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  1. #1
    us
    .... Never Ever Give Up ....

    May 2009
    Eastern Kentucky
    Garret Ace - 250
    78
    Gold and Silver!!!!

    Swift - Filson: UNCOVERED

    Uncovered - The Fabulous Silver Mines
    of Swift and Filson
    By Joe Nickell

    Part I: The Legend

    For nearly two centuries a legend has
    persisted in eastern Kentucky concerning the
    "lost silver mines" of one "Jonathan Swift." In
    his alleged Journal, Swift relates how he and
    a company of men preceded Daniel Boone into
    Kentucky, making annual trips from
    Alexandria, VA to mine silver. From June 21,
    1760 until late 1769, they "carried in supplies
    and took our silver bars and minted coins"
    which Swift used to buy vessels for his
    "shipping interests." Plagued by Indians, a
    mutiny of his workmen, and other troubles,
    and after a pious change of heart, Swift
    discontinued his venture, walled up his mine
    and a cave full of treasure, and headed for
    "England or France" to "get a party interested
    in...working the mines on a large scale." When
    he returned after a fifteen-year delay (he says
    he was imprisoned in England), Swift had
    become blind - unable to find his fabulous
    treasure! (1)
    Many have undoubtedly accepted the
    legend at face value. J. H. Kidwell says: "Men,
    hoary with age and gray haired, half insane on
    the subject of the Swift mines ranged the
    mountains and the likely places, and die din the
    belief that they were very near the source of
    the mines as outlined in the Swift Journal..."
    (2) To some, a treasury warrant of 1788
    whereby John Filson (the early Kentucky
    mapmaker and historian) recorded 1,000 acres
    alleged to contain Swift s mine, has lent
    credence to the legend. (3) (Part III of this
    article explores the "Filson connection.")
    Skeptical geologists and historians
    have advanced quite another theory which has
    also achieved a legendary status. (4) This
    theory supposes that Swift concocted the tale
    of silver mining as a cover for piracy and
    counterfeiting. Although the theory has
    persuaded many, it raises more questions than
    it answers: Why make the arduous and
    extremely dangerous journey to Kentucky in
    order to melt silver when the backwoods near
    Alexandria would do? (5) For that matter, the
    coinage could have been minted on board ship.
    And why go to all the trouble of producing a
    spurious journal? Such literary ability -
    employing phrases like "deeming it imprudent"
    - is indeed remarkable for one who went to sea
    "when a boy."
    What, then, is the answer? Before
    attempting to reach a solution it will be
    necessary for the reader to suspend judgment
    and begin to focus critically on the details of
    the evidence.
    The scientific evidence seems to
    preclude fabulous silver treasure being mined
    in Kentucky. Geologists as well as park
    naturalists, rangers, and other knowledgeable
    officials I interviewed expressed skepticism of
    the Swift bonanza. Mr. Warren H. Anderson
    of the Kentucky Geological Survey responded
    in writing to my query:

