Shasta County -
Long ago, when a detachment of soldiers
were transporting an Army payroll along the road between Redding and
Weaverville,
California, they were attacked by Indians. While the battle
ranged, one soldier had the foresight to bury the gold and marked it by
burying his rifle straight up in the ground. He then joined the rest
of the soldiers in the frenzied battle.
Severely wounded, he was later rescued and taken to French Gulch where he
told the story of the attack and buried payroll before he died. Though the army began an immediate search, they were unable to find the
rifle or the hidden gold. Many years later, two deer hunters in the
vicinity found the rifle and not knowing the story, removed it and took it
with them. Today, French Gulch is a sleepy little village located
about 10 miles east of Lewiston,
California.
Tehama
County –
Peter Lassen was a pioneer and land owner in
California
long before its
Gold Rush days of 1849. Arriving in 1840, he was able to secure
a 26,000-acre land grant in 1843. Located in the upper Sacramento Valley, Lassen
hoped to develop his land into an empire and established the Rancho
Los Bosquejo, or the "ranch of the wooded places" in 1845. In the
years that followed, Lassen developed a trading post, a new settlement,
vineyards, and farms to entice people to what he believed would be his new
empire. However, when gold was discovered at Sutter’s Mill in Coloma, his workers
and settlers abandoned him for the goldfields. Lassen’s
fortunes would rise and fall over the next decade until he was murdered in
1859 while traveling to Virginia City,
Nevada
to prospect for silver. Afterwards, a legend began to grow that
Lassen had buried thousands of dollars in gold near his home on the Rancho
Los Bosquejo. Located at the confluence of Deer Creek and the Sacramento River, he was said to have hidden his gold coins in iron pots
surrounding his property. Though Lassen had a lifetime of financial
difficulties, the legend continues. The buried cache is thought to
be in Deer Creek
Canyon near Vina,
California
or somewhere along the Lassen Trail which follows Deer Creek.
Some
twenty years after Lassen's death, a miner named Obe Leininger found a
gold-flecked ledge of gold in the same area. In order to find it
again, he marked the spot by burying his pick in the trunk of a nearby
tree. When he returned, however, he was unable to find the tree with
the pick, though he searched the area diligently. Though he and
others who had heard his tale continued to search the area for years
afterwards, the gold ledge was never found again. The location of
the ore was said to be to between the mouth of Calf Creek and the Potato
Patch campground of the U.S. Forest Service,
just beyond Deer Creek.
Trinity County - In the 1862, the sheriff of Trinity County was not
only responsible for upholding the law, but was also tasked with
collecting taxes. On one occasion as he was traveling through the
area, his saddle bag was filled with about $1,000 in gold coins and $50
gold slugs. As the sheriff and his horse were cautiously crossing a
stream, the horse stumbled and the saddlebag filled with gold was dropped
and washed down the creek. Though the lawman made an immediate
search of the area, he was unable to find the bag. Soon, the county
offered a reward of $250 for the recovery of the saddle bag, but
but despite
diligent search efforts, including damming up the creek, it was never
found. In those early days of
California,
gold slugs were often minted by assayers and private mines. Today,
in addition to their gold value, they have also become major collectible
items, and if the treasure were to be found today, some estimate it could
be worth as much as a million dollars. The creek was located near
Weaverville,
California.
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