[x] Welcome at THunting.com!

A fun place to talk about Metal Detecting, Treasure Hunting & Prospecting. Here you can share finds and experience with thousands of members from all over the world

Join us and Register Now - Its FREE & EASY

THunting.com
Treasure Hunting & Metal Detecting Community
   
Advanced Search
*
Welcome, Guest! Please login or register HERE - It is FREE and easy.
Only registered users can post and view images on our message boards.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with email, password and session length
Or Login Using Social Network Account
News:
Pages:  1 2 3   Go Down
Print
Share this topic on FacebookShare this topic on Del.icio.usShare this topic on DiggShare this topic on RedditShare this topic on Twitter
Tags:
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Offline RebeccaTopic starter
Pull Tab
*

Join Date: Jan, 2012
Thank you1

Activity
0%
Female
United States
Posts: 14
Referrals: 0

50.00 Gold
View Inventory

Awards

Garrett Pro
« on: January 27, 2012, 03:41:29 am »
Go Up Go Down

Wondering if there is any Hidden Treasure in the East Texas Area? I live in Jacksonville,Texas Detecting

         Thank you

Linkback:

You are not allowed to view links.
Please Register or Login

http://www.thunting.com/smf/index.php/topic,34917.msg211921.html#msg211921




Logged
Offline BitburgAggie_7377
Klugheit und Verstandnis
Platin Member
*

Define Treasure
Klugheit und Verstandnis
Join Date: Jul, 2009
Thank you118

Activity
62%

United States
Posts: 9235
Referrals: 0

26045.00 Gold
View Inventory

Awards

Fisher Impulse , Tesoro Lobo SuperTraq, Tesoro Vaquero, Tesoro Compadre, Garrett AT Max, Whites Sierra Super Trac
« Reply #1 on: January 27, 2012, 10:28:20 am »
Go Up Go Down

Hello, Rebecca.   Welcome from a Texan living in Arizona.   There are lots of tales of buried treasure in East Texas.   You'll even find some of them by searching through our past posts (start by looking on the "Treasure Leads" and "Legendary Treasures" boards).    But if you really want to FIND hidden treasures as opposed to reading treasure legends, your best bet is to dive into old newspapers and diaries in search of clues to treasures that have NOT been published.


BA

Linkback:

You are not allowed to view links.
Please Register or Login

http://www.thunting.com/smf/index.php/topic,34917.msg211932.html#msg211932




Logged
Offline ArfieBoy
Knight
Gold Member
*

Join Date: Apr, 2011
Thank you299

Activity
4%
Male
United States
Posts: 3430
Referrals: 0

16056.00 Gold
View Inventory

Awards

Compass X-70; Compass X-200; Compass Coin Scanner Pro II; Whites Coinmaster 2/DB Series 2
« Reply #2 on: January 27, 2012, 11:10:07 am »
Go Up Go Down

Welcome to the forum Rebecca, from the Blue Mountains of northeastern Oregon!   Welcome    Detecting

Linkback:

You are not allowed to view links.
Please Register or Login

http://www.thunting.com/smf/index.php/topic,34917.msg211937.html#msg211937


ArfieBoy


Logged

Government can not give anything to anyone...  without first taking it from someone else!

Offline Homefire
Global Moderator
Platin Member
*****

Join Date: Jan, 2009
Thank you664

Activity
0%
Male
United States
Posts: 15906
Referrals: 0

52360.00 Gold
View Inventory

Awards
« Reply #3 on: January 27, 2012, 11:28:51 am »
Go Up Go Down

Welcome from New Mexico.

I would think there would be a pile of treasures related to the Civil War time.

Linkback:

You are not allowed to view links.
Please Register or Login

http://www.thunting.com/smf/index.php/topic,34917.msg211941.html#msg211941




Logged
Offline RebeccaTopic starter
Pull Tab
*

Join Date: Jan, 2012
Thank you1

Activity
0%
Female
United States
Posts: 14
Referrals: 0

50.00 Gold
View Inventory

Awards

Garrett Pro
« Reply #4 on: February 05, 2012, 01:53:07 pm »
Go Up Go Down

Have the Trinity River ever changed its coursed over the years?  I'm trying to figure out Why people thinks the Cortez Treasure is at the Pilgrim Church and grave yard in Elkhart,Texas

 Detecting still Searching

Linkback:

You are not allowed to view links.
Please Register or Login

http://www.thunting.com/smf/index.php/topic,34917.msg212556.html#msg212556




Logged
Offline seldom
Wrecking Crew
Platin Member
*

Wrecking Crew
Join Date: Jan, 2009
Thank you19

Activity
0%
Male
United States
Posts: 7361
Referrals: 0

20755.00 Gold
View Inventory

Awards
« Reply #5 on: February 05, 2012, 07:07:02 pm »
Go Up Go Down

Rebecca think you might be thinking of a different legend involving Cortez and treasure the one in your area is this on.

