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T2 Finds 15" deep Horse.."Old Home Site"

Elton! Please try and find this one! lol perfect for the T2 search in pinpoint mode! lol Damn wish I was in the Ole USA, I would camp there till I find it!
http://www.legendsofamerica.com/ut-springcanyontreasure.html
S
 
Check this out someone..Maybe ?? Thanks Silverman777...............

One thousand Five Hundred miles from me I would guess.
 
1500?? that's like around the corner man! Where is you adventurous spirit? hahahaha You do get holidays don't you? Cigar box full of silver dollars? Hmmmm would be worth a lot now! Silver does not deteriorate in such a short time!
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One would have to do research and get permission in that neck of the woods...
I hear they do not take kindly to tresspassers.......It would be an interesting trip wouldn't it ????

They also might not like you rearranging their pipes..( Pulling OUT)....:starwars:
 
Well its not like you would be digging the hillside! Just remove the pipes and cover the hole afterwards!
Don't think the area belongs to someone It is a ghost town abandoned and way away from snooping eyes! Oh yeah I wanna see a picture of them coins!
lol
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You get here.and I will get us there.. "FACT"..........
 
DAmn thats tempting LOL Ok then email me from my site and we can see how things go! Hahahah Several others I want to have a look at! Heard of the quarters that was lost gallons of them? I have the largest private research database in private hands! But it is all in the ole USA! Sadly LOL
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You should print it up and sell us copies...........

Make me your first customer..
 
Hey Silverman, I too would like a copy of your upcoming book, or at least the Central Illinois section.

Now sure silver dollars would be fun to find, but lets look at the facts in this case. (If indeed these are facts) First you have no idea how deep the pipes are. Four feet?, Ten feet?, Twenty feet? To get ten feet deep I would think you'd be talking about a backhoe. What would that cost to rent? Second, you would have to find which pipe held the coins? Don't plumbers have snakes with cameras mounted in them? (Doctors do). So your going to have to rent more equipment or hire a plumber/doctor. Third, the little girl said the box was heavy. How little of a girl? I'm guessing that we are talking about a four or five year old here. Older children would know what money looked like and how important it was, especially in the 1920's. Fourth, what would be heavy for a five year old? A gallon of milk would be, and that would be about nine pounds. So even if the box weighed nothing. Nine pounds of silver dollars would be about 190 coins. I doubt this girl dropped 190 coins into a pipe. Next we have the time period, 1920s, these would be Peace dollars. The article states that the coins were newly minted. since it happened in Utah, the coins probably came from San Francisco. Definitely not the rarest of marks for Peace dollars. So let's say your looking at recovering 200 coins at $25.00 each. That would be $5000.00.

Now Silverman would have to fly over here, Elton and Silverman would have to fly to Utah, get permission, rent the equipment, pay for meals and lodging for several days most likely, and then fly home.

Heck all you would have left would be about one silver dollar apiece as a memento and the memories of your adventure of a lifetime.

I say go for it.
 
Dave.
Yeah I see your point, if one does metal detecting purely for the money then yes it just ain't worth it. So no real treasure hunter will be interested and chances are about 50/50 that the coins are still there. But the idea is to find the coins take pictures and donate it to the local museum, proving or disproving the treasure tale! Either way it would be great fun and like you say a hell of a trip!
Oh and there is no book! I just research all the stories check with newspaper and army, navy and sensus reports notes etc to make sure there is something to go after. Just a hobby of mine.
Either way I am soooo tempted to take my T2 out there! hahaha
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By The way Elton and Dave if you tell me you are from I can give you details about treasure in your area.... Only those I researched and are pretty sure it is there.
Here is one for you!
Big Jim's treasure

Big Jim Colosimo liked diamonds. He wore a diamond ring on every finger, diamonds studs in his shirt, and always had a huge diamond-set horseshoe pinned to his vest. Likewise, his belt and suspenders were set with diamonds to match his diamond cufflinks. He bought 100s of diamonds at discount prices from thieves and needy gamblers and carried little buckskin bags of diamonds in his pockets. By 1915 Colosimo was the acknowledged king of prostitution in Chicago, with his brothels generating him a personal net income of over $50,000 a month. He liked to spend his free time stacking his diamonds in little piles on the black cloth on which he played with his little toys.

On May 11, 1920 he was shot dead in the lobby of his own cafe by a mysterious visitor whom he told his wife and business associates he was going to meet. The murder occurred at 4:30 p.m. Colosimo secretary, Frank Camilla, and his chef, Antonio Caesarino, heard the shots from the next room and were on the scene in seconds. Big Jim had $40,000 worth of diamonds still on his person. Just prior to his murder, Big Jim was known to have had something like $500,000 worth of diamonds in addition to large quantities of cash he routinely carried.

Weeks of searching by police, lawyers, wives, ex-wives, and fellow gangster Johnny Torrio who had arranged Big Jim? death failed to uncover the whereabouts of the stones or the cash. It is possible that they were hidden somewhere in his Vernon Avenue mansion or on the grounds??. Colosimo's second wife, Dale Winter, had only been married to Big Jim for about three weeks and had spent less than a week in his mansion when Big Jim was gunned down. If the diamonds were hidden there, it is not likely she would have known the location.

Neither Dale Winter nor Big Jim's ex-wife, Victoria Moresco, claimed any portion of his estate. In all likelihood, they wanted to avoid any suspicion on the part of Torrio and his thugs that they knew the location of the diamonds. Most of Big Jim's holdings, which were conspicuously void of cash or jewels, went to his father and eventually passed into other hands. No one connected with them is known to have ever exhibited signs of sudden wealth.
 
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