chest of buttons in oneida lake

gunsil

Silver Member
Dec 27, 2012
3,864
6,207
lower hudson valley, N.Y.
Detector(s) used
safari, ATPro, infinium, old Garrett BFO, Excal, Nox 800
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Yup, a rather small chest, but the buttons are worth a lot of money. I read about this some time ago and I don't remember where. It was a collection of rare buttons many of precious metal, but they were supposedly tossed over the side in the 1700s. Be an awfully hard thing to find out in the lake. The chest was less than a foot long, more like a jewelry box. I don't think it was in Oneida, either, but it was one of the finger lakes, I believe the story I read said lake Cayuga.
 

Last edited:
OP
OP
metalmilitia

metalmilitia

Jr. Member
May 25, 2014
41
12
Central NY
Detector(s) used
Minelab 505,Garret at pro,Garrett propointer,Strong will and determination.
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
yeah ill have to look into it further but the one i read said his wife threw them over board after joking with a buddy that he loved them more than her lol.
 

gunsil

Silver Member
Dec 27, 2012
3,864
6,207
lower hudson valley, N.Y.
Detector(s) used
safari, ATPro, infinium, old Garrett BFO, Excal, Nox 800
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Yup, I read the same thing. But if the story is true the chances of it ever being recovered are slim, and slim left town.
 

OP
OP
metalmilitia

metalmilitia

Jr. Member
May 25, 2014
41
12
Central NY
Detector(s) used
Minelab 505,Garret at pro,Garrett propointer,Strong will and determination.
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Yup, I read the same thing. But if the story is true the chances of it ever being recovered are slim, and slim left town.

Yeah i figured but it was a cool story i tried finding it again but cant seem to find it wtf.
 

JOHUNT

Sr. Member
Sep 24, 2009
462
106
Southern tier of New York
Detector(s) used
bounty hunter
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
If the hinges were made of a non-ferrous metal like brass you'd be wasting time. Besides cayuga being a quite large lake, the bottom isn't smooth like a swimming pool. The bottom has ledges that can drop off quick. I know this from fishing cayuga with copper line, trying to keep a lure on the bottom while trolling is tough. The fish/depth finder often shows the depth go from 90-70ft in just a matter of seconds

Sent from my SCH-S720C using Tapatalk 2
 

NiagracountyNY

Full Member
May 17, 2009
244
143
Western New York
Detector(s) used
Nokta- Fors core / Makro--CF77 / Minelab CTX 3030 / XP deus /Velox 1 / RS PinPointer /Makro Waterproof PinPointer
Prob alot of silver buttons in that box.The folks well of used silver.I dont think people would use gold...but maybe..It would have been a good way to carry your money..wear it in the form of a button,then pull it off when u need it..Brilliant really..lol I have a buddy who has 1 or 10 silver war of 1812 buttons from officers i believe.Very nice.Found in the lake erie shoreline area i believe..
 

KGCnewbieseeker

Sr. Member
Oct 29, 2005
324
50
FL
Resting quietly in the mud of a lake bottom in Central New York State is a priceless cache of rare antique buttons, once among the envied collection of the French Count. Jean-Mark Brieuc de Beauville. Even one of these precious ornamental fasteners could command a price in six figures on the open collectors' market, yet there are fifteen hundred of them in the lake, a fortune today estimated at $150,000,000!The man who possessed this rare and extensive collection of valuable buttons, Count Jean Mark Brieuc, was a French citizen and a temporary resident of New York City. He was a wealthy aristocrat who moved in the highest social circles. He was an official representative to the United States, but not in the service of his own government. Instead, he stood in behalf of private French trade interests as well as a few European business cartels. In some respects he was more influential than the French diplomat in Washington.His taste in antiques, fine cutlery, and crystal was legend, yet of all his possessions Brieuc dearly loved his buttons the most. Surprisingly, few of his American friends even knew of his buttons, for such mere baubles were not exactly well-regarded by New Yorkers.

I cant find the second part of the story but it goes that he took the buttons out with a few friends on oneida lake for a day of sailing and was showing the buttons off when he commented that he loved the buttons more than his wife and in a rage she tossed them over. (LOL)



and if you are in the neighborhood...