    Silver occurs in a variety of geologic
    environments, is generally associated with
    certain minerals and is found throughout the
    geologic time scale. From a geologic
    standpoint it is possible for silver to occur in
    sandstones in eastern Kentucky, but this does
    not mean that silver actually exists in economic
    quantities. Some silver has been reported in the
    western Kentucky fluorspar district (Hall and
    Heyl, 1968, Economic Geology, V. 63, No. 6,
    p. 655-70) as well as trace amounts in the
    central Kentucky mineral district (Jolly and
    Heyl, 1964, Kentucky Geological Survey,
    Series X, Reprint 15). As these reports indicate
    silver does occur in small amounts in
    Kentucky. (6)
    Note that the precious metal exists
    only in trace amounts and in parts of Kentucky
    beyond the eastern section.
    How this contrasts with Swift s
    purported find! He states he had two
    "workings," with his company "divided into
    two parties...My party has four places where
    we obtained silver ore that were later
    connected by trails of "Tomahawk" (sic)
    paths." He also alleges that Frenchmen who
    "worked mines to the south" had no less than
    two furnaces in operation. (7)
    Swift claims he found several "veins"
    of silver! Such abundance - when two hundred
    years of highway construction, excavation, and
    strip mining, not to mention cave exploration
    and treasure hunting, have failed to unearth
    even a single "vein" of silver. Yet Swift alleges
    a wounded bear had led to the discovery of a
    cave containing "a very rich vein of silver ore."
    In researching the Swift story (and
    doing a little prospecting myself), I came
    across reports of "silver nuggets" from the
    Wolfe Co. area. My cousin, John May, was
    able to coax one sample from its owner and
    gave it to me to test. It was pyrite - "fool s
    gold." Or in this case, "fool s silver." (Only
    afterward did John reveal that he had
    previously shown the "nugget" to three
    geologists and obtained the same opinion.)
    Similarly a U. S. Forest Service
    official told me he had tested samples of ore
    brought in to a Wolfe Co. ranger station and
    found them to be "iron sulfides" - that is,
    pyrite. He stated he also had found samples of
    lead sulfide (galena), which the lay person
    could easily mistake for silver.
    A parks official confided that about
    two or three years ago, an attempt was made to
    sell the State of Kentucky a tract of land -
    alleged to contain Swift s mine - for
    approximately a million dollars. Another
    official, he said, agreed to be taken,
    blindfolded, to a prospector s pit. The "silver"
    actually glittered: it was mica.
    A friend recounted another incident.
    He was exploring in the rugged Red River
    Canyon, popularly assumed to be the general
    location of the mines, with a companion who
    got excited by a "silver vein" in a rock face
    along the river. My friend recognized it for
    what it really was: a scrapping from an
    aluminum canoe. Sometime later he preyed on
    his companion s gullibility by "salting" an
    area with some filings of "silver". And old
    "John Swift" had - with a wink - claimed
    another victim.
    Clearly the geologic evidence demands
    that we closely scrutinize the Swift Journal, or
    rather, journals, since numerous versions
    compete in the claim for authenticity. (8)
    These differ in varying degrees. One, headed
    "John Swift s Manuscript Journal," begins, "I
    was born October 3, 1712, in Philadelphia,
    Pennsylvania, my ancestors first came to
    America in 1637." (9) Another, from
    Tennessee, commences: "I, George William
    Swift, was born at Salisbury, England in the
    year of 1689, A. D., a son of William Swift,
    who was a miner of copper, silver, and lead."
    (10) Even versions with some distinct
    similarities contain discrepancies in the dates
    and number of the excursions as well as the
    directions for finding the mines.
    Probably the most detailed version is
    reproduced in Michael Paul Henson s JOHN
    SWIFT S LOST SILVER MINES. (11) But
    it demands skepticism: A journal which begins,
    "I was born..." is immediately suspect. This
    version does agree substantially with quoted
    fragments from Connelley and Coulter s
    HISTORY OF KENTUCKY. (12) But
    portions of the text - wherein Swift is
    alternately paraphrased and quoted - seem to
    have been "lifted" by the unknown compiler of
    this particular version of the Journal.
    Some of the paraphrased portions are
    recorded word for word in the Journal.
    Further, the latter work carelessly preserves
    one quoted excerpt in quotation marks with the
    untenable result of having Swift begin quoting
    himself in mid-sentence! (13) Another
    discrepancy involves the ending of the Journal
    - allegedly penned by Swift after his return
    from England, although in it he states that he
    has become completely blind and therefore
    would have been unable to write. (14)
    We might explain that away by
    suggesting Swift dictated the portion. But what
    of the statement "...that treasure will lie in that
    cave for eternity," written (if the Journal can
    be believed) during 1765? (15) Why would
    Swift pen such a hopelessly defeatist remark -
    one anticipating events not to be realized for
    twenty years - while he was still making
    excursions to the mines? Other seriously
    questionable aspects of the Journal will be
    discussed presently (and still others will be
    treated later).
    Was there really a John or Jonathan
    Swift?
    Well, of course, there was the famous
    English satirist by that name who wrote the
    allegorical TRAVELS INTO SEVERAL
    REMOTE NATIONS OF THE WORLD
    (better known as "Gulliver s Travels"). Like
    "Swift," "Gulliver" was a ship s captain and
    the title of "his" work is echoed in a phrase
    from Swift s Journal stating that the smelting
    furnace was "in a very remote place in the
    west." (16) But that Jonathan Swift died in
    1745. It would seem that, at best, he could
    only have unwittingly inspired the creation of
    a Swift legend.
    At the end of the Journal in Henson s
    book is added a 'cut signature (as collectors
    of autograph materials say of "Jonathan
    Swift." Henson says he placed it there "to lend
    a touch of authenticity to the document. This is
    an exact reproduction of Swift s signature that
    appears on an old land grant I obtained from
    an attorney in Kentucky." (17) But Mr.
    Henson is in error.
    I researched the matter, finally
    tracking down the entire deed from which the
    actual signature in question was reproduced.
    (18) I carefully compared the signatures and
    found them to be identical, stroke for stroke.
    The document does substantiate that there
    really was a bona-fide Jonathan Swift and that
    he was from Alexandria, VA, as the Journal
    alleges, and further that he was a "merchant"
    (which at that port could mean that he had
    shipping interests as claimed).
    Unfortunately, further research proved
    Mr. Swift re-acquired the land and deeded it a
    second time in 1809 (19) - nine years after
    "Swift s" reputed death. (20) The documents
    also enabled me to establish that the
    "signature" on the first deed was not actually
    by Mr. Swift s own hand, but was - like the
    entire document - in the handwriting of the
    recorded who had copied it into the deed book!
    This real Mr. Jonathan Swift could not
    have been the Swift of silver-mine mythology
    as will be clear from his biography. It informs
    us that he "was born at Milton, near Boston,
    Mass., and became a resident of Alexandria
    prior to 1785; was an importing merchant and
    prominent citizen during the forty years of his
    residence..." He married and had "several
    children." He died in 1824 and "was buried
    with Masonic honors..." (21) Clearly Mr.
    Swift was not the supposed blind pirate, nor is
    it likely he reached the remarkable age of one
    hundred and twelve years.
    The genealogical data of some
    versions of the Journal must be discounted.
    Not journals - but brazen attempts to
    perpetrate fraud - begin so. (Some details even
    appear to have been copied - usually carelessly
    and quite late - from Swift genealogies. (22))
    Indeed the earliest documented references to
    the legend mention only "a Certain man named
    Swift," (23) "one Swift," (24) "Swift," (25)
    and "said Swift." (26) (And the Tennessee
    version cited previously gives an entirely
    different first name.)
    There were numerous Swifts. Some
    were actually named John or Jonathan, which
    is, after all, a common first name. But there is
    no proof that there was an actual person
    named "Swift" - whether "Jonathan" or not -
    who early mined silver in Kentucky. To the
    contrary, there are indications that versions of
    the Journal have been tampered with. And not
    all such tampering can be explained away
    simply by copyists errors.
    We turn now to the seemingly-exact
    directions for locating the mines which make
    up the latter part of the Journal and which
    have inspired thousands of searches. But just
    how exact are they? We can take a cue from
    the coy statement therein that the furnace is "in
    a very remote place in the west." Landmarks
    are liberally given together with some
    directions and distances. Naturally these vary
    from version to version.
    Although Swift maps have been
    widely reputed to exist, they are scarce in
    relation to copies of the Journal. (A couple of
    imperfect ones are reproduced in books, (27)
    and I have another in my collection.) So, with
    the help of my father, Wendell Nickell - who
    has often acted as a guide in the Red River
    area and who reads maps at his leisure - I
    constructed a hypothetical map of the mines
    and buried treasure. I based it primarily on the
    rather detailed version of the Journal in
    Henson s book. It was immediately apparent
    that great flexibility of interpretation was
    required, pointing up the true vagueness of the
    description.
    But Swift actually gives the latitude
    and longitude of the mines:

    The richest ore is to be found in
    Latitude 37 degrees 56 minutes north (some
    versions read "57 minutes"). The ore vein of
    little value is in Latitude of 38 degrees 2
    minutes north. By astronomical observations
    and calculations, we found both veins to be
    just a little west of the longitude of 83 degrees.
    (28)

