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

hmmm -

Thanks.

Due to the timeline, it strikes me as very possible that all three occupied it at one time or another. And possibly even others. Which is what I call a "Bingo-Bango-Bongo!"

Which, in the circle of retail salespeople I used to hang with, means ...

Signed - Sealed - Delivered

Or, if I may be allowed to expound further, means ...

Seen - Sought - Solved?

I doubt anyone will ever know for certain exactly what went on there unless a team of professional archeologist/anthropologist go in there and do a meticulous scalpa and tooth-brush excavation of the site. And I believe you've already indicated that's not likely to take place.

So what do you say we go back to the relics you found and focus on them a little more?

Just another suggestion, of course.

Thanks again.

SDBB
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

hmmm said:
One question is , is the main cave [light house cave ] the work of the british, the spanish or the Indian?
Maybe this will help. I accumulated a list of possible countries on another post. http://forum.treasurenet.com/index.php/topic,236229.100.html


British,
Spanish,
Chinese,
Vikings,
Native Indians,
Canadians,
Romans,
Egyptians,
Incas,
Aztecs,
Greeks, and
Phoenicians.
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

I think a more obvious question to start with is:
Is the cave a geologic formation that was actually used as a lighthouse during the colonial period?

Or is the cave just a cave that happens, by chance, to be oriented with its opening facing toward the ocean? And, if so, is this thread just the product of a person with a hyperactive imagination?

There is no doubt that there are human remains scattered throughout the various caves in the region. What is in doubt (at least for me), is that these bones were left as markers to find buried treasure. I think there is plenty of evidence suggesting that these bones are the remains of Native Americans, and that these caves were simply used as burial caves. Also, I think there has been plenty of evidence discounting the theory that Swift would have traveled that far to hide his silver.

To answer my own question:
The cave is not a lighthouse. It's a cave whose opening just happens to face the water.
The bones are the remains of Native Americans and not treasure markers.
Hmmm, you have a vivid imagination, and perhaps you watched National Treasure one too many times.

I would like to thank Hmmm for starting this thread. As a result of reading his posts, and my desire to learn what I could about the area, I have done a lot of research on the Pacific Rim National Park. Hmmm, you are fortunate to live in such a beautiful area of this planet. I have promised myself that one day I will visit the island, but I will leave my detector home.
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

Shootncoin, i think swift mined his silver here.

:laughing9:

one thing to note, this place is mild and rarley snows. it was a place waiting for colonists.
:icon_pirat:
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

If it was a light house or light cave would there not be be tons of charcoal from the fires and the walls blackened ? Caves are many times burial chambers for the dead. I think the big questions is. Who do them Bones belong to and what do the pictures of the upper teeth look like ? :icon_scratch:
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

Hmmm -

In your own words from above ...

remember, its against the law to touch or desterb anything in the caves with bones.

SDBB
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

If this cave were used to mine silver, wouldn't you be finding the remains of mining implements? Or torch burn marks and mining marks on the cave walls somewhere? Or at least a little silver?

So far, you've got none of the above. Or did they just pick up this silver off the ground and call it a day?
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

TnMountains If the skull shape and outer view and molars can determin if the bones are native, i will post some , I would rather not, it clearly offends some.
:read2: i believe the boards should give us some clues.
sdbob, this law has not stopped people from raiding the caves in the past.
shootncoin ,
"I think there is plenty of evidence suggesting that these bones are the remains of Native Americans, and that these caves were simply used as burial caves."
:hello2: that is the very evidence i have been looking for since i have been looking into the burial caves. if you can post some, a good one would be the description of a traditional bent wood burial box. ill post the pictures i have of parts of the boxes i have seen, i photoed every one also the dowels and joints.
:read2: "Also, I think there has been plenty of evidence discounting the theory that Swift would have traveled that far to hide his silver."
he would not travel far to hide the silver from the mine, but how far would he go to mine the silver, remember he was a captain of a fleet of ships in 1770.
hmmm German coin, 1790.
swift last went to the mines in 1790.
its a amassing park, goggle earth it and cruise around.
this part of the park relay needs tourism.
i should do a tour to the silver mines.
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

"hmmm German coin, 1790.
swift last went to the mines in 1790."

So you think a German Coin came across from Germany in the same year it was minted & was lost in a remote place by Swift. That coin would then have to be in nearly uncirculated condition. Any wear would quickly discount this theory.
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

hmmm said:
he would not travel far to hide the silver from the mine, but how far would he go to mine the silver, remember he was a captain of a fleet of ships in 1770.
hmmm German coin, 1790.
swift last went to the mines in 1790.
its a amassing park, goggle earth it and cruise around.
this part of the park relay needs tourism.
i should do a tour to the silver mines.
This thread will easily make 3 pages with these type of conclusions. Dont quit your day job yet. BTW have you found any silver?
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

hmmm said:
TnMountains If the skull shape and outer view and molars can determin if the bones are native, i will post some , I would rather not, it clearly offends some.
:read2: i believe the boards should give us some clues.
sdbob, this law has not stopped people from raiding the caves in the past.
shootncoin ,
"I think there is plenty of evidence suggesting that these bones are the remains of Native Americans, and that these caves were simply used as burial caves."
:hello2: that is the very evidence i have been looking for since i have been looking into the burial caves. if you can post some, a good one would be the description of a traditional bent wood burial box. ill post the pictures i have of parts of the boxes i have seen, i photoed every one also the dowels and joints.
:read2: "Also, I think there has been plenty of evidence discounting the theory that Swift would have traveled that far to hide his silver."
he would not travel far to hide the silver from the mine, but how far would he go to mine the silver, remember he was a captain of a fleet of ships in 1770.
hmmm German coin, 1790.
swift last went to the mines in 1790.
its a amassing park, goggle earth it and cruise around.
this part of the park relay needs tourism.
i should do a tour to the silver mines.
here is a link to some coffins of the west coast, looking for more still https://www.washington.edu/burkemuseum/collections/ethnology/collections/display.php?ID=55557
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

Hmmm can you provide us even a shred of documentation the Swift went to the West coast? Ship manafest, ect.?

Why did a Engishmen have a German coin in 1790 on the west coast?

Why would Swift travel to the west coast to hide his silver.

If I rememeber right in 1790 Swift was old and nearly blind.
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

British Columbia grows some of the best weed in Canada. Or the World for that matter!

B.C. skunk is quite potent. The locals like to make brownies and Folk Festival cookies.

The climate is ideal for Ganja and it can be seen growing everywhere on the islands.

The high concentration of THC can alter..................... :tongue3:

I need some B.C. bud so I can finish reading this thread. ::)

Dave.
 

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Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

Muddyhandz said:
British Columbia grows some of the best weed in Canada. Or the World for that matter!

B.C. skunk is quite potent. The locals like to make brownies and Folk Festival cookies.

The climate is ideal for Ganja and it can be seen growing everywhere on the islands.

The high concentration of THC can alter..................... :tongue3:

I need some B.C. bud so I can finish reading this thread. ::)

Dave.




I wonder how much a flight will be ;D
 

Upvote 0
Re: Freemason lighthouse from the 1700's

shaun7 said:
Muddyhandz said:
British Columbia grows some of the best weed in Canada. Or the World for that matter!

B.C. skunk is quite potent. The locals like to make brownies and Folk Festival cookies.

The climate is ideal for Ganja and it can be seen growing everywhere on the islands.

The high concentration of THC can alter..................... :tongue3:

I need some B.C. bud so I can finish reading this thread. ::)

Dave.




I wonder how much a flight will be ;D

what on skunkair?
 

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