Treasure Revealed

Treasure Revealed

This is Treasure Revealed, I will show you the possible locations of buried gold treasure, silver treasure and other valuable objects not only in every state of United States, but in other parts of the world using my many years of extensive research. There are two types of locations, one is based on evidence that something valuable was buried and second one is based on historical events that happened here, therefore there is a high probability of finding valuable items as well. Never has anyone put together so much valuable information and was willing to share it with you.

  1. 17/07/2022

    Treasure hunting New York Lost Shawangunk Silver Mine Accord Peeksill Kidd's Point Hicksville Gardin

    The Lost Shawangunk Silver Mine is found at the upper part of Sullivan County in the Catskill Mountains between Lake Mongaup and Hodge Pond. Almost a mile east of Shokan Village in County 28, Ulster County, a bootleger from New York is reported to have hidden two and a half million dollars worth of paper currency in several iron boxes during the Prohibition days, somewhere on a deserted farm at the upper part of Ashokan Reservoir. He was caught, but the FBI and other law enforcement agencies failed to find his loot. Also located someplace in this area is the Lost Truman Hurd Gold Mine. Another cache of valuables known as the Tongorara Treasure is presumed to be hidden between Kingston City at U.S. 87 and the lower edge of this reservoir. It consists of gold and silver coins valued at over one million dollars. Accord's tiny village at State 209, Ulster County, is where Rufe Evans, a miner, buried a hoard of silver ore and bullion somewhere within or nearby the hamlet. At the time of the Revolution, a band of Tory raiders stashed a sizeable amount of plunder outside Summitville, State 209, Sullivan County, in a cave somewhere in the Shawangunk Mountains. Tracy Maxwell, a farmer who died in 1948 and lived two miles west of Surprise on County 81, Greene County, stated in his will that he hid paper currency and a stockpile of family jewelry worth around $135,000 somewhere in or around his barn. His family had spent more than $20,000 trying to find his treasure, but they have been unsuccessful. Eighteenth-century river pirates are believed to have buried many caches of treasure within and around the vicinity of West Point Military Academy during the Revolution. The Tories, who were forced to flee Peeksill for their lives during the Revolution, buried numerous treasures somewhere in the region. Researching where the Tories lived by examining old property records might reveal where they hid their valued possessions. The Hudson River's narrowest place is a spot called Kidd's Point. It is alleged that the renowned criminal buried a hoard of treasure in this area, making it famous as an expedition site frequented by treasure hunters over the years. A few miles south of Peekskill, located on a bluff overlooking the Hudson River at Stony Point, is a cave where another cache of pirate treasure is allegedly hidden. A place called Money Hill, located a few miles south of Croton-on-the-Hudson, is said to be the spot where a great treasure whose origin is unknown is rumored to have been buried. Some caches holding silver and gold coins amounting to $750,000 were hidden in Hicksville, County 135, on Long Island by an affluent misanthrope somewhere on his estate. A bulldozer operator discovered one of the caches holding $89,000 of old coins in 1960. A pirate named Joe Brandish is believed to have hidden some treasure chests on the northeastern tip of Long Island on Orient Point, sometime in the late eighteenth century. Gardiner's Island, located in Block Island Sound, is the most famous place where Captain William Kidd buried his treasure and the most likely to be so indeed. It is a fact that he and other pirates used the island as their headquarters. Kidd stayed there immediately after seizing a valuable prize at sea, just before his capture and execution by hanging. Kidd Valley, a site on this island, has rocks imprinted with many symbols some have taken to be clues that, if deciphered and understood, would reveal the exact location of Kidd's treasure. Fisher's Island, situated close north of Gardiner's Island, is reputed to have been often used by pirates. It is believed that some have hidden their treasures here. The coins and other precious trinkets found on the island are thought to have washed aground from shipwrecks. The pirate Charles Gibbs is said to have buried a tremendous amount of treasure somewhere in Southampton Beach, County 27, Long Island, sometime in the early years of 1800. Renowned millionaire Walter C

    12 min
  2. 16/07/2022

    Treasure Hunting New York-Erie Canal Treasure Island Ticonderoga Thousand Islands Blenheim Mountain