    While this is seemingly specific,
    exactly how far is "just a little" west?
    Taken literally, the latitude and
    longitude of "the richest ore" pinpoint a
    location in Morgan Co. near Relief, KY. Alas,
    neither the proper configurations nor the mine
    is to be found there. Despite all this, several
    factors conspire to fuel the search: Errors in
    "Swift s" calculations are reasonably
    assumed; partial configurations are located or
    "interpreted" as necessary; new maps and
    alleged copies of the Journal are drafted;
    newspaper editors experience weeks in which
    no man bites a dog; and skeptics are shunned
    by a public eager to believe.
    And so virtually every county in
    eastern Kentucky lays claim to the silver
    mines. The legend persists as well in Virginia,
    West Virginia, Tennessee, and North Carolina;
    and presumably it is everywhere good for
    business. A "Monument Rock" here, a
    "Balanced Rock" there, is often enough to set
    metal detectors and spades - even heavy
    equipment - in motion.

    ILLUSTRAT
    Not long ago Job Corpsmen at the
    Frenchburg Job Corps conservation Center
    located on Tarr Ridge in Menifee Co. searched
    (according to the Menifee County Journal) "an
    area from Sky Bridge and Rock Bridge
    westward along the Red River to Raven Rock,
    Court House Rock and Indian Creek where
    they have found several of the landmarks..."
    (29) A "mining and exploring" company is
    searching in Wolfe Co. There and elsewhere
    other groups and individuals are pursuing the
    myth and finding their treasure in the form of
    publicity.
    Years ago, the Swift mania cost one
    man his health, and after his death his widow
    returned to the search, squandering her fortune
    and her remaining years in futile pursuit of the
    treasure.(30) The legend of "John Swift" had
    struck again.

