassable until the snowmelt of the following spring.

Within a few weeks, they became lost in the parched wilderness of the Funeral Range and the Amargosa Mountains to the east of Death Valley. On Christmas Eve, they stumbled into the deep barren valley with bitter, undrinkable pools of water.

Of about 100 men, women and children who made this unfortunate journey, at least one died in the valley. William Robinson, so the story goes, perished near Palmdale on January 28,1850, after drinking large quantities of cold water to quench his Death Valley thirst.

Most of the others were saved when they found a way out of the valley through the Panamint Mountains to the west. William Manly, one of the survivors, wrote years later that the party turned for a last look east and "spoke the thought uppermost in our minds: 'Good-bye Death Valley!'"

Sequence of Events
The discovery was made by Jerry Freeman, a 56-year-old Pearblossom, California resident who has been visiting Death Valley since childhood. Freeman, who has an undergraduate degree in cultural anthropology, has long been fascinated with the '49ers' experience in the California deserts.

He said he found the chest November 22 while preparing for a Christmas hike retracing the '49ers' route out of Death Valley. He was scouting a route through the Panamint Mountains near Pinto Peak at about 6,500 feet elevation, when he found an old oxen shoe and part of an old knife. Not far away, he spotted two small caves.

Inside the deepest of the two caves, he discovered a chest propped on boulders against a board. The chest was 31 inches long, 19 inches wide and a foot high. Prying open the lid, he found a knitted shawl covering the items inside the chest, which included a letter folded within a hymnal ,from William Robinson, a Gold Rush pioneer who became lost in Death Valley. Excerpts include:

My dear edwin,
knowed now we should have gone around. but am thankful to not Be sick with the agu cause others are worse ofen me.

My last ox falled in his checks afore morn and I caint carry down the steep. the locket was your mahs. The boles and the wagon shrod were the preachers wife. I toted her youngen. If you shoudove already seen my lydia, tell her my heart beets with hers. Kindly leave me a half stake and my short gun. ifen I don't raturn by end of fifty. I wont never come.

Lord Be precious to your soul,
William.

With dark approaching, Freeman says he removed the letter and a coin, taking them home for further examination. He returned with his brother the following weekend, took photographs and replaced the letter in the hymnal.

On Christmas Eve, Freeman, with the help of 4 others, removed the 40-pound chest to Pearblossom, in the Antelope Valley. The National Park Service became aware of the trunk after an Antelope Valley newspaper published an account of the discovery January 1,1999.

Death Valley National Park officials contacted Freeman, who relinquished the chest and its contents to them few days later. Freeman says he kept nothing and has only retained photos and a videotape of the items, as well as a computer-scanned copy of the letter. Before returning the trunk to Death Valley officials Freeman held a press conference announcing his discovery.

Archeological Authentication
Freeman later escorted park officials to the location where he says the discovery was made, but the chest's removal from the cave had destroyed what archeologists call provenience, and complicated efforts to determine its authenticity.

"I would like to believe that the entire story is true and genuine," another Death Valley ranger stated at the time, "however, gaps exist in the inability to recreate the site due to the disturbance. The trunk was opened and contents contaminated. Lack of original photos will make it difficult to confirm or deny the placement, ownership, timelines etc. This case will be forever tarnished due to the lack of documentation.

"Please spread the word -- if you find something -- mark it, guard it, protect it in place!!!! Then notify the park service, if on park lands, or BLM. All archeological finds should be treated as if a crime scene for documentation."

On January 28, Tim Stone concluded that the only authentic items in the chest were coins minted before 1850, probably worth"thousands of dollars." He added that Freeman presently faces no criminal charges, because the trunk was did not contain any items protected under the federal Archaeological Protection Resources Act and he, therefore, violated no law by removing it.
 
I don't want to get into the whole "report or not" question since I like the friendly nature of these forums.

I do think, from reading the article, that this wa a case of one guy really, really, wanting to be a part of a history that he had got obsessed with. Seems almost like he was blind in love and didn't think thru his actions.