    The Erie Canal, which flows between Buffalo and Albany for 363 miles, was completed in 1825 to connect New York City and the Hudson Valley with the Great Lakes. Remnants of the canal, including its toll stations, maintenance buildings, and locks, still exist today, which still yield precious artifacts and, on occasion, some old coins. Isle Royal, an island off the port of Waddington, Lawrence County, situated on the St. Lawrence River County, is where a French commander buried a treasure before surrendering the fort to the British in 1760. The treasure's value is estimated to range between $10,000 to $100,000. Many silver mines in the eighteenth century were once located along Mouat Utsayantha, Schoharie County's region. The Lost Blenheim Silver Mine is found on the northern side of this mountain. The Patriots sealed it off to deter the British from accessing and profiting from it. A landslide occurred soon afterward, concealing it permanently. Silver Creek is situated by Lake Erie, just around eight miles northeast of Dunkirk (County 59). The creek owes its name to the fact that a substantial number of silver coins washed along its beach after intense storms. It is presumed the coins came from the steamer Atlantic, which carried over $60,000 and sunk in the area in 1852. Some wreckage is also visible on Lake Erie's beach, about four miles northeast of Barcelona, County 60, Chautauqua County. If unconfirmed reports are believed, gold and silver coins have been discovered in this same area. The steamer City of Detroit, which was carrying more than $200,000 in gold and silver coins, as well as a substantive cargo of copper ingots, sank here in 1873. Storms and strong currents have washed some of the steamer's remains and cargo ashore. Dean Richard, a steamer ship, sank near Jerusalem Cors' shore on Lake Erie, around ten miles south of Buffalo. A storm destroyed the ship and cast ashore its remains and cargo, which included $191,000 in gold and silver coins, burying them in the beach's sands. Grand Island is located in the middle of the Niagara River between Buffalo and Niagara Falls. It is said to be the site where an affluent French merchant named Clairieux had some kegs containing eighteenth-century coins buried close to his house and store. The site is also home to several ruins of colonial buildings. A cache of gold and silver coins dating from the sixteenth century was found close to a round stone building's ruins in 1888. It is believed that some French raiders buried around fifteen treasure chests in secret locations on this island during the French and Indian wars. On the Lake Erie shore, east of Port Colborne by about half a mile, in County 58 in Ontario, Canada, considerable amounts of American gold coins have been found, including remains of a wrecked steamship. It is presumed that they are of the Anthony Wayne, a steamer that sank here in 1850 and carried more than $100,000 in gold and silver coins. This site can be reached by heading ten miles due west of Buffalo. Wilbur Rogers' farm, about two miles west of Warsaw Village, State 20A, Wyoming County, is where the present owner's father buried gold coins priced at around $43,000 during the Depression. Montezuma Swamp, situated close to Seneca, County 96, Seneca County, is reported as the site where Loomis outlaw gang buried around $40,000. The Sulphur Spring Treasure is reputed to have been buried close to the ruins of Sulphur Health Resort, between the villages of North Pitcher and Pitcher County 26, Chenango County, by a traveling medicine man circa 1900. Several years ago, some gold coins were discovered in this region; however, they are of recent origin. Some silver coins and chinaware fragments were found on a beach after storms four miles south of Oswego on Lake Ontario, Oswego County, close to S.U.N.Y. College's campus. In 1803, the Lady Washington, a merchant ship, was wrecked here while carrying precious cargo and is presumed the source of th

    13 min
  3. 15/07/2022

    Treasure Hunting New York-Oriskany-Battlefield-Peekskill-Sackets-Harbor Battlefield- Sag Harbor-Saratoga