    Part II:
    The Treasure of Ophir

    If, as the geological evidence indicates,
    Swift found no great veins of silver, it follows
    that the Journal is a fabrication. Putting aside
    the "cover-for-piracy" theory (which is a very
    leaky boat), we come to another. In Silver
    Fleece, Kidwell states: "...thousands of
    transactions in real estate have hinged around
    the probability that it abounded with the
    abundant source of the Swift mines." (31) Isn t
    it conceivable the document was created for
    use in land schemes? It does appear it was
    later used for such a purpose. But, as I intend
    to demonstrate, there is a further possibility.
    Swift says he marked a tree with "the
    symbols of a compass (some versions read
    compasses), trowel and square." (32) These
    symbols are meaningless in any but a single
    context: A combined compass (a drawing
    compass, or 'pair of compasses ) and square
    compose the emblem of the 'secret society,
    Freemasonry. The trowel is the symbol of the
    Freeman s craft.
    Freemasonry, or Masonry, is a
    benevolent society. It is not, Masons state, a
    'secret society but a 'society with secrets .
    First carried to America in the early 18th
    century, it has been defined as 'a peculiar
    system of morality veiled in allegory and
    illustrated by symbols." (33)
    Swift says he marked various trees
    and rocks with symbols which he referred to as
    "curious marks" and again as "peculiar
    marks." He identified one location of buried
    treasure with "a symbol of a triangle." Not just
    a triangle, but a symbol - one important in
    masonry. Another Masonic symbol is the
    "Broad Arrow," also represented in the
    Journal; and there are many others.(34)
    In the Masonic ritual of the Entered
    Apprentice, or First Degree, is the statement
    that there is "nothing more fervent than heated
    charcoal, it will melt the most obdurate
    metals." (35) Similarly, in the Journal Swift
    states, "We were able to make charcoal in
    large quantities, for our use in smelting the
    ore." (36)
    The Journal continues in this vein (no
    pun intended): As part of the allegory, Swift
    claims that - when he left the "richest mine"
    for the last time - he "walled it up with
    masonry form." (37) Otherwise an unlikely
    expression, we need only capitalize "masonry"
    to see that this says, in effect, that the meaning
    has been concealed or 'veiled in Masonic
    fashion. It may b read with a knowing wink.
    Now, among the essential elements of
    any true Masonic group are these: "a legend or
    allegory relating to the building of King
    Solomon s Temple" and "symbolism based on
    the stonemason s trade." (38) Masonry
    incorporates many legends of King Solomon,
    his masons, and the building of the temple.
    Indeed, the Masonic Lodge is held to represent
    some part of Solomon s Temple. (39) The
    lodge is oriented east and west, with east
    regarded as the most sacred of the cardinal
    points.(40)
    Thus it is that our allegorist, "Swift,"
    places his furnace in a "rockhouse that faces
    the east." From the rock house, he says,
    "facing the east you can see two monument
    rocks" (two tall rock pillars). (41) These are
    coincident with the Masonic/Solomonic "two
    great pillars" symbolizing Strength and
    Establishment. (42)
    The remote and fabled mines, the fleet
    of ships (which supposedly bore Swift s silver
    to the "trade of the seas"), even the corral for
    horses - all tally with Solomon, his fabled
    mines (in "Ophir"), his great fleet, trade, and
    stables. Just as Swift refers to his "occupation
    as a silver-smith," Masons extol Solomon s
    Master Mason (whom they called Hiram Abif)
    - a smith, a craftsman in precious metals. And,
    like Swift who supposedly found so much
    silver he could not transport all of it, Solomon
    "made silver to be in Jerusalem as stone..."
    (43)
    The Swift story admirably teaches its
    moral about the futility of 'laying up
    treasures." It is not a true story but a parable
    in the form of a legend "veiled in allegory." In
    the Journal, Swift states the story s moral in a
    philosophical monologue: He says, in part, that
    "the works of man are always unfinished and
    unsatisfactory: and that "the life of man should
    be at some period turned about for reflection
    on God..."(44)
    Let us unveil a bit more. When Swift
    allegedly returned, years later, his blindness
    prevented him from re-locating his treasure.
    This is the punch-line of the allegory. In
    Masonry - which has been called the "Great
    Light" - light symbolizes enlightenment. (Swift
    says that from the "richest mine" you could
    "see a hole through the cliff and see the sky
    beyond." He called this formation "The
    Lighthouse." (45) In contrast, applicants for
    the Degrees of Masonry are first required to
    enter the lodge - like Swift - in complete
    blindness. (46) The "all-seeing" eye (depicted,
    for example, on the back of a dollar bill) is a
    prime Masonic symbol. (47)
    Not only Swift s furnace but his
    "richest mine" was in a cave. He and his men
    camped in another. And he had rich stores of
    silver (walled up with "masonry form")
    "hidden in the great cavern...which fact was
    known to no one living soul beyond our
    company." (48) (Like Masons, the members of
    Swift s "company" were "sworn to secrecy.")
    To this end, we should note that caves of
    "Clefts of the Rocks" figure prominently in
    Masonic symbolism. Too, there is the Masonic
    legend of the "Secret Vault," Solomon s
    subterranean depository of certain great
    secrets. (49)
    The Masonic rites of the Third Degree
    feature a quest after such vague secrets
    (specifically "that which is lost") which, I the
    end, remain lost. (50) That, precisely, is the
    simple plot of the Swift legend. A "sea
    captain" figures in that Degree; and it will
    come as no surprise to learn that Swift states,
    "I became captain of a ship."
    The parallels go on and on. Swift s
    landmarks include a "Lookout Rock,"
    "Hanging Rock," "Remarkable Rocks," etc.,
    including the two pillars or "Monument
    Rocks" previously noted. In Masonry,
    "Landmarks" -originally stone pillars for
    boundaries - are symbols distinguishing
    Masons from others. (51)
    Various directions from the furnace
    are given in distances of "three miles." (For
    example, "We carried the ore three miles to the
    furnace."; Furnace Creek forks "about three
    miles below the furnace"; again, "North of the
    furnace about three miles is a large hill..."). In
    Masonry, three miles represents a "Cable
    Tow s Length" which is "symbolic of the
    scope of a man s reasonable ability." (52)
    Numerous times Swift employs the number
    three - a number with definite significance in
    Freemasonry.
    The preceding only begins the
    possibilities. Such Masonic terms as "The
    Conclusion of the Whole Matter," "The
    Camp," "The Contention Among Brethren,"
    "The Left Hand," "The Right Hand,"
    "Treasure Room," "Royal Arch," "Cardinal
    Points" (of the Compass), "The Broken
    Column," "Degrees," "The Winding Stairs,"
    "Covenant of Masonry," "Darkness to Light,"
    "Circumambulation," "Weary Sojourners,"
    "Foreign Country," "The Lost Word,"
    "Distressed Worthy Brother," "the Rejected
    Stone," etc., etc., all seem to have definite
    counterparts in the allegorical Swift Journal.
    So do such symbols as the crescent moon,
    grapevine, laurel, crown, and others. (53)
    There are historically dubious points
    in the Journal which are probably directly
    attributable to allegory. Arthur Edward Waite
    points out that "the significance is in the
    allegory and not in any point of history which
    may lie behind it." (54)
    At least one dubious historical point is
    instructive. Swift refers to Indians "called
    Meccas." (Note the qualification that they were
    "called" that.) Although there was no such
    tribe, Henson guesses that "Meccas" or
    "Macces" may be a corruption of
    Mequechakes, a tribe of Shawnees. (55) On
    the other hand, in Masonic lore a copyist error
    appears with reference to "Maacha" (which is
    part of the Solomonic legend); Masons were
    referred to in the early charges and laws as
    "Maccones"; and the heroic Jewish family of
    Macabees also figures in Masonry. (56)
    I had a hunch that the allegorist might
    attempt to play games with numbers,
    especially since Masons make symbolic use of
    them. Swift s phrase, "reflection on God,"
    suggested a look in the Bible. In four chapters
    of Isaiah - 37, 56, 38, 2, indicated by the
    degrees and minutes of latitude - are to be
    found an amazing number of passages
    paralleling the Swift story. IN Isaiah 2, for
    example, is this: "...Their land also is full of
    silver and gold (Swift lists both silver and gold
    as part of his treasure), neither is there any end
    of their treasures..." (Isa. 2:7) IN this one
    chapter alone are allusions to Solomon, ships,
    idols cast of silver (Swift cast coins and silver
    bars), plus a phrase (adopted by Masons!):
    "Clefts of the Rocks." (Isa. 2:13, 16, 20-21).
    In Isaiah 37 the reader will learn why
    the Swift allegorist created a duel with swords,
    resulting in the death of one man; why he uses
    the strange expression, "The Drying Ground";
    and why he says that, in searching for the
    mine, he and his guide "wandered around all
    day. That night we came back to the place we
    started from." (Isa. 37: 7, 25, 34).
    The following chapter reveals why
    Swift claims that for fifteen years he was
    prevented from finding his treasure. (Isa. 38:5)
    also from this chapter: "Behold, I will bring
    again the shadow of the degrees..." (Isa. 38:8)
    Of the few references to "degrees" in the Bible,
    how very striking it is that we find the phrase
    in a passage we were directed to by a cryptic
    reference to degrees! (It is worth noting that in
    Masonry the various grades are known as
    "Degrees.")
    In the same chapter is the question,
    "What is the sign...?" (Isa. 38:22) We may ask
    another: Is the sign in the Swift allegory? Well,
    Swift refers to "myrtle" which is a biblical
    tree. One of the very few biblical passages
    mentioning it has special meaning; and it
    immediately prefaces the designated chapter
    56. It reads: "...and instead of the brier shall
    come up the myrtle tree; and it shall be to the
    LORD for a name, an everlasting sign that
    shall not be cut off." (Isa. 55:13) Here is how
    this "myrtle," this "sign that shall not be cut
    off," is represented by "Swift"; "Munday (his
    guide) said, 'I see the myrtle thicket. I know
    the way from here! " (57)
    Chapter 56 refers again to this sign, as
    well as to "the sons of the stranger," to greed,
    and blindness. (Isa. 56:6, 10-11) Chapter 38
    elaborates on the latter point: "Mine age is
    departed...mine eyes fail...(remember Swift
    became blind in his later years) O LORD, I am
    oppressed; undertake for me (blind, Swift
    became "dependent upon others")...they that
    go down into the pit (the mine) cannot hope for
    thy truth..." (Isa. 38: 12, 14, 18)
    So many parallels with the Swift
    allegory! Reading and understanding these
    passages from Isaiah (containing symbolism
    adopted by Freemasonry) help us to
    understand the moral of the Swift allegory.
    After almost two hundred years, the key to the
    'cipher has been broken.
    One of the problems allegories present
    is that of interpretation. It has not been my
    intent to twist facts to fit a theory. I can only
    repeat that the Journal itself demands
    comparison with Freemasonry since so many
    Masonic symbols are expressly given therein.
    Clearly these elements - compasses, square,
    and trowel - refer to Masonry to the exclusion
    of any other meaning.
    This does not mean "Swift" was a
    Mason, of course, since his very existence is
    doubtful. Nor does it necessarily mean that the
    original version of the Journal (long lost!)
    contained such symbolism - although ever
    indication is that it did. In the forthcoming
    section I will detail evidence which strongly
    suggests the author s intent as well as
    indications of who he was and when the
    allegory was drafted. As we shall see, John
    Filson is conspicuously present in the Swift
    affair.

