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  1. #1
    us
    Oct 2010
    400
    1 times
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    NE 1 heard of a "Time Map" Treasures in Okla?

    I heard a rumor that someone had a Treasure Map of a Clock that was in Okla.
    Hands pointed to 6 Times. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, & 11.....and no
    it was not the Dr. Pepper Map(10,2,&4)

  2. #2
    us
    Oct 2004
    South Central Oklahoma
    TF 900, Schonstedt, Whites, Garrett, GPR, etc.
    288

    Re: NE 1 heard of a "Time Map" Treasures in Okla?

    I never heard of a map like that, but I did hear of a clock being carved on a rock.
    http://okietreasurehunter.blogspot.com/

  3. #3
    us
    Oct 2010
    400
    1 times
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    Re: NE 1 heard of a "Time Map" Treasures in Okla?

    That might be it....did you see it?

    Quote Originally Posted by okietreasurehunter
    I never heard of a map like that, but I did hear of a clock being carved on a rock.

  4. #4
    us
    Oct 2004
    South Central Oklahoma
    TF 900, Schonstedt, Whites, Garrett, GPR, etc.
    288

    Re: NE 1 heard of a "Time Map" Treasures in Okla?

    I haven't looked for it but was told of the general area it was in. It might take a few trips out hiking to find it. It's in southwestern Oklahoma if that might fit any details of the map you're talking about.
    http://okietreasurehunter.blogspot.com/

  5. #5
    us
    Oct 2010
    400
    1 times
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    Re: NE 1 heard of a "Time Map" Treasures in Okla?

    that might help.....I am working to figure out what area it relates too without showing my map........

    Quote Originally Posted by okietreasurehunter
    I haven't looked for it but was told of the general area it was in. It might take a few trips out hiking to find it. It's in southwestern Oklahoma if that might fit any details of the map you're talking about.

  6. #6
    us
    Knights of the Golden Circle

    Jul 2009
    146

    Re: NE 1 heard of a "Time Map" Treasures in Okla?

    1969: ENIGMATIC OKLAHOMA

    (Sorry for the lengthy article but it IS just an excerpt from the entire article -also sorry that I am drawing on UFO sites for info but it was just too good to pass up- enjoy- ccc)

    http://www.ufoinfo.com/roundup/v10/rnd1023.shtml
    Last week's story about the search for lost Confederate gold in
    Cement, Oklahoma (population 500), a small town on Highway 277
    southwest of Oklahoma City, has called attention to some of the
    stranger tales about the Sooner State.

    On the outskirts of Cement is a stony hill called Buzzard's Roost. At
    the summit is an outcrop of bedrock that resembles an anvil.
    Professional treasure hunters Bud Hardcastle and Charlie Holman
    believe "that enterprising disciples of Dixie stashed millions of
    dollars in gold and silver--now probably worth billions-- in
    locations across North America, to help finance a second Civil War."

    The gold is supposed to have been buried there by the Knights of the
    Golden Circle (KGC), a very real secret society that flourished in
    the USA between 1850 and 1870. Many Knights were also prominent
    members of Masonic lodges throughout the South.

    "If Buzzard's Roost is a Masonic site, it should be fairly easy to
    find the buried gold," UFO Roundup editor Joseph Trainor
    commented. "Just face east at sunrise. Pick out a point 33 degrees to
    the south of the spot where the sun appeared at the horizon. Walk
    either 33 feet (10 meters) or 33 yards (30 meters) downhill from 'The
    Anvil' and start digging."

    Another potential burial site for KGC gold is the ruins of old Fort
    Towson, 10 miles (16 kilometers) from Valliant, Okla. (population
    771) on U.S. Route 70 in that corner of southeastern Oklahoma known
    as "Little Dixie."

    "The fort was established in 1824 to protect the Choctaws--who were
    induced by the federal government to emigrate from their Mississippi
    homes--both from the raiding western Plains Indians and the outlaws
    that made their headquarters along the north bank of the Red River."

    "The post was abandoned in 1829, then re-established when enforced
    removal of the Choctaws began in 1831. Abandoned once again in 1854,
    it was used as a Choctaw Indian agency until the outbreak of the
    (American) Civil War, when it was taken over by the Confederates."

