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Treasure
Mountain, Colorado |
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Treasure Mountain, 1880, courtesy Pikes Peak
Library
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Treasure Mountain
In the late 1700’s a
French expedition of 300 men and 450 horses journeyed from an outpost at
present-day
Leavenworth,
Kansas on
their way to the Rocky Mountains. Once they reached the mountains,
they began to prospect, at first without success. Working their way
south, they made camp several miles east of Wolf Creek Pass, near
present-day Summitville.
Prospecting in the many creeks and streams of
the area, they supposedly found a large amount of gold on
Treasure
Mountain. The amount of gold today would be valued at as much as $33
million dollars. The Frenchmen stored the gold in three different
places and the commanding officer was in charge of the map.
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When the French arrived, the Indians did
not initially disturb them, but as time went on, the Indians mounted a
brutal attack upon the expedition and a fevered battle ensued.
Quickly, the French buried the gold and made new maps, but most of the
Frenchmen were killed by the Indians. Only an estimated 17 to 35
men were able to flee the area, only to be attacked again, once they
reached the Front Range. After this second brutal strike, only
five weary men began the journey back to
Kansas.
However, winter was upon them, and starvation and bitter conditions
killed three more, leaving only two who finally stumbled into the
Kansas
outpost. Even then, only one of the two survived. The sole
survivor, a man by the name of “Le Blanc,” was the expedition’s
historian. After recuperating at the outpost he made the long
journey back to France, with two copies of the
treasure
map, one of which he gave to the French government, the other, he kept
for himself.
A
second expedition was mounted to retrieve the buried treasure, though
it is unclear weather the mission was conveyed by La Blanc’s family or
by the French government. Fifty men headed back to the
Summitville area, passing through Taos,
New Mexico,
where they hired a guide to lead them to the area.
However, months later, the guide returned
to Taos alone, claiming the entire expedition had again been wiped out
by the Indians. The Taos locals were suspicious of the “sole
survivor” and in the last Mexican trial held in United States
territory, they tried him for murder but he was acquitted. Some
theories claim the whole story was contrived by the Frenchmen, who
secretly found the gold and returned to France, paying the guide to
return to Taos,
New Mexico
with the untrue story of a massacre.
Over the years, several maps have appeared
which claim to lead to the buried
treasure.
A man by the name of William Yule supposedly had a copy of the
original and searched the entire western side of the valley, north to
Saguache, without success. Later, a prospector named Asa Poor
supposedly obtained the map from Yule and with two partners, was able
to locate several landmarks leading to the
treasure,
but never found the hidden gold. One of Poor's partners, named
Montroy, retained possession of the map, but it disappeared several
years later.
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More
recently, a local area family, who claims to be direct descendents of Le
Blanc, professes to be in possession of an authentic map written in
French. Supposedly, for three generations they have been quietly
searching for the lost cache. After years of search, the family
members claim to have located seven of the eight landmarks that are
mentioned on the map. Then, in 1993, one of the family members was
hunting elk in the mountains south of Del Norte. When a cold hard
rain began to fall, he took shelter in a 3-foot opening in the ground,
which turned out to be a 5 by 4 foot wide man made tunnel. Exploring
the tunnel, he crawled about 20 feet into the hillside, when suddenly his
path was blocked by an underground landslide. Shining his flashlight
around the dark passageway, he observed a carving in the rock wall, which
was supposedly the long-lost eighth clue. The following day, 20 of
the family members returned to the passageway to excavate the cave-in,
tunneling an additional twelve feet into the mountainside. Getting
late in the day, the family lined the length of the passageway with
candles but before they got a chance to light them a rattlesnake lunged
out of the gloom at the end of the tunnel just barely missing one of the
family members.
Frantically, he scrambled back to the entrance
when a swarm of bats poured out from the hillside, squeaking and diving
aggressively at the surprised party. Undaunted, they knelt down to light
the first candle at the entrance to the tunnel when the candle at the far
end of the tunnel inexplicably flared on by itself! While the stunned
group gaped at each other in horror, a huge owl dive-bombed the shocked
party within inches of their heads. Terrified by these unusual events,
the family fled the passageway and returned home.
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Is the French gold
“guarded” by an unknown entity? Something eerie happened that day.
Though scared off that day, the family has since obtained the
Colorado
state treasure
rights to legally enter the cave and claim whatever
treasure
may remain there.
Additional information
also suggests that the Ute Indians may have acquired some of the French
gold during the battle that occurred, hiding it near the mouth of the Rio
Grande Canyon.
More
Treasure Stories Next Page
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From the
Rocky Mountain General Store
Discoveries
America Colorado DVD - Rocky Mountain
National Park, cog railway to Pikes Peak,
Colorado
Springs Garden of the Gods, Denver, “Taste of
Colorado,"
Winter Park, Sheepdog Championships in Meeker, cliff dwellings in Mesa
Verde, Durango steam locomotive, historic railroad festival, trout fishing
and whitewater rafting the Gunnison.
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