    Part III
    John Filson - John Swift

    The earliest documented reference to
    Swift s silver mines is this land record of May
    17, 1788:

    Robert Breckinridge and John Filson
    as Tenants in Common Enters (sic) 1000 acres
    of land upon the balance of a Treasury
    Warrant No. 10,117 about sixty or seventy
    miles North Eastwardly from Martins Cabbins
    in Powells Valley to include a silver mine
    which was Improved about 17 years ago by a
    Certain man named Swift at said mine,
    wherein the said Swift Reports he has
    extracted from the oar (sic) a Considerable
    quantity of Silver some of which he made into
    Dollars and left at or near the mine, together
    with the apparatus for making the same, the
    Land to be in a Square and the lines to run at
    the Cardinal Points of the Compass including
    the mine in the Centre as near as may be. (58)

    Filson is of course the famous
    Kentuckian who produced the first map of the
    state together with the first history, The
    Discovery, Settlement and Present State of
    Kentucke (1784) in which he wrote: "Iron ore
    and lead are found in abundance, but we do not
    hear of any silver or gold mines as yet
    discovered." (59)
    Now Filson s book, and the statements
    in it, contained endorsement by "Daniel Boon,
    Levi Todd, James Harrod." The opinions of
    these exceedingly knowledgeable men should
    have been the best obtainable; and they hadn t
    even heard, in all their travels, an allegation of
    silver mines. Yet in four years the name
    "Swift" had come to light; his mine had been
    located; and it was Filson who had gotten
    lucky. Weigh the odds.
    There is, in fact, absolutely no
    evidence of the "Swift Mines" legend prior to
    the 1788 Filson document. It would be
    interesting if we could ask John Filson how he
    had located the mine. But since we cannot, we
    can look at the man and his activities in hopes
    of clues. They are forthcoming.
    Consider this portrait of Filson by
    William Masterson of Rice University:

    His was a strange personality. Fiercely
    acquisitive, he secured, on paper at least, over
    12,000 acres of land. For gain he plunged into
    arduous schemes, sued and was sued, and
    endured all the hardships of an incredibly
    savage frontier. For gain, despite pious
    explanations to the contrary, he wrote his book
    and drew his map, the products of hours and
    days of interviews, travel, and technical skill.
    He was not friendly and was possessed of a
    deadly quality of impatience and pompousness.
    Like his map he lacked perspective - the map
    at the eastern and western ends, the man in any
    direction that touched upon personal standing
    and relationships. Except for the map and book
    he was in all his endeavors, including his one
    known courtship, almost ludicrously
    unsuccessful. He died penniless..." (60)

    Masterson adds: "Yet Filson s very energy
    attracts." His frontier travels were extensive.
    He taught at Transylvania, studied medicine
    and untold other subjects, conducted countless
    interviews, surveyed roads, wrote poetry and
    created sundry documents at the request of
    others, helped to found a city, and attempted to
    found a seminary (tuition: "one half cash the
    other property" (61)).
    If the reader suspects I am about to
    'accuse Filson of perpetrating the Swift hoax,
    he is partly right: I wish to suggest that there
    are numerous indications - if not conclusive
    evidence - that he did so. Let us examine the
    indications.
    First, there are Masonic symbols and
    allusions in the text of Filson s land record;
    but we cannot be certain they are not purely
    coincidental. For example, "Cardinal Points of
    the Compass" is a definite Masonic term, while
    on the other hand nothing precludes a non-
    Mason s innocent use of the expression in a
    deed. Too, the "Square" may just be meant
    literally. In Masonry it can refer either to the
    four-sided figure which symbolizes morality
    (or duty), or to the trying square, which, with
    the compass, composes the Masonic emblem.
    (The serious student may wish to look up in
    Masonic texts and glossaries the following:
    "North-East Corner," "Working Tools,"
    "Legend," "The Lost Word," "Quest,"
    "Alchemy," and even "Circumambulation,")
    But I belabor my point; presently we shall look
    at Filson s Masonic ties; first, let us consider
    other evidence.
    In that pioneer era of Kentucky, Filson
    was one of the very, very few who could have
    met all the necessary requirements for drafting
    the Journal. His scholarship, his ability to
    write and to create maps would obviously have
    been necessary talents together with his
    excellent knowledge of Kentucky. There was
    nothing in his mixed character to preclude a
    motive - and several motives present
    themselves.
    Putting words into "Swift s" mouth
    would have been child s play for Filson; for
    after all, he had given these words to Daniel
    Boone in a ghostwritten account of the hero s
    exploits:

    The aspect of these cliffs is so wild and horrid,
    that it is impossible to behold them without
    terror. The spectator is apt to imagine that
    nature had formerly suffered some violent
    convulsion; and that these are the dismembered
    remains of the dreadful shock: the ruins, not of
    Persepolis or Palmyra, but of the world! (62)

