F
Franklin
Guest
Justintime said:1967 a friend of mines dad went to a flea market in PA and seen the iron box with fishing lures hangging off of it. The guy said ill sell you the lures for three bucks apeice or twenty$ for everything. The box laid around till the early 90's we were haulling off scrap,when I asked what about this box he said tossit so it got tossed. It it a woodburning stove we had already loaded, and half the box desentigrated on impact. There amist the wreckage was a rolled up peice of paper sticking out, stuck through the drawstring of a leather bag the other drawstring had a handle off some type of box. The handle had hyrogliphics onit. It was in a false bottom. My friends dad passedaway and it laid dorment till eight years ago. When I insisted we sell it. WhenI discovered it had multiple maps and initialsTJB
Sorry Justintime it seems as though you ran out of time. The iron box was found by Pauline Innis by the directions given her by George Hart, Clayton Hart's brother. You can read all about the iron box in her new Book Gold Cover. She found it with the Otey Family in Roanoke, Virginia. Now if you or anyone else wants to find the iron box you will have to go to Washington, D.C. and get it that is where you will find it. I know she had the iron box and there was nothing in it but a couple of pieces torn from a receipt which could have been paper where TJB was deciding how to encrypt the codes.