|
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!
| |
|
|
|
Texas
Treasures - Singer Treasure on Padre Island |
|

|
|
<<Previous
1 2 3
4 5
6 7
8 Next
>> |
|
Singer Treasure on Padre Island
Though his name was famous for business and invention, John Singer was an
adventurer. His younger brother, Isaac Merritt Singer, created a
fortune when he improved upon the sewing machine in 1851 and started the
Singer Sewing Machine Company. But of gadgets and inventions, John Singer
had no interest. While his brother was tinkering with not only the sewing
machine, but also other inventions, such as a rock driller, back in New
York City, John was exploring the coast of
Texas.
He
first arrived in
Texas
around 1847, along with his 23 year-old New
Orleans-born wife, Johanna
Shaw Singer, and their children. Upon their arrival, John could see that
Point Isabel and Corpus Christi were important supply stations and the
family quickly established a shipping business in Port Isabel
Beginning with a three-masted
schooner called the Alice Sadell.
|

Padre Island |
|
Unfortunately, that first year of business
would not be a good one for the family. As John captained the Alice
Sadell from the harbor at Port Isabel, the ship encountered bad
weather. New to the job and not yet an experienced seaman, Singer was
sure that the storm would blow over. However, as the winds grew
stronger and the waves began to lap over the deck of the boat, he
decided he needed to head toward land. The winds helped, as he
navigated towards Padre Island, but rather than land safely, the
schooner was smashed into the coast. Singer, along with his wife, four
children, and a hired hand all survived.
From the wrecked schooner, they then set
about salvaging the materials and supplies from the boat and while
they lived in a tent made of the salvaged canvas sails, they built a
small house and crude furnishings from driftwood and wreckage from the
boat. Though stranded, they fell in love with the island, and when a
rescue vessel finally arrived, they refused to leave.
John soon built a small boat that allowed
him to travel back and forth to the mainland, where he purchased a few
head of cattle. The family also subsisted on fishing and a small
garden that Mrs. Singer planted.
The Singers not only survived, but prospered and four
years later, in 1851, they bought the old Santa Cruz Ranch from
the Padre José Nicolás
Ballí estate, which had been awarded to Balli in 1829 by a Mexican
Land Grant.
The Singers built a new home on the
foundation of Balli’s old house and renamed the ranch Las Cruces.
There, they operated a cattle ranch and invested in real estate,
buying and selling land on Padre and Brazos islands. At some point,
John also invested $500 into his brother’s Singer Sewing Machine
Company, for which he is said to have profited handsomely from. Mrs.
Singer also had a large garden where she grew vegetables that once
ripe; she took to Port Isabel in a skiff to sell. At some point,
Singer was appointed wreck master of the island, a position which
allowed him to profit from salvaged materials.
During this time, the family came across a
number of Spanish coins while scouring the beach and one tale alleges
they came
across a wooden chest
containing about $80,000 in jewelry and coins. Singer is said to have
kept the bulk of his found
treasure,
as well as his earnings, in a large sand dune which he called “money
hill.”
|
|
|
|
By the time the Civil War broke out in 1861, the Singer
family had grown to include seven children and the family had amassed a
fortune in collected
treasure,
including Spanish coins, silver bars, and jewelry. The Singer’s Las
Cruces Ranch was located near the strategic
Brazos Santiago pass, and this, coupled with the fact that the Singers
were known Union sympathizers, they were
soon ordered off the island. Forced to leave their cattle
and other belongings behind, the Singers buried their collected
treasure,
estimated to have been valued at $60,000-$80,000 at the time.
The Singers then lived at Flour Bluff, south
of Corpus Christi before moving to Brazos Island. In the meantime, Federal
troops occupied their Las Cruces ranch, subsisting on the Singer cattle.
Finally, when the war was over, the Singers were allowed to return to
Padre Island, only to find that their house had been torn down by the
Union sailors and used for firewood. Furthermore, the island had been hit
by a hurricane during his absence and as he searched for “money hill,” it
was not to be found. Wind, water, and shifting sand had erased the
landmarks and changed the entire landscape of the island.
When Mrs. Singer died in 1866, John first went
to Honduras for a time before returning, collecting his family, and moving
to New Orleans. Singer returned to Padre Island on at least two occasions
with his oldest son, Alexander, trying again to find “money hill” and the
buried
treasure.
However, he failed. John Singer died, an impoverished man in Mississippi
in 1877, without the
treasure
ever having been recovered.
Though several visitors to the island claimed to have discovered the
Singer and Balli homesteads, calling them the "Lost City," in the mid
1900’s, verification of these discoveries were never made.
Today, many believe
that the lost cache remains on the island somewhere at the southern most
tip. Other tales say that Singer also buried another cache between two
small oak trees.
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, © January, 2007
More Treasure
Tales Next Page
|
|

South Padre island today.
|
|
|
|
|
<<Previous
1 2 3
4 5
6 7
8 Next
>> |
|
From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Hand
made turquoise and silver jewelry from the
Rocky Mountain General Store is a favorite for those that love the Old
West. Here, you'll see a wide assortment of beautiful
Belt
Buckles,
Bracelets,
Earrings,
Necklaces and more. |
| |
|