    Oriskany Battlefield is a state park that can be reached by going east of Rome, Oneida County, by around five miles. A significant battle transpired here in August 1777, where many men died from both sides of the Revolutionary War. Peekskill on the Hudson River, located in the northern part of Westchester County, was settled by the Dutch in 1665 and was known as a trade town for farmers for two hundred years. During the Revolutionary War, numerous military activities occurred here, including minor skirmishes. Vestiges of old buildings from that era still stand around Peekskill's countryside. Raynham Hill on Oyster Bay, Long Island, is reachable by traveling seven miles north of Northern State Parkway, Exit 35. The British used this site as one of their many critical British encampments during the Revolution. Since the place is still underdeveloped, many traces of the camp may still be found. Sag Harbor, Long Island, remains a tiny village, just like when the British troops used it during the Revolution. Many encounters between the Patriots and the British occurred here. Remnants of many old colonial buildings make this a good site for exploration. Saratoga National Historical Park is situated on the Hudson River close to Bernis Heights village in Saratoga County. Much military equipment was lost here from both sides of the Revolution during two of the most bloody clashes in 1977. The Schoharie Valley, settled by a large group of Palatines around 1700, is located in Schoharie County, close to Middleburgh. Remnants of hundreds of Palatine homes destroyed by the Tories and Indians during the Revolutionary period can still be found there today. Over on Gallupville on N.Y., 443 stands the ruins of an old stone fort. Before an Indian attack in 1734, many settlers hid their valuables in unknown locations. No one of them survived the attack. Setauket, Long Island, the only essential village in the central section of the region at the time of the Revolution, was first settled sometime in 1650 by Boston Puritans. The Tories held the island the entire time of the war. In 1777, the Patriots attacked the place twice, but both campaigns ended in defeat. The remnants of many colonial homes still litter the surrounding area. Sharon Springs Battlefield, off U.S. 20 situated between Sharon Springs, Schoharie County, was the battleground where a small band of Patriots won against a contingent of Tories and Indians that far outnumbered them, July 1781. The landscape is primarily open farmland to this day, and treasure hunters have recently found many artifacts. Sprintsteel's Farm can be reached by heading west of Stoney Point, Rockland County, for about one and a half miles. Anthony Wayne and his Patriot troops used this as a campsite in July 1779. Stone Arbadia, which covers about 20,000 acres in Mohawk Valley in Montgomery County, is bisected by N.Y. 10 - a site granted to Palatine settlers back in 1723. The valley still holds ruins of these early settlers' homes. A battle broke out a little north of the Valley North close to Palatine Bridge in 1780. The nearby Fort Keyser, constructed way before the Revolution, was already destroyed and in ruins before the fight began. Fort Frey, Fort Wagner, and Fort Paris are hidden within a two-mile radius. Stony Point Battlefield is reachable by going twelve miles south of West Point and is situated close to Stony Point on the Hudson River on U.S. 9W. A battle broke out here on July 15, 1779, in which the Patriots won. Tappan is located somewhere across Dobbs Perry, Rockland County, just two and a half miles west of the Hudson. The Dutch settled the area about 1675, as evidenced by some ruins of their houses still standing scattered in the region. Washington used the site as his headquarters several times, and this particular importance was held high by the Patriots when they utilized it as an encampment during the Revolution, Ticonderoga is situated on Lake Champlain close to Lake George, Essex

    12 min
  4. 14/07/2022

    Treasure Hunting New York-Fort Ontario Fort Stanwix Gardiners Island Kingston Lake George Village