    In 1864, at the height of the Golden Circle intrigues, Confederate
    general S.B. Maxey took command of Fort Towson. Maxey was a Knight,
    as was his patron in Richmond, Isham G. Harris.

    Indeed, Fort Towson was the last bastion of the southern Confederacy.
    Here Confederate general Stand Watie surrendered in June of 1865, two
    months after Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox courthouse in
    Virginia.

    (Editor's Note: Watie was an Ani-Yupuya or a Cherokee Indian.)

    However, stranger items than Confederate gold have been unearthed in
    the suburbs of Oklahoma City.

    "On June 27, 1969, workmen leveling a rock shelf at 122nd Street on
    the Broadway Extension between Edmond (population 68,315) and
    Oklahoma City uncovered a rock formation that caused a great deal of
    controversy among investigating authorities."

    "To the layman, the site looked like an inlaid mosaic floor. It
    apparently looked very much like someone's floor to some of the
    experts, as well."

    "'I am sure this was man-made because the stones are placed in
    perfect sets of parallel lines which intersect to form a diamond
    shape, all pointing to the east,' said Durwood Pate, an Oklahoma City
    geologist who studied the site. 'We found post holes which measure a
    perfect two rods from the other two. The top of the stone is very
    smooth, and if you lift one of them, you will find it is very jagged,
    which indicates wear on the surface. Everything is too well-placed to
    be a natural formation.'"

    "Dr. Robert Bell, an archaeologist from the University of Oklahoma,
    expressed his opinion that the find was a natural formation. Dr. Bell
    said that he could see no evidence of any mortaring substance. But
    Pate, on the other hand, was able to distinguish some kind of mud
    between each stone."

    "Delbert Smith, a geologist, president of the Oklahoma Seismograph
    Company, said the formation, which was discovered about three feet
    (0.9 meters) beneath the surface, appeared to cover several thousand
    square feet."

    "The Tulsa World quoted Smith as saying: 'There is no question about
    it. It has been laid there, but I have no idea by whom.'"

    A mosaic floor covering "several thousand square feet." Obviously, it
    was the remains of some prehistoric palace. Did an ancient city once
    stand on the site of what is now Edmond, Okla.? And who could have
    built it? Travelers from prehistoric Lemuria? Settlers from the lost
    continent of Atlantis? Or maybe a wandering tribe from the weird
    Lamanite civilization mentioned in The Book of Mormon.

    Thirty-six years after its discovery, there are still no definite
    answers about the "mosaic floor" found in Edmond, Okla.

    Was it buried gold, prehistoric cities or the assassination of
    Abraham Lincoln that triggered Oklahoma City's most baffling
    homicide? Charles Fort, the "Father of Ufology" mentions it in his
    book Wild Talents: "I put this item with others upon freaks of
    collectors. In Oklahoma City, July 1907, somebody collected ears.
    Bodies of three men--ears cut off."

    But, when it comes to sheer weirdness, not too many communities in
    the Sooner State can compete with the city of Enid (population
    47,045).

    Located on Highways 60, 64 and 412 approximately 98 miles (157
    kilometers) north-northwest of Oklahoma City, "Enid has grown over
    the years from a tent city which sprang out of the prairie dust on
    the day of the Cherokee Outlet opening--September 16, 1893--to a
    typically prosperous, substantial, self-contained municipality."

    Yet, early Enid was a Mecca for people associated with the
    assassination of Abraham Lincoln, the USA's sixteenth president, on
    Good Friday, April 14, 1865.

    According to researcher Jim Brandon, "What might there have been in
    this small city to attract not one, not two, but three persons
    involved in what pioneer conspiratologist Otto Eisenschiml has
    called 'the strange death of Abraham Lincoln.'"

    "Local (Enid) history records that a chap who killed himself with
    strychnine--or at least ended up poisoned to death--at the local
    hotel on January 13, 1903, had identified himself as none other than
    John Wilkes Booth."

    This mysterious figure "had been living around Enid for quite some
    time, using a number of aliases. At the time of his death, he was
    known as David E. George and posed as a house painter, although no
    one seems to have taken that role any more seriously than he did."

