Freemason lighthouse from the 1700s

hmmm

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Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

:wink: OK ,this one should be hot. :D
many of you remember "Dem bones"
skull and cross bones,
john swifts silver mine,
a 1421 Chinese coin,
a 1790 German coin ,
a 1804 stash of 500,000 silver coins .
viking looking artifacts.
solstice caves and so on.
:coffee2:
I have speculated the skull and cross bones i have seen where the work of the free masons and they where dated to the mid 1700's. but the proof was not really there for such a skeptical world.
the boards and boxes are all the same, some call them Indian bent wood coffins, some call them shipping crates. but all agree they exist.
finally after years of searching i was pointed to a cave with more then a skull and a few bones.
it is big , it has broken boxes , wood dowels, cloth, leather and body parts all over, i came to the conclusion it is a Spanish lighthouse/smelter that was attacked.
but after looking out the entrance i see the mark of the freemasons.
if you look of in the distance you see open ocean on the west coast of America, if the ship looks up the channel , they would see the sign of the freemasons, they would know it was a safe run straight to the light, as long as the light was seen they where safe, Vere off and they end up on the rocks. they would head to it and end up at the old lost Spanish town of ????? . my guess would be , nova albion. :help:
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

“ John Swift said he made silver in large quantities, burying some thirty thousand dollars and crowns on a large creek; fifteen thousand dollars a little way off, near some trees, which were duly marked; a prize of six thousand dollars close by the fork of a white oak; and three thousand dollars in the rocks of a rock house: all which, in the light of these notes, it is allowed any one who will to hunt for. ”



hmmmmm...
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

:read2:
google john swift lost silver mine.
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

I can not understand why we keep going back to Swifts silver. Swifts silver is not buried on the west coast. I can say that with 100% certainity. It would be buried on the west coast most likely in Eastern Kentucky, Virginia or West Virginia. It will not be west of the Mississippi. The book quote that hmmm listed backs that, if you have any understanding of geography. When a say any I mean any past a 3rd grade understanding. I understood that in the sixth grade when I first learned of the mines.
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

kytreasureghost said:
I can not understand why we keep going back to Swifts silver. Swifts silver is not buried on the west coast. I can say that with 100% certainity. It would be buried on the west coast most likely in Eastern Kentucky, Virginia or West Virginia. It will not be west of the Mississippi. The book quote that hmmm listed backs that, if you have any understanding of geography. When a say any I mean any past a 3rd grade understanding. I understood that in the sixth grade when I first learned of the mines.
I have no idea either lol. I was just adding fuel to the fire. Im afraid to ask.
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

kytreasureghost said:
I can not understand why we keep going back to Swifts silver. Swifts silver is not buried on the west coast. I can say that with 100% certainity. It would be buried on the west coast most likely in Eastern Kentucky, Virginia or West Virginia. It will not be west of the Mississippi. The book quote that hmmm listed backs that, if you have any understanding of geography. When a say any I mean any past a 3rd grade understanding. I understood that in the sixth grade when I first learned of the mines.
If the mines swift worked are in Eastern Kentucky, Virginia or West Virginia. they would have definitely been found by now. swift could have wanted to keep the location a secret, swift had a fleet of ships, so his mines could have been anywhere. a good prospector will always lead you astray. 300 years later, we can assume the mines are exactly where they are. :dontknow: i would say the two mines mentioned in the book i quoted, are 1 in the same.
i think the swift mines are the same mines as all the lost mother load mine storys that are to be found through out the Americas, swift found "the lost spanish mines" and worked them years after the spanish where driven from them in 1730. the reason i keep bringing them up is because i speculate he and his men created bem boards, swift was a freemason. :notworthy:
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

hi hmmm Nice Victorian Era british empire button "circa 1865" Standardnaval issue mainly British colonies. tinpan
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

tinpan said:
hi hmmm Nice Victorian Era british empire button "circa 1865" Standardnaval issue mainly British colonies. tinpan
I knew that, the hook, the 1790 coin, the captain button, ball buttons and lots of square nails all came from the same spot. just behind a beach in a cove called "smugglers cove" now here is the interisting thing,the boat in the picture is robert lewis stevenson's boat , the picture was taken less then 1 mile from the island where smugglers cove is.
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

Ok Hmmm please inlighten me on how you come to your conclusions and how it can be that you know so little about history? I have tried to be reasonable, explaining the problems with your theory. The facts that I have told you are not something that I am pulling from thin air. Its backed by history books, accounts from the Swift party, and even opions of many people who have studied this time period for many years. The land west of the Mississippi would have been extremely dangerous to English, and thier allied tribes in the mid to late 1700s. Even if he sailed to this area he would have to made a long and too risky voyage to hide this silver when there was many better places to hide it on the east coast. I feel that you may have watched one to many tv shows.
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

A modern Pike Hook
pikepole2.jpg


An antique Pike Hook
tools_pic4.jpg


They are just like yours. And they are used for logging.

Now it looks like the wooden debris in the cave is the remains of a cheap wooden coffin similar to those usually made for naval burials. Sailors would plane coffin boards from the available material onboard and fasten them together. The rope was used to carry the coffin. This was common during the 1700's, 1800's, and early 1900's.

It is also interesting to note that the lower jaw looks to have fairly well cared for teeth and missing wisdom teeth. I'm guessing late 1800's, early 1900's when dental care was coming into it's own.

But there is absolutely nothing about the images you've shown which point to either freemasons, pirates, or treasure of any kind.

