|
Legends Home
Site
Map
What's New!!

American History
Ghost Towns
Ghostly Legends
Historic People
Native Americans
The Old West
Photo
Galleries
Roadside Attractions
Rocky Mtn Store
Route 66
Travel
Destinations
Treasure Tales
Legends Blog
Free E-Newsletter

P.O. Box 19423
Lenexa,
KS 66285
913-708-5119
Please report
broken links, missing pictures, or other problems online by clicking
HERE or send us an
email.
Thanks!
| |
| |
|
Reynolds
Gang Buried Treasure |
|

|
|
<<Previous
1
2
3
4 5
6
7
8
9
10
Next
>> |
|
South Park and the Reynolds Gang
In July 1864, Jim Reynolds and eight
Confederate raiders launched the only invasion of the
Colorado
Territory during the Civil War. Their hope was to rob the gold mines of
the area to help finance the Confederate cause.
Immediately up to no good,
the gang attacked the ranch of Adolph Guirand on July 24, 1864, stealing
his horses, cash, and molesting his wife.
|

South Park Area
|
|
They then headed to
Dan McLaughlin's stage station, about eight miles out of Fairplay,
where the town of Como is today. Stealing cash, a gold watch,
and the horses, they made off with about $3,000. Then heading over
Kenosha pass toward Denver, they again robbed the Michigan House stage
stop, taking more horses.
A gentleman by the
name of Mr. Berry began to warn everyone of the gang and their
thievery trying to raise a posse without success. Not to be
deterred, Mr. Berry followed the gang as far as the Omaha House stage
station near the present day town of Conifer. From the Omaha
House, the gang headed towards Shaffer’s Crossing.

Fairplay, 1860,
courtesy Denver Public Library
Finally, a posse
was organized and on July 30, 1864, the
outlaws were spotted camping in a forest. A gunfight quickly
ensued, leaving one outlaw by the name of Owen Singleterry dead.
One posse member, a Dr. Cooper, cut off Singleterry’s head, took it
back to Fairplay and preserved it in alcohol, where it supposedly
remained for many years.
The gang buried their
loot and split up, fleeing the area. It was estimated that the
gang had taken somewhere between $5,000 and $100,000 and area locals
blamed them for every robbery within miles.
An even bigger posse
was raised to capture the fleeing bandits. About seventy-five
men were dispatched to find the thieves and just four days later, four
of them were captured. Outlaw, Tom Holliman, was caught just days later as he made his
way to Canon City,
Colorado.
However, Jim Reynolds, his brother John, and another bandit escaped to
New Mexico.
|
|
|
|
As the five captured
bandits were being taken to Fort Lyon, the first stop on their way to
Denver for a military trial, a fight ensued. Three of
outlaws were killed and two managed to escape.
Years later, John Reynolds lay dying of
gunshot wounds suffered during a horse theft in Taos, New Mexico. However, before he died, he shared the story of how the gang had buried
their loot, to fellow outlaw Albert Brown. He also drew a map, which
showed the site of the ambush and the vague location of the
treasure. After Reynolds died from his wounds, Brown and his partners traveled to
the South Park area, trying to find the
treasure.
When they arrived at the site, they were disappointed to find that a
forest fire had destroyed many landmarks. While they found an old
white hat that supposedly belonged to the decapitated Singleterry, a
headless skeleton, and horse bones in a swamp, they were unable to find
the rocked-in prospect hole. Brown and his partners made three more
attempts to find the treasure, but finally gave up and returned home. Albert Brown later died in a drunken brawl in Laramie City, Wyoming
Territory.
However, before he died, he either gave or
showed the map to a Detective David J. Cook, a
Colorado
Lawman. In an autobiography by Detective Cook, published in 1897,
Cook quotes Reynold’s conversation with Alfred Brown as follows:
“Jim and me buried the treasure the morning
before the posse attack on Geneva Gulch. You go up above there a little
ways and find where one of our horses mired down in a swamp. On up at the
head of the gulch we turned to the right and followed the mountain around
a little farther, and just above the head of Deer Creek, we found an old
prospect hole at about timberline. There, we placed $40,000 in greenbacks,
wrapped in silk oil cloth, and three cans of gold dust. We filled the
mouth of the hole up with stones, and ten steps below, struck a butcher
knife into a tree about four feet from the ground and broke the handle
off, and left it pointing toward the mouth of the hole.”
By all accounts,
the money remains buried somewhere in the South Park area.
Readers' Comments:
I have found that there were
three parts to the treasure of the Jim Reynolds gangs lost treasure. I
have also found a crude map of the old South Park area which I made from
the three parts. If anyone was reading the three different stories of the
Reynolds gang they would have found that two of the outlaws were never
accounted for until now when you put them together but were reunited with
Albert Brown. Yes the treasure is still there, but it has something to do
with the Appaloosa horse that one would not think of in the story. When
all of this is said and done I believe that this treasure will be found
and hopefully it will be. Just think, after 142 years, there is finally a
way to find it. And it was as plain as could be. - Carolyn, March
2006
More
Treasure Stories Next Page
|
|
<<Previous
1
2
3
4 5
6
7
8
9
10
Next
>> |
|
From the Rocky Mountain General Store
From
Hardtack to Home Fries
by Barbara Haber
Culinary
historian Barbara Haber takes a unique approach to the history of cooking
in America, focusing on a remarkable assembly of little-known or forgotten
Americans who helped shape the eating habits of the nation. As Curator of
Books at Harvard University's Schlesinger Library, Haber had access to
more than 16,000 cookbooks from which she has drawn inspiring and often
surprising stories of the way meals have shaped America's past. Peppered
throughout with recipes, Haber's fascinating survey adds a delicious new
dimension to America's cultural heritage. New, paperback.
 |
| |
|