Rebel - KGC
Gold Member
- Jun 15, 2007
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In the codes.....from the point of view of a map maker......or someone like Reavis who was in the Military for the CSA in the south in Texas.....this is easy to chart and to Forge a document, lacing historical references of military activity into these charted codes.
But after simply using the Gold and Silver measurements to describe the treasures clues and whereabouts, by converting them like the DOI in the 2nd, that these codes signify the creation of a series of distances......for instance....
the three holes on the Peralta Stones are places on a map. Where you then take the numbers in the Beale codes and chart the distance of the Gold, and Silver numbers into the map, and the dates give both the angle above the horizontal longitudes and the distance in miles. This then leads to finding the exact location of the "Jewels" described.....
What I mean is that they stole some really important stuff that was buried when they were hustling the Spanish Gold and Silver out of AZ....they found the Church of Santa Fe Treasures......
The 1st and 3rd codes are basically a complete sham of random numbers that give a codebreaker a mind bender, after the 2nd is used to let you start thinking that way.
Keys to statements relating to burial locations are numbered in descriptions in the weights. it is easy to see that the code is amateur and made to look like a document of higher stature than it actually is. A perfect fit for a scumbag who is robbing gold from his fellow statesman.
Distances are charted as points of origin of calculations in AZ, and are then made according to points that are created along a map. Thats all I am saying.....
A fair assumption. However, it could just as easily be that the pamphlet story was only intended for a possible few, and not for everyone, just those possible few who might have recognized some of the details in the long-ago events. If you have ever seen the movie Three Days of The Condor then you should know that the basic notion of code annalist looking for codes in random publications was based on true activities, this practice/experimenting of publishing secret code in select publications dating back even before the turn of the 19th century. So the notion that someone might use even a popular publication to pass information to a select few isn't out of the question at all. Given this, then, "I would say a word to those who may take an interest in them...It is,TO DEVOTE ONLY SUCH TIME AS CAN BE SPARED FROM YOUR LEGITIMATE BUSINESS TO THE TASK,AND IF YOU CAN SPARE NO TIME,LET THE MATTER ALONE" could have been written for another reason. i.e., "only those with knowledge of the eventsThis need apply".
ALL of this, is in AZ...?
How many times has this phrase been used when presenting a pet theory concerning the Beale Papers?... that is another cover story ...
Used by Ward as a hook to entice buyers for the Beale Papers dime novel that sold for 50 cents....
The 1st and 3rd codes are basically a complete sham of random numbers that give a codebreaker a mind bender, after the 2nd is used to let you start thinking that way...
Pursley/Purcell is mentioned in Kit Carson's memoirs as living in Santa Fe, but not as Beale's half brother.... read Elliott Coues book on the Journals of Zabulon Montgomery Pike. Mr Coues say that James Pursley (Purcell) traveled with upwards of 5,000 friendly Indians. James Pursley was Thomas J. Beale's half brother on his mother's side. James Pursley found the gold in 1805 with two French Indians. One of these Indians worked for the paymaster of General Wilkerson and Wilkerson was a double agent with the Spanish being paid by them.
Any more doubts or questions just ask.
Yes this is documented, they had the same mother. I have all of this on my CD Book. Rebel have you or anyone else checked this documentation out? There were three TJB's in NO, one was from Bealestown, PA also in the CD Book. There is a lot more in the CD Book about TJB's brother marrying a Purcell and three Purcell brothers married three sisters from another family.
Dear Friends:
I've been cleaning out the archives, putting some choice items of treasure hunting literature up for sale on eBay, donating books, and generally trying to weed a garden that has been growing for close to five decades.
I just came across a fascinating publication The 30 Million Dollar Beale Treasure Is A Hoax" by Tom Kenny (Brunswick, MO: 1990) a fascinating self-published 52-page work that, to my mind, settles the issue.
It meshes nicely with the Thread here that points out the astonishing similarities between the Beale narrative and Edward Fitzgerald Beale's account of his travels.
To be fair to Mr. Kenny, I'm not going to reproduce his efforts here. I will point out that he demolishes the hoax on several levels:
I. Basic history: Why would the party travel to Santa Fe and risk almost certain arrest? Why would they travel to New Mexico to hunt buffalo when the great herds were across the Plains?
II. Language: Anachronistic words - the "Beale Papers" contain words that were not in use at the time they were supposed to have been written.
III. Linguistic Evidence: That the same person (Ward) wrote the narrative and the Beale letters.
IV. Cipher No. 3 is much too short to contain the information it is supposed to have.
There's more, of course. I find it quite a stretch that anyone would claim Colorado Indians willingly helped white folks mine gold.
Bottom Line: The Beale Treasure is a hoax, plain and simple. Written by Ward to raise money and sell books.
Good luck to all,
~The Old Bookaroo
Need more of these, because all of them have been put away as nonsense.