    Booth/George "always seemed to have plenty of money and spent most of
    his time in taverns. When well-oiled with drink, he often delivered
    lengthy Shakespearean recitations, which amazed those who heard them
    as being far superior to ordinary barroom blague."

    "He had confided to a number of persons that he, Booth, had escaped
    from a burning tobacco barn at Port Royal, Virginia, where he was
    cornered after the Lincoln assassination, leaving another man to be
    shot in his place."

    "A last request, found among (David E.) George's effects, was that
    actor Edwin Booth of New York City (the assassin's older brother--
    J.T.) be notified of his death. This was done by telegram, but there
    was no reply."

    "A man who certainly should have been able to shed some light on the
    (real) identity of 'George' was also residing in Enid at the time.
    This was Boston Corbett, the Army sergeant who had rushed up and shot
    into the burning barn in a sort of instant preplay of the" Lee Harvey
    Oswald/Jack Ruby "exchange of 1963. Corbett, who seems to have
    escaped from an insane asylum (in Kansas-- J.T.) somewhere along his
    checkered trail, was working in Enid as a drug salesman. He may even
    have carried strychnine in his samples kit. But if he was in town at
    the time of George's death, he never came forward."

    "Eight months after the death" of David E. George, "a newspaper in
    Rockport, Indiana reported that the former manager for the Laura
    Keene Theatrical Company, who had opened the window for Booth to
    escape Ford's Theatre" in Washington, D.C. "after shooting Lincoln,
    had retired and was living, where else but at Enid, Oklahoma. He too
    kept silent."

    Enid "successfully avoided having the name of Skeleton thrust upon it
    (from its proximity to the head of Skeleton Creek) and owes its real
    name to a literature- loving Rock Island railroad official. Fond of
    Tennyson's Idylls of the King, he felt that Geraint's wife ought to
    be honored by having a city named for her."

    In a bizarre twist of fate, as a schoolboy, John Wilkes Booth played
    the role of "Enid" in an amateur production of Idylls of the King at
    the Milton College for Boys in Cockeysville, Maryland.

    So, if you find yourself in Oklahoma this summer, don't go speeding
    on through. Stay awhile, drive around, explore a bit--this Midwestern
    state has a plentitude of mysteries to share. (See the books
    Mysteries of Time and Space by Brad Steiger, Dell Publishing Co.,
    Inc., New York, N.Y., 1973, pages 53 and 54; The Complete Books of
    Charles Fort, Dover Publications Inc., New York, N.Y., 1974, page
    871; Oklahoma: A Guide to the Sooner State, University of Oklahoma
    Press, Norman, Okla., revised edition July 1957, pages 148, 149, 245,
    374, 375, 417 and 426; Weird America by Jim Brandon, E.P. Dutton, New
    York, N.Y., 1978, pages 186 and 187; Why Was Lincoln Murdered? by
    Otto Eisenschiml, Little, Brown Co., Boston, Mass., 1937; and
    Murdering Mr. Lincoln by Charles Higham, New Millenium Press, Beverly
    Hills, Cal., 2004, pages 104, 105 and 106. See also the Enid, Okla.
    Morning News for February 4, 1976, "The Odyssey of John Wilkes
    Booth," page 1; the Edmond, Okla. Booster for July 3, 1969; and the
    Tulsa, Okla. World for June 29, 1969.)
    Knights of the Golden Circle Archive and Research
    Sons of Liberty and the Order of American Knights

  7. #7
    us
    Oct 2010
    400
    1 times
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    Re: NE 1 heard of a "Time Map" Treasures in Okla?

    Digging Around Cement Oklahoma!

    You got to be careful if you venture to Cement to dig.
    There are a lot of underground lines and pipes(oil field) and more since 1969! Hit the wrong spot and you
    might go GAABOOMM!

    33degrees East and dig?!! That is a wild stretch of the imagination!
    If that was true, then Frank James dug all that loot up
    when he returned to Okla.
    ****NO I am afraid these treasures were buried differently than this story relates to***
    Cement is a much searched area!.....residents will tell you most everything is gone around Buzzard's Roost. 8)

 

 

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