Tuberale
Gold Member
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 5,775
- Reaction score
- 3,452
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- Portland, Oregon
- Detector(s) used
- White's Coinmaster Pro
- #1
Thread Owner
The Blue Bucket Mine is the stuff dreams are made of. This following is from Coffman's "1001 Lost, Buried or Sunken Treasures," c. 1957, p. 181: "1. The famed Blue Bucket Mine is located in the area near Rome, Malheur County, Oregon, first found by immigrants to Oregon. Later the location was searched for but could not be relocated. Nuggets were picked up by the bucketful at this site. Indians soon drove the immigrants away. The county is mountainous; there are many ravines and gorges, which are misleading; and topographical changes continually alter it."
If you search Malheur County, Oregon for the Blue Bucket Mine, you are doomed to failure before you start. Start with the facts, which are:
1. gold nugget(s) found by members of the Lost Meek Wagon Train 1845, somewhere between leaving Ft. Boise on the Snake River, and The Dalles.
2. Nuggets were found by accident by children searching for water, near where water was finally found, probably North of Wagontire Mountain near the South Fork of the Crooked River.
3. Called Blue Bucket, because all well-provisioned pioneers of the time were supposed to carry a bucket for water, usually painted blue for water.
4. No Indian problems at this site: the train had run out of water because the leader of the train, Stephen L. Meek, had never been on it before and was blazing it as he went.
5. Best source of information on this historic "lost mine" that was never mined, is "Terrible Trail: the Meek Cutoff 1845", by Keith Clark and Lowell Tiller, copyright 1967 by Caxton Printers, Caldwell, Idaho. Both of Ruby el Hult's books have sections on this "lost mine" as well: "Lost Mines and Treasures of the Pacific Northwest", c. 1957 and "Treasure Hunting Northwest", c. 1971.
If you search Malheur County, Oregon for the Blue Bucket Mine, you are doomed to failure before you start. Start with the facts, which are:
1. gold nugget(s) found by members of the Lost Meek Wagon Train 1845, somewhere between leaving Ft. Boise on the Snake River, and The Dalles.
2. Nuggets were found by accident by children searching for water, near where water was finally found, probably North of Wagontire Mountain near the South Fork of the Crooked River.
3. Called Blue Bucket, because all well-provisioned pioneers of the time were supposed to carry a bucket for water, usually painted blue for water.
4. No Indian problems at this site: the train had run out of water because the leader of the train, Stephen L. Meek, had never been on it before and was blazing it as he went.
5. Best source of information on this historic "lost mine" that was never mined, is "Terrible Trail: the Meek Cutoff 1845", by Keith Clark and Lowell Tiller, copyright 1967 by Caxton Printers, Caldwell, Idaho. Both of Ruby el Hult's books have sections on this "lost mine" as well: "Lost Mines and Treasures of the Pacific Northwest", c. 1957 and "Treasure Hunting Northwest", c. 1971.