    Fort Ontario, situated opposite Oswego City at the mouth of the Oswego River, was built by the British in 1726 and destroyed 30 years later by the French. The British reconstructed the fort in 1759, abandoned it after 37 years in 1796, but used it once more in the War of 1812. It was finally demolished at the end of that war, leaving only its ramparts as a testament to its history. Fort Plain is located by the junction of U.S. 90 and N.Y. 5S, Montgomery Co., near modern-day Fort Plain village. In 1776, Patriots built fortifications that enclosed a farmhouse and its immediate area for about half an acre. The Tories later destroyed the fort in 1780. Fort St. George, constructed in 1776 by the British, is located near Mastic Beach and Smith's Point Bridge on Long Island, a few miles away from William Floyd Parkway. The Patriots captured and destroyed the fort in 1780, leaving a few parts that still survive today. Fort Stanwix was an Indian trading post built by the British in 1725 in the heart of Rome City in Oneida County. The British enlarged it in 1758 but abandoned it later in 1769. Both sides of the Revolutionary War used the fort separately at different times. In 177, A bloody battle between these contesting forces occurred here. Nothing of the site has survived. Gardiners Island was an anchorage in the early colonial period and was located half of the way of the forks on the east of Long Island. The British established a small naval base in Gardiner's Bay during the Revolutionary War. German Flatts used to be the location of Palatine settlements that stretched for about ten miles in the Mohawk Valley near modern-day Herkimer, Herkimer County. The Palatines moved into the area circa 1730 only to have their homes destroyed first by Iroquois and later by Tories during the Revolutionary War. The ruins of hundreds of Palatine homes can still be seen here today. Ruins. About 1700, the Huguenots came and settled New Paltz, located somewhere near N.Y. State Thruway, between the areas of Kingston and Newburgh in Ulster County. Plenty of Huguenot brick and stone homes are still found in this region. Ruins. Remnants of early settlers' homes can still be found on N.Y. 5S near Indian Castle close to Indian Castle Church somewhere part of the way between Fort Plain and LittleFall. Many of these residences were destroyed during the French and Indian Wars. Some remains of Mohawk village dwellings can also be found in this vicinity. Johnstown, first settled in 1760, can be found at N.Y. 67 and State Road 30A, Fulton County. Many homes and other structures were destroyed here during a major battle in 1781. The massive destruction was great, as evidenced by the ruins of its old buildings still visible in the area. Kingston was founded in 1615 by Dutch settlers in Ulster County. They constructed Fort Esopus, which was first intended as a trading post and later became known for its prosperity. Despite the fort being destroyed in 1777 by the British, people rebuilt a new town over the remnants of old buildings. Lake George Village is found by the lower end of Lake George, Warren County, over on U.S. 9 and I-87. American and French troops fought in a great battle here in 1755. After winning, the American forces constructed Fort William Henry not far from here. The French launched an attack in 1757, held off by the Americans who surrendered after five months of fighting. The Indians allied with the French massacred every single American and dumped their corpses in a lake which came to be known as Bloody Pond, located close to the present town. Also nearby are Forts Gage and George, built during the Revolutionary War. Minisink Ford, over by the Delaware River just opposite Pennsylvania, Sullivan County, is located in the township of Lackawaxen in Pennsylvania, Sullivan County. On July 22, 1779, the Patriot forces' entire contingent was wiped out by the Tories and their Indian allies. The exact area where this is found is at N.Y. 97, where it me

    11 min
  5. 13/07/2022

    Treasure Hunting New York-Albany Bear Mountain Bennington Battlefield Butlersbury Mans Dobbs Ferry Fishkill

    Albany was discovered in 1609 by Henry Hudson, where Fort Nassau, a Dutch settlement's fortified trading post and warehouse, was built in 1614 on Castle Island (known today as Westerio Island). A massive influx of colonists from Denmark, Germany, Holland, Norway, and Scotland arrived and built Fort Orange in 1619. More people came and occupied the village of Beverwyck, the area surrounding Fort Orange. British forces captured Beverwyck and renamed it Albany in 1664. In 1777, the British attacked the hilltop military post on State Street called Fort Frederick opposite Fort George, which was situated on the same street at the foot of the hill. A colonial hospital where injured Patriots who fought in the Revolution, stood at the corner of Lodge and Pine Streets. The surrounding region is home to many historic ruins of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Bear Mountain, located on the Hudson where the U.S. 9W, Washington County connects to the Palisades Interstate Parkway, is still home to the remains of two forts conquered by the British during the Revolutionary War, Fort Montgomery and Fort Clinton. Bennington Battlefield, the site of the famous August 14, 1977 battle between the Patriots and British, is located close to Wallooomsac, Washington County, on N.Y. 67. Butlersbury Mansion, the historic home of the infamous Tory raiders John and Walter Butler, still exists after being built in 1742, in the vicinity of Fonda in the Mohawk Valley on Switzer Hill. The father and son, British Loyalists, plundered many Patriot settlements in Mohawk Valley and amassed many spoils. They escaped to Canada before the end of the war, but not without burying at undisclosed locations near the mansion an immense amount of loot from their pillaging. Mohawk settlements. A total of sixteen villages called Indian castles located in the Mohawk Valley, Montgomery County, was owned by the Mohawks from 1580 to 1666. In 1666, all these villages were burned, save the one situated in Auriesville. Four castles were built as replacements, but these too were burnt in 1693, which contributed to the considerable reduction of the Indian population. The exact location of the original castles is unknown. Still, three have been determined as existing villages near Indian Castle, Fort Hunter, and Fort Plain that once existed at the time of the Revolution. Continental Village. This village is two miles north of Gallows Hill Road, Putnam County, somewhere further up north of Peekskill. From 1777 to 1781, it was used as a camp and supply center by the Patriots during the Revolutionary War. Crown Point Campsite is situated in Essex County near the west end of Lake Champlain Bridge. This campsite is where the French built Ford Frederic in 1731, but they had it blown up themselves at the arrival of British armed forces. The British had to construct Fort Crown a little further inland, as a result, which, unfortunately, accidentally burnt in 1773. This campsite that the Patriots and British occupied during different times of the Revolutionary War can be found near the remnants of the said forts. Dobbs Ferry Site on the Hudson River, the former primary crossing point of the lower Hudson, is located on Dobbs Ferry, Westchester County. Much of the shoreline has changed with the times, but the area still has many recoverable Revolutionary War artifacts. Schuylerville. This is the location of a 50-acre open field on the west bank of the Hudson, situated past New York 29, west of U.S. 5, Saratoga Co. by a few hundred feet. After the historical battle of Saratoga, this field was used as the site where 6,300 of the remaining British forces surrendered on October 17, 1777. This historical battlefield still contains many authentic relics from the Revolutionary War. Fishkill Landing is located opposite Newburgh near U.S. 9, Dutchess Co., on the east bank of the Hudson. The ruins of Fort Hill, a garrison used by the Patriots during the Revolutionary War, can be found here. Fishk

