Not by land...but by sea

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tat2guy

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Oct 29, 2011
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Chester County pa
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As written in the BT we are told the "deposites" were brought back in wagons, by ten men. It didnt happen that way. Read into the Stephen Harriman Long expidition. Read it thoroughly and you will see them recording severe weather from the winter untill the summer. Youll find that the winter of 1819/1820 was extreme in the eastern rockies. And after such a tough winter the Missouri and Mississippi rivers were above todays flood stage through the spring.

So it didnt happen by land, it came by sea. Or UPS maybe???
:laughing7:
HH Jay:skullflag:
 

bigscoop

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Jun 4, 2010
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Wherever there be treasure!
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Older blue Excal with full mods, Equinox 800.
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1818:
"One of my forts situated 21 kilometers from the Trinity River was destroyed."........."This fort was 45 kilometers from Galveston."

"My last secret words to Mr. Hall were to say that my mission would be to the south, to the east, then to the north. The majority of my personal valuables and my documents had (already) been sent to Charleston, Baltimore, and Philadelphia."

"Our crude vault of granite.........."
This "first" vault was located near where four creeks of granite ran into one large estuary (Galveston/Trinity Bay).
 

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