    Exclamation mark indeed! Anyone who could
    bestow upon a backwoodsman such an instant
    education would have no trouble saddling an
    untutored "sea captain" with a phrase like
    "deeming it imprudent."
    Filson occasionally sounds like the
    surveyor he was, with a string of "thences":
    "...thence down the same to the mouth; thence
    up the Ohio..." (63) as if he were drafting a
    deed of land. Swift writes: "We...came to
    Leesburg, thence to Winchester, thence to
    Littles, thence to Fort Pitt..." (64)
    "Swift s" division of his manuscript
    into sections - "Description of the Mines and
    Country," "Ore South of the Furnace," etc. -
    parallels Filson s treatment of his book:
    "Situation and Boundaries," "Soil and
    Produce," etc. Filson evidently patterned his
    miscellany after Jefferson s Notes on the State
    of Virginia, manuscript copies of which were
    in circulation after 1781. (65) (Let us hope no
    one suggests Jefferson copied "Swift!")
    After relating some of the early history
    of exploration, Filson (following Jefferson s
    approach) described the boundaries. He began:
    "Kentucke is situated, in its central part, near
    the latitude of 38 degrees north and 85 degrees
    west longitude, and lying within the fifth
    climate...Is bounded on the north by great
    Sandy-creek..." (66) And "Swift," after
    recounting his comings and goings, gives his
    "Description of the Mines and Country,"
    including, as previously noted, the latitude and
    longitude. He says the furnace is on "a long
    rocky branch." (67)
    Let us compare style. In Filson s little
    book we find this:

    The lands below the mouth of Elkhorn,
    up Eagle Creek, and towards the Ohio, are
    hilly and poor, except those contained in a
    great bend of the Ohio, opposite Great Miami,
    cut off, as appears in the map, by the Big-bone
    and Bank-lick creeks, interlocking and running
    separate courses. Here we find a great deal of
    good land, but something hilly. (68)

    And here for comparison is "Swift":

    Mots of the mountains have but little
    timber and are poor and barren. North of the
    furnace about three miles is a large hill, seven
    or eight miles long, upon which there is good
    timber of different kinds, where we were able
    to make charcoal in large quantities for use in
    smelting the ore. South of the furnace there is
    little timber worth notice." (69)

    In such passages there is a similarity of both
    style and outlook.
    But did Filson have the particularly
    literary (and not just journalistic) turn of mind
    necessary to contrive a complex allegory
    replete with clever symbolism? The answer is
    emphatically yes. He was, for one thing, a
    poet. But an example of his genius for
    cleverness is found in the name he proposed
    for the city he helped to found. He called it
    "Losantiville." As he explained: "L for Licking
    River; os, Latin for mouth; anti, Greek for
    opposite; and ville, French for city." Read
    backward, it translates as 'city opposite the
    mouth of the Licking ! Although later the
    name was changed to Cincinnati, some Filson
    notes have survived to reveal his pedantic
    virtuosity. (70)
    Filson may well have been a
    Freemason; certainly some of his closest
    associates and contemporaries were. One was
    Levi Todd, an endorser of his book. (71)
    Humphrey Marshall - controversial Tory,
    historian, surveyor, and Mason (72) - is
    presumed a Filson friend; although speculation
    that Marshall wrote, or helped write, Kentucke
    is based on too-meager evidence. (73) Filson
    almost surely came in contact with such
    Freemasons as Samuel January, an early
    settler of Lexington, who later opened an
    establishment at Limestone (Maysville) with
    the Masonic name of "Sign of the Square and
    Compass." (Two taverns in Lexington also
    bore Masonic names - "Sheaf of Wheat" and
    "Sign of Cross-Keys.") (74) Insofar as is
    known Filson never met George Washington
    (America s most famous Freemason), but it
    was to him that Filson publicly dedicated his
    map.
    IN 1788 (the year in which the
    Journal was probably created, or at least
    finished), Filson was actually living in the
    home of a prominent Mason, Colonel Robert
    Patterson (75) - soon to be a Filson partner in
    founding "Losantiville." It was in this
    significant year of 1788, on November 17, that
    the "first lodge west of the Alleghenies,"
    Masonic Lodge No. 25 at Lexington, was
    issued a charter. (76) The date of the
    application for the charter is unknown, but
    surely it was some time (weeks or even
    months) before. (Prior to that time, Kentucky s
    Freemasons had to make the difficult,
    dangerous trip to the Grand Lodge in
    Richmond, VA.) Unfortunately, the names of
    the charter members of Lodge No. 25 are
    irretrievably lost; (77) but it does seem that
    while plans were being made to establish the
    lodge, Filson - living in Patterson s home - was
    close at hand. And it is very likely that, with
    his extraordinary curiosity and his admiration
    for Masons, he sought membership in the
    society.
    While there is no direct proof the
    "Swift Silver Mines" allegory was adopted for
    actual use by Masons, Freemasonry is, after
    all, a "society with secrets." Further, many
    appendant orders of the brotherhood have
    flourished briefly before passing into
    obscurity. If Filson had written the allegory
    (say at the request of Patterson), it might
    simply have suffered the same fate as
    "Losantiville." Or possibly another fate, which
    I will touch on presently.
    Filson s talents frequently earned him
    requests to write documents for others. for
    example, it was he who drafted the petition to
    Congress on behalf of the families at Post St.
    Vincent pleading for military protection (and
    for the establishment of a "permanent land
    office here, for the purpose of obtaining valid
    rights to lands... (78) Land was a Filson
    obsession, and he dwells on explaining how to
    acquire it in his book.) He also wrote the
    announcement for a proposed Lexington
    seminary (a "bizarre" document, as his
    biographer admits) (79) as well as the
    prospectus for the proposed settlement of
    "Losantiville." It was at the request of
    Colonel Patterson that Filson set to the task of
    conjuring up that 'veiled name. (80)
    In mid-1788 Filson wrote to his
    brother - who was being harassed by Filson s
    creditors - a letter most revealing of his
    character. He said, in part:

    I have supported a good credit here
    (Lexington), and have enough to support me.
    I resumed my studies last winter...and this
    spring have begun to study Physic with Doctor
    Slater...two years I study, as soon as my study
    is finished. I am to be married, which will be
    greatly to our advantage. Stand it out 2 years
    my dear brother, you shall have Negroes to
    wait on you. (81)