Sunken Treasure Chest of Robert Gordon. Robert Gordon, his wife Rachel Rose, and their children abandoned their home and 35-acre Red House Farm lot located on the west side of Wood Creek beginning at the southern edge of Skenesborough (or Skenesboro - now Whitehall), New York in 1775 bound for St. Johns, Canada where Gordon felt it would be safer for his family at the onset of the Revolutionary War after hearing of the surrender of Burgoyne. (Wood Creek Area of his Home) Gordon was neutral regarding the war -- neither a Tory nor a Whig -- and he knew he would be trusted by neither. According to the Whitehall, New York Local History Sketches of Pre-Revolutionary Settlers by Clarence Holden, "One night he embarked with his family in a small sloop and sailed away. He abandoned everything but, evidently distrusting his Tory friends equally with the Whigs, packed up his silver and other valuables in a large chest and sank them in the lake somewhere in the marsh." Of course, he intended to return and reclaim his valuables after the hostilities subsided, but never got the chance as he died suddenly. The location where he was said to have dropped the metal chest was in the marsh near the west shore of the Haven. In old documents "the Haven" refers to the "New Haven" area, including "West Haven." The reason this treasure story has gained credence, and the box is considered to still be hidden in the marsh, is that the local historical sketches written between 1914-1918 corroborate the story, and a dredger who was clearing the swamp near that same location in 1934 reported lifting a large metal box precariously balanced on muck and debris that fell back into the water. Many people have tried to relocate the box, but all attempts have failed. Holden continues, "Robert Gordon was born in London in 1739, the oldest of three children. His parents were full blooded Scotch. When he was a child, his mother died and his father enlisted in the King's Life Guards. Robert was apprenticed to a gardener, and after the expiration of his apprenticeship, he entered the royal service and in time became head gardener to the king. The Queen asked him on numerous occasions to skillfully open letters for her to read and reseal them, but when the King found, Robert felt it was best for his health to travel in foreign countries. About 1770, he fell in with Colonel Skene and decided to settle in Skenesborough. With the assistance of Skene, he purchased a large stock of goods, brought them to his new home, and set up a very successful business career. He took up a large farm adjoining Skene's patent, its northeast corner being the angle formed by the south line of Whitehall and Wood creek. He also had a 35-acre lot which is described as "the Red House farm." It is likely this was his homestead, but where it was located is not clear, probably somewhere near the Landing. After a year, he went back to England and returned with another large stock of goods. He married Rachel Rose of Manchester, Vermont, and continued to live peacefully and prosperously at Skenesborough until the breaking out of the Revolution." From the History of Saratoga County, "At the time around this region the Indian could paddle his canoe, and the white man in the colonial period could row his bateau, finding, save the portages around the somewhat numerous falls and rapids, only two carrying-places. One was from the Hudson at Fort Edward to Fort Nun on the Wood creek that runs into Lake Champlain at Whitehall. The other was from the Mohawk at Fort Stanwix to Fort Williams on the other Wood creek which runs into the Oneida lake." Arriving in St. Johns, Gordon set up a tavern, and became quite popular. He was a large, fine looking man, with gracious manners, and his inn was much patronized by the English officers and officials, who enjoyed the fine flowers and vegetables from his garden, and particularly doted on his milk punch, which acquired more than a local reputation. He obtained a grant of several hundred acres of land in the town of Hemingford, and taking his son Robert Jr. and some hired men he set out to explore his new property. Landing at Rouses Point, they started overland and had no difficulty in locating the grant. Late that afternoon while the men were making camp, Robert, the father, taking his gun strolled off in search of game. That was the last ever seen of him, although the party searched for days for the missing man. He left a widow and eight children, the eldest sixteen years of age. Some years afterwards, while the family was living on the land which cost the husband and father his life, some Indians, of whom there were large numbers in the neighborhood, brought to Mrs. Gordon a little canteen made in the form of a miniature barrel and carved with figures and emblems. She at once recognized it as belonging to her husband. By gestures and broken English they gave Mrs. Gordon to understand that they had found it in the forest not far away at the foot of a tree with the bones of a man and the remains of a gun. Before the family recovered from their surprise, the Indians decamped and were never seen again. The mystery of Robert Gordon's treasure and of his death has never been solved. Robert, the son, had an equally mysterious fate. Much against his mother's wishes, he went to sea. She received two or three letters from him in foreign parts, and then never another word. Based on everything known, the treasure was likely sank in the marsh along the narrow navigable canal portion of Lake Champlain that traversed to the northwest of Whitehall and along the western shore of West Haven. With dredging and water movement, the chest may have moved further north, but the marsh in the drowned lands is very weedy and dense. Although access appears limited on the east side of the lake, there is a Main Road across the canal from Adirondack Park that appears to end near the water's edge, and further north there may be an access area at Maple Bend where you could backtrack down the canal's edge to the south
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top