    11 min
  6. 10/06/2022

    Fort Mohave Treasure Hunting Arizona San Bernardino Hacienda box canyon Bronco Canyon Cochise County

    The site of Fort Mohave near Mohave Springs and around 20 miles due east of Lake Havasu City in Mohave County, is said to play host to a sizable gold nugget cache. Fort Mohave was burned down in 1861, to deny Confederate forces control of the fort. It was then rebuilt in 1863, and the new Fort Mohave served until the year 1890. The gold cache is said to be buried underneath the ruins of a carpenter shop on the north side of the fort. On the east side of Bronco Canyon, some 30 miles to the northeast of Fort McDowell in Maricopa County, it is said that around $75,000 worth of gold nuggets are buried. This treasure was said to have been buried by two miners in 1891, under a rock shaped like a toadstool close to a small spring. They were unable to find their buried treasure again. The Lost Treasure of Telegraph Pass is said to have been buried in the vicinity of Telegraph Pass in the year 1870, in a flat campground whose distinctive feature was a small butte to its east. This campground was said to be below Montezuma’s Head, somewhere on the southern end of the Estrella mountain range in Yavapai County. Buried here is about $50,000 in gold and jewelry. Close to Montezuma’s Head, there is another reported buried treasure, which supposedly contains up to $2 million in gold bars. Due west of Santa Rosa Wash, between the town of Santa Rosa and the city of Casa Grande, there is said to be a buried cache of some one thousand rifles and pistols, hidden by Native Americans in 1880. This places it in the Papago Indian Reservation in Pima County. In a cave on the east side of the Estrella mountain range and to the south of Butterfly Peak, there is said to be a deep box canyon that runs east to west. This canyon lies somewhere midway between Butterfly Peak and Montezuma’s Head. A cache of 30 bags of gold nuggets and 50 solid gold bars is reported to be hidden here. The legendary Sunlit Cave Treasure has been sought after by many treasure hunters. This tremendous cache is said to contain tons upon tons of Spanish gold bullion. The cave of which the legends tell is supposedly 15 to 20 miles due south of Ehrenberg in Yuma County, on the Arizona side of the Colorado River. Close to the Rancho de los Yumas, around 40 miles due north of Yuma City in Yuma County, it is said that a number of chests full of gold were buried on the Colorado River’s east bank. This treasure was said to have been hidden by a prospector named William Rood in 1875. In 1897, around $1,000 worth of twenty-dollar gold pieces were found in the vicinity, but the main treasure had never been found. The Lost Laguna Treasure is said to be located close to the modern-day Laguna Dam, between the Laguna Mountains in Mohave County and the Colorado River. According to legend, a band of Native Americans ambushed a group of miners, and threw their bodies into a gorge in the hills near present-day Laguna Dam, along with the gold they mined. This gold is said to consist of 50 pounds of gold nuggets. Around Yuma Crossing, close to present-day Yuma City, there is said to be $80,000 in gold and silver coins buried on the east banks of the Colorado River. This treasure was supposedly buried by a man named Lincoln in the 1850s. Along an old trail between Cochise County and Wilcox, around $60,000 of gold bullion is alleged to have been buried by the Alvord gang in the late 1800s. In the mountains north of Tucson, Arizona, there is reported to be a gold mine that was buried under collapsed earth and wooden logs. It is said that the mine was once staffed by a priest and some Native Americans. The only distinguishing characteristic of it was its iron door. No one has been able to find it since the collapse. Another point of interest in the Superstition Mountains was said to have been discovered in the 1840s. A Spaniard, along with his two sons, unearthed valuable ore near a place that was known to some as Weaver's Needle, named for its sharp peak. The Spaniard would dub this newl