    The letter was written just ten days after Filson
    recorded his supposed discovery of the silver
    mine, yet he makes no reference to it! Did he
    know the mine was only legendary?
    He did not travel to the mine. Instead
    he headed in the opposite direction. A month
    later, at Beargrass (near Louisville), he
    composed a poem, indicating he had been
    spurned in love and threatening suicide. (82)
    By September 23, Filson had arrived
    at "Losantiville" with his two partners:
    Colonel Patterson, and Matthias Denman of
    New Jersey (who had obtained the land). After
    a preliminary survey, Filson disappeared. He
    was rumored killed by Indians, although his
    body was never found; and another surveyor,
    Israel Ludlow, took his place in the
    partnership. John Walton, Filson s biographer,
    states: "Years later, sworn testimony was
    given that these men ransacked Filson s trunk
    and destroyed his papers in order to defraud
    his heirs. (83) Could the Swift allegory have
    been among the papers in the ransacked trunk?
    A great deal of circumstantial evidence
    connects Filson with the "Swift" manuscript.
    Someone certainly contrived it, and at every
    turn, Filson is suspiciously present.
    Wherever we find Filson in the Swift
    matter, Colonel Robert Patterson is not far
    behind. After Filson s death, the records are
    silent as to "Swift s Mine" for more than two
    years. Then there is this entry:

    April 1791. Eli Cleveland withdraws
    his entry of 200 acres made January 5, 1791
    on Warrent No. 15132. Eli Cleveland and John
    Morton enters (sic) 1483 acres of land on two
    Treasury Warrants No. 15132 and 12128 on a
    branch of Red River to Include an Old Camp
    in the Center where there is some old troughs
    at said Camp by the branch side. The said
    Camp is a place difficult of access Supposed
    to be Swift s Old Camp and others including a
    mine said to be occupied formerly by said
    Swift and others. (84)

    John Morton (who later became a banker) was
    a Mason, (85) and his partner, Eli Cleveland,
    may have been. Cleveland was closely linked
    with Colonel Patterson since they were (at
    roughly this time) fellow magistrates of
    Fayette Co. (86)
    In two more years these county
    lawmen were to learn of a bizarre and tragic
    episode in the "Swift" saga. Colonel James
    Harrod, prominent as the founder of
    Harrodsburg, was reported murdered after
    being lured on a search for the mines (87) by a
    man named Bridges - a man with whom
    Harrod "had a lawsuit about property." (88) In
    his little book, Filson had called Colonel
    Harrod "a gentleman of veracity." (89)
    Several years later, in 1815, Colonel
    William McMillan of Clark Co., with eleven
    other men, formed a "company" (90) to search
    for the Swift mines. McMillan possessed, at
    least according to later legend, the "original"
    Journal and map. As to the latters: "From
    notes relating to it, it must have been in cipher,
    for finding the place appeared to depend upon
    the phases of the moon or signs of the zodiac
    or some mysterious combination of
    circumstances, perhaps never revealed." (91)
    Had the map survived, only then might we do
    more than guess that the "cipher" was
    composed of Masonic symbols.
    I did succeed in establishing that
    "William McMillin" (sic) was active in Clark
    Co., (92) and that a "William McMillan" was
    at "Losantiville" in 1788! He arrived with a
    party brought by Colonel Patterson shortly
    after Filson s reported death...(93) This much
    is clear: Any further clues concerning "Swift s
    Mines" will be unearthed - not in the soil of
    Kentucky - but in the neglected dust of
    archives.