Much like the average shotput, you are seeing what you want to see.
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

hmmm said:
tinpan said:
hi hmmm Nice Victorian Era british empire button "circa 1865" Standardnaval issue mainly British colonies. tinpan
I knew that, the hook, the 1790 coin, the captain button, ball buttons and lots of square nails all came from the same spot. just behind a beach in a cove called "smugglers cove" now here is the interisting thing,the boat in the picture is robert lewis stevenson's boat , the picture was taken less then 1 mile from the island where smugglers cove is.

Quote " I Knew That" Well then why would a british colonial naval button be on an American merchant ship called the Casco. Which in fact he chartered in San Francisco in 1888 . Thats button was not used after 1870." Pass by did he" as he was on his way to Hawaii then too Samoan Islands.One of his books is called the South Seas not the North Seas.Another is called Treasure Island not Canada Island

In the 1860's the british empire were at war with Russia most british regiments where sent home from the colonies to fight in this war.So the colonies undermaned formed their own forces under the british crown to protect themselves.Russia was still a vast power in 1860's and the colonies knew this. This is the story of your button.

This section is called "What is it" i merely i.ded your button .colonial forces and navy were commanded by british offices and the button is of common sailor or marine.

tinpan
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

:icon_thumleft:
Allen you are right , what i want to see is,
:read2:
" it looks like the wooden debris in the cave is the remains of a cheap wooden coffin similar to those usually made for naval burials. Sailors would plane coffin boards from the available material onboard and fasten them together. The rope was used to carry the coffin. This was common during the 1700's, 1800's, and early 1900's."
ill go take a picture of my hook, i have gone through lots of the hooks, they keep falling of my boat. >:(
when i first reported dem boards , i was told to look at the teeth, look to see if they where eating sand, or if they cared for there teeth.
:icon_profileright: i am seeing what's there and looking for whats not. :icon_profileleft:
when you , allen , look at the picture in cave , what do you see? :o
you see boards, some bones, leather, cloth, rope and a lot of gross material.
::) no evidence of either masons, treasure , pirates etc ::)

What do "you treasure netters" with your high tec metal detector see. a :coffee2: ???
here is a good example, this is sitting on the chair beside me. what do you see.
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

hmmm said:
:icon_thumleft:
Allen you are right , what i want to see is,
:read2:
" it looks like the wooden debris in the cave is the remains of a cheap wooden coffin similar to those usually made for naval burials. Sailors would plane coffin boards from the available material onboard and fasten them together. The rope was used to carry the coffin. This was common during the 1700's, 1800's, and early 1900's."
ill go take a picture of my hook, i have gone through lots of the hooks, they keep falling of my boat. >:(
when i first reported dem boards , i was told to look at the teeth, look to see if they where eating sand, or if they cared for there teeth.
:icon_profileright: i am seeing what's there and looking for whats not. :icon_profileleft:
when you , allen , look at the picture in cave , what do you see? :o
you see boards, some bones, leather, cloth, rope and a lot of gross material.
::) no evidence of either masons, treasure , pirates etc ::)
What do "you treasure netters" with your high tec metal detector see. a :coffee2: ???
here is a good example, this is sitting on the chair beside me. what do you see.

A box of weed?? :icon_scratch:
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

hmmm said:
Ironspike, can you say set up.
if you read the swift stories, he had mined the silver in the mountains, it appears he had found the old spanish mines that where mined from 1522 to 1730, he had so much silver , he was melting it down , making fake coins and hiding it in places, in 1780 he hid the mine with sand and then hid the silver coins he made . he went back to england where he was imprisioned .
according to the story, some coins he hid in caves, he came back in 1790 to try find the mines again, he was blind and i would bet his partners he left behind had sercum to the indian attackes. like john silver he probobly grabed what he could and left befor he to was attacked. leaving the majority of the coins safly hidden in the cave.
his story very much paarrales the treasure island story, maybe the 500,000 silver coins hidden in the long john cave, where the counterfit coins of swift.
worth looking into.
Gold, like his counterfit coins can only be found where they are, and you will not find it if you dont look.
here is some key points.
captain hook.
1790 nootka convention .
1804 boston massicure.

The Boston Massacre was March 5, 1770. Was there another one in 1804 that I don't know about?
Foxtonames
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

hmmm i see a nugget container (with smiley face) a zip drive, a piece of paper, a comb, and what looks like a camera bag.
what do you see in your caves, what else have you found?
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

OK - I couldn't take it any longer ...
I see a plastic box that you keep your crap in.
Your pictures don't add up -
In your original post about dem bones, you have a picture of a child's leather shoe - In this post, you show what appears to be the top portion of a leather shoe. I'm guessing that the shoe from your first post (which is missing the top portion where the laces would be found) and the leather piece from the pictures of your Freemason's Lighthouse started out together.
In your first post, you show a picture of empty boxes. In your second you show a closeup of joints held together by dowels. The piece of wood found at the "lighthouse" seems strangely similar to the piece of wood in the lower right corner of the picture from your first post.
Sorry, but your coffin looks staged - especially the rope/string. Why is the green color, created from the moss/algae growth, not uniform throughout the length of the string? Probably because something was lying on it before it was staged.
Sorry, but I am a skeptic. As strangely fascinating as your posts are to read, I have just one question - What color is the sky in your world?
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

Hmmm
I saw the half of the lower human mandible. The lower always breaks in half, we see many around here. Go and skim over the place with a metal detector get your pics and report dem bones. Do it before your friend with muscle does it.
Keep us posted glad you health is better?
TnMtns
 

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