    9 min
  7. 08/06/2022

    Treasure Hunting Arizona San Bernardino Hacienda Box Canyon Bronco Canyon Cochise County

    In the ruins of old San Bernardino Hacienda, which lies on Robber’s Roost just south of the town of Tombstone, there are reports of still remaining hidden treasure. These reports are substantiated by a discovery in 1967, when a treasure hunter unearthed an iron kettle, buried right next to this site, which turned out to be containing around 20 pounds of gold nuggets! Near the Buckhorn Ranch on US 10, a few miles to the north of Mescal, Cochise County in the Rincon Mountains, there is said to be a cave wherein a sizable cache of gold nuggets and gold dust is buried. In Santa Cruz county, 8 miles to the north of Patagonia, there is an old trail that travels south from the San Xavier del Bac Mission. This trail leads to where Spanish missionaries were said to have hidden a substantial gold treasure on the ledge of a steep hill, buried under tons of rocks. The Lost Treasure of Fort Huachuca, believed to contain over $60 million in hundreds of 50-pound gold bars, is said to be located on the Fort Huachuca Military Reservation, in Huachuca Canyon, somewhere between the cities of Nogales and Bisbee. Legend says that Juan Estrada, a Mexican Bandit, was responsible for hiding this treasure. In 1941, Robert Jones, a man stationed on the base, claims that he fell into the hole and discovered the treasure. He took a few bars, covered the hole, and did not tell anyone about what he found. In 1955, the US government gave him permission to recover the treasure. However, he was unable to find the hole he covered, even with the help of state-of-the-art search and excavation gear. In the area of Cienega Stage Station, an army payroll valued at around $100,000 is said to have been buried between Silver City and Tucson, on the Butterfield State Trail in Pima County. The La Esmeralda Church Treasure is several tons of gold church ornaments and solid gold bars, that is according to legend buried six miles southwest from the old San Xavier del Bac Mission, Santa Cruz County, in a cave somewhere in the Santa Catalina Mountains’ south ridges. On Mt. Graham’s southwest side, legend has it that about $22 million worth of silver and gold bullion was buried by a Mexican bandit named Bonita. It is reportedly buried somewhere around 30 miles due southwest of the town of Safford in Graham County, in a place now called Meadows of Gold. Meadows of Gold is close to a modest town named Bonita, after the bandit. To the northeast of Willcox in Cochise County, up in the Winchester Mountains, there is supposedly a cache of silver coins and gold dust, said to have been hidden by the Apaches following a successful attack on a wagon train, just out of the stage station at Mountain Springs. In Wild Cat Canyon, around 40 miles due north of the city of Bisbee in Cochise County, in the Chiricahua Mountains, there is said to be a large treasure cached in a cave by the outlaw Black Jack Ketchum. In Skeleton Canyon, in the Davis Mountains, Cochise County, there is cave where it is alleged that $3 million worth of stolen treasure from Mexico, hidden by the American outlaws Billy Grounds and Zwing Hunt. On the Tanner Trail, flanked by the town of Cibola and the Colorado River, in Yuma County, a prospector by the name of Tom Watson hid a bag of gold nuggets in a cave behind a small waterfall. He was not able to find this hiding place as he came back later to retrieve his treasure. In Sycamore Canyon, close to the Verde River and due north of the town of Cottonwood, Yavapai County, there is said to be a very rich gold mine that was discovered by a group of Spaniards sometime in the 1710s. These Spaniards packed their mules with hundreds of pounds of gold, but were eventually slaughtered by Apaches. Only two of the Spaniards survived. The Apaches then concealed the mine entrance, and the two were never able to find it again. In and around Cottonwood, Yavapai County, on State 89A, it is said that several bottles of gold du