    FOOTNOTES
    1. Except as otherwise noted, all
    quotes from Swift s Journal are taken from
    the version reproduced in Michael Paul
    Henson s John Swift s Lost Silver Mines
    (Louisville; privately printed, 1975), pp. 8-25.
    2. J. H. Kidwell, Silver Fleece (New
    York: Avondale Press, 1927), vii. (This is a
    novel based on the Swift legend. The quote is
    from Kidwell s introduction.)
    3. Lincoln Co. No. 10117, issued May
    17, 1788 and filed in the Land Office at
    Richmond, VA. Copy available from the Land
    Office in Frankfort, KY. Reproduced by
    Henson, p. 37.
    4. Thomas S. Watson. "John Swift s
    Lost Silver Mines - A Joke?", The State
    Journal (Frankfort, KY), February 22, 1976,
    p. 25
    5. Ibid. citing opinion of Dr. Thomas
    D. Clark, Kentucky Historian.
    6. Letter to author, September 26,
    1978
    7. Journal, pp. 11, 19
    8. In addition to versions cited, there
    are these: Kidwell, pp 1-8; Henson, Lost Silver
    Mines and Buried Treasure of Kentucky,
    private printed, Louisville, 1972, pp. 6-13; et
    al. There are also numerous unpublished
    versions.
    9. Henson, p. 8. Henson believes Swift
    died in Tennessee in 1800 and that the Journal
    was taken to Pennsylvania and later to
    Louisville. (See Henson, pp. 7, 40-41.) But if
    the Journal was not circulated until after 1800,
    how do we explain Filson s treasury warrant
    of 1788 containing wording which implies
    Filson possessed a copy?
    10. Arthur Hardie Dougherty, "The
    Legends of the Swifts and Monday Mine"
    (sic), undated typescript in the McClung
    Collection. Lawson McGhee Library,
    Knoxville. Unpaginated. (Dougherty says his
    brother "procured a very old and faded
    document from an old man in Virginia by the
    name of Boatwright," from which the text was
    transcribed.)
    11. Op. Cit.
    12. William Elsey Connelley and E.
    Merton Coulter, History of Kentucky
    (Chicago: The American Historical Society,
    1922), pp. 130-33.
    13. Journal (Henson), p. 15 (cf.
    Connelley and Coulter, p. 132)
    14. Ibid., pp. 24-25.
    15. Ibid., p. 14
    16. Journal (Henson), p. 17. Jonathan
    Swift, the allegorist, was known to early
    Kentuckians. A creek named "Lulbegrud"
    (from "Gulliver s Travels) appears on Filson s
    1784 map.
    17. Henson, p. 25
    18. Court of Appeals Deed Book A, p.
    307. August 1, 1795. Kentucky Land Office,
    Frankfort.
    19. Court of Appeals Deed Book N. p.
    142. November 4, 1809. Kentucky Land
    Office, Frankfort.
    20. Henson, pp. 7, 27.
    21. Franklin Longdon Brockett, The
    Lodge of Washington (Alexandria, VA: 1899),
    pp. 127-28.
    22. e. g., William Swift of Sandwitch
    and Some of his Descendants, 1637-1899,
    compiled by George H. Swift (Millbrook, NY:
    Round Table Press, 1900).
    23. 1788. (Filson s treasury warrant.)
    See Footnote 3.
    24. 1823. (Judge John Haywood s
    History of Tennessee, p. 33, 34. Cited by
    Connelley and Coulter, p. 115.)
    25. 1791. (Fayette Co., VA, Entry
    Book, p. 333, in the Kentucky Land Office.
    Full text of this document is given below.
    26. 1791. (Ibid)
    27. Henson, pp. 88-89
    28. Journal, (Henson), p. 18.
    29. Undated clipping (obtained from
    Mr. Henson).
    30. Early and Modern History of
    Wolfe Co. (Campton, KY: Wolfe Co.
    Woman s Club, 1958), pp. 13-14. See also,
    Licking Valley Courier (West Liberty),
    October 19, 1978.
    31. Op. Cit., p. vii
    32. Journal (Henson), p. 16. The
    version in Silver Fleece (Kidwell, p. 4) reads
    "compass square and trowel" (sic)).
    33. Masonic Heirloom Edition Holy
    Bible (Wichita, KS: Heirloom Bible
    Publishers, 1964), p. 26. (Before proceeding
    further, let me state that I requested no Mason
    to compromise himself by revealing society
    secrets. Data on Masonic symbols and other
    matters revealed in the following pages is
    found in encyclopedias and books on Masonry
    sold to the general public. If I have
    inadvertently revealed any treasured secrets,
    that has not been my motive, nor do I intend
    criticism of Freemasonry in any of my
    statements.)
    34. Journal (Henson), pp. 11, 12, 17.
    Cf. Masonic Bible, pp. 16, 24. Albert G.
    Mackey, Symbolism of Freemasonry
    (Chicago: Charles F. Powner Co., 1975), p.
    122 states that Freemasonry is "a science of
    symbolism."
    35. Look to the East!, revised edition,
    edited by Ralph P. Lester (Chicago: Ezra A.
    Cook Publications, 1977), p. 60.
    36. Journal (Henson), p. 18.
    37. Ibid., p. 22
    38. Collier s Encyclopedia (1978),
    "Freemasonry." Mackey (p. 315) explains that
    an allegory is "a discourse or narrative, in
    which there is a literal and figurative sense, a
    patent and a concealed meaning; the literal or
    patient sense being intended by analogy or
    comparison to indicate the figurative or
    concealed one

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  3. #2
    us
    .... Never Ever Give Up ....

    May 2009
    Eastern Kentucky
    Garret Ace - 250
    78
    Gold and Silver!!!!

    Re: Swift - Filson: UNCOVERED

    I hope you guys take the time to read all of this.. Pay close attention to the solid "Masonic" connection and especially close attention on what he has to say about Filson.. I suspect that he has hit the nail on the head - so to speak.. But then again - who knows.. Happy Hunting Fellers..

  4. #3
    us
    Aug 2007
    Whites XLT (E- Series)
    109
    1 times
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    Re: Swift - Filson: UNCOVERED

    Hello All,
    Filson also said he surveyed the richest mine, and put it in a square of 1000 square acres, and the corners of the square were lined up with the cardinal points of the compass. This middle mine/richest mine is also the GC of the Shawnee. I have a square with each side approximately 3.28 inches per side exactly encompassing the mine/cave and the other workings in a 1000sq acre survey. Swifts square, compass and trowel is within the survey.

    Bill N. (The Swizard)

  5. #4
    us
    Having the time of my life!

    Sep 2008
    Cincinnati
    522
    9 times
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    Re: Swift - Filson: UNCOVERED

    Hi Frontiersman,

    I had read this from Nichols some time ago..kind of funny how he tries to paint Swift as not being real, but yet has made a map that he thinks is realistic..where the mine is..Then does a great job of pointing out the allegories from masons. This coincides with Prather’s book a lot too. I have an idea that maybe masons have become involved with this legend so that when its discovered to be true it will legitimize the mason history-supposed history…there was long period after Washington’s time when no one would be a Mason because they killed a brother mason because he divulged some secrets..Masons were held in contempt for a long time..it started coming back a lot more in the late 1800s. No don’t give me a rough time..I am not saying masons are a blood thirsty lot..just telling you what is history and a motivation for inclusion of mason history in Swift stuff.
    On the negative vent..Filson also disappeared /died while supposedly looking for the Swift mine-when he did turn up in New Orleans sometime later and owned up to the Swift thing being a fabrication to sell the journals and maps..BUT I still believe Swift was real and did have a large silver mine. Another thing that Nichols brings up is the lack of silver in KY…but there are historical records of nice sized veins being used for counterfeiting. There are historical record about the French having silver mines near carter KY and Elliott county. The Spanish were there too mining Silver..I think that Swift and crew were working some old Spanish works that the Indians had been salves to the Spanish for..then when the Spanish were killed or left (due to French late owning the area)..the Indians use the mines for themselves..Until Monday/Swift appeared. Then there Is the newspaper article about the Lady Nichols refers to..and all the signs are there and they were trying to recover the vein lost form blasting in Swift’s mine…but he had others that are still there for us to locate.
    I mentioned before I am in the process of getting things together to let a film crew do a documentary on the location of Six Indian silver mines I found..yes, 6 of them..so I don’t care who says there is no silver in KY I can prove there is and will soon show it to the world. WE start the middle of February if the water permits. Hope I am not sounding like Swiftsearcher here…I for sure will not be using explosives! haha
    Yea, though I walk through the Valley of Death I will fear no evil for thou art with me.

 

 

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