How else to explain what a horrible job he did gaming the evidence. I mean, leaving the gum from a price tag? Thats fake artifacting 101! :lol:
 
I'm amazed at these people who find these treasures/caches, then turn them over to the government. Put in all that hard work, then hand it over so the government can steal it from you. :?:

People need to learn to keep their mouths shut when they find caches/treasure chests... No newspaper stories, no news interviews, etc. They are just asking to have the government come take the finds for themselves, even though nobody else would have ever found them.

If this guy really went out and spent thousands of $ on gold coins to try to fake this, then risks the government taking them all... well, he is a nut.
 
If you find $100,000 in gold coins, you go right ahead and turn them over to the "Educated Professionals"... so they can call them archeological finds, throw them on some shelf in some storage facility, never to be seen by the public, or you, again. :?:

I think I would pass them to my oldest son before I die...
 
Wtf?

I think the point here is the find was faked by a guy that wanted to be part of history in his own mind. :( :wow: He went to a lot of trouble - and expense to put the chest together, and then make sure it was known he discovered it. An extreme example of what can happen in forums every day - fake finds to impress or fit in - or to make money on a false pretense. Pretenders, wanna-bees - whatever.

As far as reporting finds -- The current Administration in Washington, has managed to almost completely stop the reporting of new meteorite finds with their interpretation of the antiquities laws on the books. 90-percent of the people that "report," or show rich finds, do it for attention - period. I don't know any serious treasure hunters that want you to know they found anything - and when they show a stranger something, it's to throw them off the scent..:shock:
 
It's crazy to me that anyone would post "found" items on this site if they didn't actually find them while detecting, CRH'ing, etc. I'm sure it happens, but that's kind of sad. Anybody can go buy an old coin on eBay and say they dug it up, but recovering an actual lost item from the dirt is why we all joined this forum.
 
If I ever find a gold coin, or anything else valuable, I will be too scared to post it. In fear of the government hunting me down. I don't have to worry about any of that yet, my best find is a 1947 merc... oh wait thats over 50 years old and an artifact... damn I need to hide this mercury dime... :lol:
 
It is ashame that the government thinks anything and everything is thiers. I think it should be if you found it then its yours unless you and the property owner have some sort of deal. Thats just my 2 cents.
 
........the Antiquities and the governmental folks would rather the lost items rot away and then on one will ever enjoy or learn our ancestors. Go figure!
 
I think the point here is the find was faked by a guy that wanted to be part of history in his own mind. :( :wow: He went to a lot of trouble - and expense to put the chest together, and then make sure it was known he discovered it. An extreme example of what can happen in forums every day - fake finds to impress or fit in - or to make money on a false pretense. Pretenders, wanna-bees - whatever.

As far as reporting finds -- The current Administration in Washington, has managed to almost completely stop the reporting of new meteorite finds with their interpretation of the antiquities laws on the books. 90-percent of the people that "report," or show rich finds, do it for attention - period. I don't know any serious treasure hunters that want you to know they found anything - and when they show a stranger something, it's to throw them off the scent..:shock:

Yeah, that's what I want and need......attention from the IRS......or anyone. My immediate family knows what I do and what I've found for a reason......they're going to end up getting most of it and I don't trust lawyers. My mom is still paying legal bills 4 years after her last husband passed away. His family is contesting the sale of the $330,000 house even though his will states she is the sole owner of the house after he is gone.

Posting pics of clad finds is one thing, saying you found a chest full of gold is just asking for trouble.......

Dusty
 
Posting pics of clad finds is one thing, saying you found a chest full of gold is just asking for trouble.......
(((( EXACTLY!!!))))


The box that I found was fun not really valuable, but cool. If I ever find a chest,well .............................. I'll probably just "Shaddup.":grin:

HH

C
 
If I ever find a gold coin, or anything else valuable, I will be too scared to post it. In fear of the government hunting me down. I don't have to worry about any of that yet, my best find is a 1947 merc... oh wait thats over 50 years old and an artifact... damn I need to hide this mercury dime... :lol:

Toss out that mercury dime....just tell me where you tossed it..I will find it and won't tell you OR anyone else! :lol::lol::lol:
 
I think there was even a story on a giy who said he had found a cache in his yard and they did soil sample on the container and it didnt match the soil on his property!!!!:shock:
 
I would keep it and say nothing, too many laws restricting us already.

"-- and that government of the people, by the people, for the people",

this statement seems to mean little today.
 
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