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CALIFORNIA
LEGENDS
Bandit Hordes in California |
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Joaquin Murrieta's Stolen Cache
Joaquin Murrieta
was a legendary figure in
California
during its Gold Rush days of the 1850's. When he tried to make his
living in mining, he faced racism and discrimination. Forced to turn
to a life of crime, he was seen by some as as a Mexican patriot, resisting
the white settlers' domination. Others saw him simply as a bandit.
Murrieta
became the leader of a band called
The Five
Joaquins, who were said to have been responsible for the majority
of cattle rustling, robberies, and murders that were committed in the
Mother Lode area of the Sierra Nevadas between 1850 and 1853. One of those
robberies was a wagonload of gold that the
Joaquins had
stolen from the northern mines.
However, when members of
Murrieta's
gang were driving the load along the hills east of the old Carrizo Stage
Station they were ambushed by Indians.
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Joaquin Murrieta,
photo courtesy San Joaquin Valley
Library System,
California Digital Archives
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According to the tale, the gold, as
well as other items taken from the gang, were hidden in an old burial
cave under a projecting rock ledge. No doubt
Murrieta
would have soon gone after the lost loot, but he was killed by the
California
Rangers before he could retrieve the gold. The Old Carrizo Stage
Station which once served the Butterfield Stage Station is located in
the Anza Borrego Desert.
Another treasure that
Murrieta
was said to have buried is thought to be located between Burney,
California
and Hatcher Pass. The $175,000 cache, said to be hidden not far
from Highway 299, has never been found.
Yet another
stolen
Murrieta
cache, worth some $200,000. is said to be buried somewhere between
Susanville and Freedonyer Pass near today's Highway 36.
Murrieta and his gang
were
often known to hid their stolen loot in the area of their robberies. On one occasion
Murrieta
and his
right-hand man,
Manual Garcia, known
as "Three-Fingered Jack, robbed a stagecoach along the Feather River. The strongbox was said to have contained some 250 pounds of gold
nuggets worth $140,000 at the time. Allegedly, the pair buried
the strongbox in a on the banks of the Feather River in a canyon a few
miles south of Paradise,
California. According to
Wells Fargo officials, the stolen gold has never been
recovered.
HidHidden
Treasures Near Vallecito Station
Allegedly, a stage was traveling from El
Paso,
Texas
to San Diego with a box of gold coins in the 1860’s. In addition
to the driver, the stage also carried a guard to protect the money. However, when the stage reached Yuma,
Arizona,
the guard fell ill and
the driver
continued on without him. Somewhere in the area of Carrizo Wash,
between the Fish and Coyote Mountains, the stage was held up by
bandits, who killed the stage driver and fled with the box of gold. According to the tale, the outlaws buried the gold on the south slope
of Fish Mountain but were unable to retrieve it because there were so
many soldiers in the vicinity. The buried coins are said to
remain there to this day.
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In addition to this
stolen cache and others said to be buried near the
Vallecito
Station, numerous lost gold mines are also said to be in the area
including the
Lost Bell Mine, The Lost Bill Williams Mine, and the Lost Squaw Mine.
Vallecito Station is now located in the
Vallecito
Regional Park in San Diego County.
Holden Dick's Stolen Loot
In
March of 1881, a freight wagon carrying several hundred pounds of gold ore
through Modoc County was stopped by a lone bandit. The ore from
Nevada
was destined for
Sacramento
and heavily guarded by three men. But, this did not stop the vicious
outlaw. Immediately killing two of the three guards, he forced the
stage to stop and the remaining guard and driver quickly surrendered.
Forcing them down from the stage, he ordered them to set out on foot in
a southerly direction. In the meantime, he boarded the wagon, tied
his horse to the back and drove north where he is said to have buried the
loot on the western slope of the Warner Mountains. |
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Eagle Peak in the Warner Mountains of
California,
photo courtesy
California Digital Archives |
The vicious crime went
unsolved for years until a Pitt River
Indian
known as “Holden Dick” began to trade small amounts of gold ore in
Susanville and Alturas. In between appearing in the saloons of
mining camps, spending his money freely, the
Indian
would disappear into some of the most rugged sections of the South Warner
Mountains, only to return again with a goodly supply of gold ore.
At first, the locals thought that the
Indian
was working a secret mine and when in the saloons, they would try, without
success, to get the
Indian
to talk. They also began to follow Holden, hoping to find the mine. On one occasion, when another miner named Samuel B. Shaw was badgering the
Indian
for the location of his gold, Holden got fed up and shot the man, wounding
him fatally.
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Holden Dick was soon
arrested for Shaw’s murder and locked up in the Susanville jail. On
January 23, 1886, four men stormed the jail and dragged the
Indian
into the street. Beating, whipping and torturing the man, he refused
to tell the location of his hidden cache and was finally hanged at the
blacksmith shop.
Somewhere along the line,
the authorities figured out that the gold ore so freely bandied about by
the
Indian did not come from a mine, but rather, was the stolen loot taken
from the freight wagon some five years previously.
After a little more
“digging” the cache is believed to have been hidden in a cave where Holden
Dick lived most of the time. The cave was located in one of the many
canyons which extend from Eagle Peak on the western slope of the southern
Warner Mountains. He was also said to have constructed a crude rock
wall at the cave’s entrance, though today it would most assuredly be
collapsed. It is most likely that the cave would be located in the
lower elevations of the mountains since the
Indian
lived there year round.
©
Kathy Weiser/Legends of
America, updated June, 2008
Back to California Treasure
Tales
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Also See:
Desert
Steamers in Death Valley
Honey Valley
Treasure
Lost Mines of
California
Lost
Treasures of Northern California
Milton
Sharp's Buried Loot
Rattlesnake
Dick's Stolen Loot
Ruggles
Brothers Loot in Middle Creek
More
California Treasures
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