    10 min
  8. 01/06/2022

    Treasure Huntin Arizona Bates Well Mine Cerro Colorado Mine Esperanza Gunsight Mine Silver King Mine

    The San Xavier Mine can be found on the Santa Cruz River. The Silver Bell Mine is about 35 miles west of the town of Marana. PINAL COUNTY The American Flag Mine is in the vicinity of the town of Oracle, in the Catalina MOuntains. SANTA CRUZ COUNTY The Austerlitz Mine can be found on the Arivaca-Peña Lake. The Oro Blanco Mine is some 9 miles due southeast of the town of Arivaca. The Salero Mine is in the Santa Rita mountain range, close to the foot of Salero Peak. YAVAPAI COUNTY The Congress Mine In the year 1929, near the US-Mexico border southeast of the town of Ajo, three miners chanced upon a collection of 700 gold bars. The last of these miners perished in the year 1963, never having disclosed where this secret cache was located. It had become an accepted fact since this discovery that the 700 bars they found were only one small portion of a much larger hoard that was in the process of being shipped to Mexico around 1648, by Jesuits who had come under attack by natives and forced to hide their treasure. It is believed that somewhere in the same area as the cache is buried treasure amounting to 4,000 to 5,000 bars of silver, as well as 2,000 bars of gold. A single Jesuit priest was the sole survivor of this attack. This priest attempted to relocate the hidden treasure a year later, but failed to find it again. A silver bullion from the famous Cerro Colorado Mine, reported to be hidden in a cave that lies between the Cerro Colorado and Cerro Chiquito mountain ranges. It is valued at more than $150,000. The Lost Carretta Canyon Treasure, also referred to as the Ajo Treasure is another treasure near the Tumacacori Mission, said to be hidden along the old Carretta Road that connected the mission to the Mexican town of Sonora , Sonora state. The treasure is said to be valued at more than $2 million, and is made up of silver and gold bullion, along with church vessels. The Lost Arivaca Treasure is reportedly in the vicinity of the town of Arivaca, supposedly inside of a cave in the Baboquivari Mountains. The Lost Arivaca Treasure was said to have been found by a Papago native in the year 1880. What he saw was a cache of silver and gold bars, hidden in the 1600s by Spanish Jesuits. This native took some bars to purchase supplies from a trading post nearby, and was never seen again. Before he disappeared, he did tell the people in the trading post where he found it, but was only able to give them approximate directions to this cave. The Blackgown’s Treasure is reported to be “slightly to the west of Tubac '', specifically in the “third little mountain” somewhere due southwest of Tubac Presidio. This means that it is in Santa Cruz County, likely some 10 to 15 miles due north of Arivaca, in the Sierrita Mountains. The Blackgown’s Treasure is said to be made up of gold bars, nuggets, dust, chalices, and statues hidden by Spanish missionaries in the 1700s. Some time ago, a hunter hailing from Tucson went searching for the Blackgown’s Treasure, and decided to look into an abandoned mining shack near to the suspected location. There, he found two large tin cans, which were filled with gold nuggets that were worth more than $20,000. The Guadalupe Treasure is one of the most well-known hidden treasures in Arizona. Legend has it that the Guadalupe Treasure is the hiding place of more than 200 mules’ worth of gold nuggets and solid bars, as well as 2,000 mules’ worth of silver ore. This caravan belonged to Jesuits who were forced from the Spanish New World colonies during the Jesuit expulsion of 1767. This extensive mule train was a large target for bandits, especially Native American raiders, who would band together to intercept it as the Jesuits were around 4 miles to the southwest of Tumacacori Mission. According to the legend, all of the treasure carried by the mule train was deposited in a nearby abandoned mine, before they fled to Mexico. Although it has sparked a lot of interest, the legitimacy of this story is thro

    12 min

Acerca de

This is Treasure Revealed, I will show you the possible locations of buried gold treasure, silver treasure and other valuable objects not only in every state of United States, but in other parts of the world using my many years of extensive research. There are two types of locations, one is based on evidence that something valuable was buried and second one is based on historical events that happened here, therefore there is a high probability of finding valuable items as well. Never has anyone put together so much valuable information and was willing to share it with you.