The tales of buried treasure in Elkhart originated deep within the heart of Mexico. A powerful and wealthy Mexican landowner and politician had a beautiful daughter named Felicia. Felicia had fallen madly in love with a peasant boy, which her father found to be a disgrace to the family name; Cortez. Felicia’s father was furious after learning of her love affair with the peasant. He was so angry that his own daughter had defiled his family name and embarrassed him that he tied the boy to a fence post and beat him to death and banished his daughter from his home land.

To ensure that Felicia could no longer bring shame upon him or their family he sent her to a convent within the Mission San Francisco de la Tejas, near the Neches River in East Texas. The mission had been established to convert and serve the local Indians. A convent had also been added, and approximately a dozen nuns resided within the mission.

Cortez financed his daughter’s journey to the north with a chest of jewels, and the remainder he ordered to be donated to the mission upon her arrival.

Felicia did not have any interest or desire to become a nun and live at the convent at the mission in East Texas. She had already formulated a plan to make a new life for herself, not her father, in Texas. She envisioned herself building a fine home on some land in Texas and raising horses. She believed she could become an influential force in Texas as her father had been in Mexico.

The night before she left Felicia took enough of her father’s gold bars and gold coins to load down five burrows. The next morning she set out on her journey with five faithful servants, five pack mules, and her new wealth.

The journey was long and hard. Day after day, Felicia and her small party trudged across the rugged desert terrain. After several weeks of hard travel Felicia and her crew crossed the Rio Grande into Texas; however, the journey was far from over. Soon they would have to cross the Nueces, San Antonio, Guadalupe, Colorado, and finally the Trinity rivers.

Not long after Felicia and her band of followers crossed the Trinity River she ordered her servants to set up camp. The next day when Felicia awoke she informed the group that a search for the perfect place to settle would begin. The group was in no big hurry after their long journey and wandered slowly through the Pineywoods searching for a perfect site for their future home.

According to legend, the group was weary from their long journey and decided to stop and take a little nap. As the group was basking and napping in the warm Texas sun, they suddenly fell under attack by a band of Indians.

The Indians emerged from the nearby woods. War whoops and screams filled the air, along with dozens of arrows aimed for Felicia and her crew. One of the servants was killed immediately by an arrow through his neck. Felicia and her remaining servants returned fire on the Indians with their muskets and drove them back into the woods.

The Indians began to rally in the woods to launch a second attack on the group. The Mexicans quickly began to gather rocks and logs to construct a crude fort to shield them from the Indian’s arrows. As Felicia’s servants hurried to build a structure to protect them Felicia was searching frantically for a place to hide her fortune.

The Indians attacked the group again, but were repelled once more. This time one Mexican was severely wounded, and two Indians perished. As the Indians retreated, Felicia ordered one of the remaining servants to help her bury her fortune near the edge of their camp.

Felicia and the servant knew the clock was ticking as they hastily buried the treasure in a shallow trench. Just as the two were covering the gold bars and jewels with pine needle and other forest debris, the Indians attacked for the third and final time. Felicia disappeared into the pine forests as her servant rushed to the aid of his friends. Felicia fled quickly knowing her few servants could not hold off the large force of Indians. Felicia knew that she had to find the mission. As she ran deeper into the pines, she could hear the screams of her faithful servants as they were slaughtered by the Indians.

Felicia wandered eastward through the Pineywoods for three days, until she finally found the Mission of San Francisco de las Tejas, located in the area known today as Weches.

The senorita stumbled into the mission with tattered, blood soaked clothing and frightened out of her mind. She had waded through deep creeks, through the thick dark pines, undetected by other Indian tribes in the area, and finally arrived at her original destination.

For three months, Felicia could not speak of the attack and did not mention the buried treasure. Some believed Felicia had no memory of the bloody tragedy she witnessed. Others believed she was waiting to recover in the safety of the mission until she could return to the area where she had buried her fortune, then carry out her original plan to build a home and start the finest horse ranch in all of East Texas.

Legend holds that Felicia found true happiness at the mission while she was waiting to recover. After living at the mission for several years, Felicia entered the order of nuns at the convent where she spent her days.

Eventually Felicia returned to Mexico and reunited with the family she had been estranged from for all those years she was in East Texas. She lived out the rest of her days in Mexico as a nun. Before Felicia died, she confided in one of her relatives about the events that took place after her father banished her to East Texas. She also told her relative about the buried treasure and sketched a detailed map of its whereabouts far away in the pines of East Texas.

Felicia’s relatives stored the map away with other family treasures and keepsakes. It was many years before someone stumbled upon Felicia’s treasure map stored away in an old family trunk. As the descendants studied the map and the descriptions scribbled on the map, the old Cortez buried treasure story they had heard their entire lives took on a new meaning. The family was excited and immediately formed a search party to travel to East Texas and reclaim their family fortune.

Felicia’s map told of a land far away in East Texas that was a wild unsettled pineywood wilderness. Yet, when the Cortez family finally arrived, at the turn of the century, in the early 1900’s, it was now a settled location full of homesteads and farms. Much had changed in East Texas since Felicia had buried her fortune in the shallow trench in Elkhart.

While the Cortez family did not have hostile Indians to contend with, the curious eyes of settlers who had established the area stared holes through them as they wandered about looking for the areas Felicia had described. They excavated and argued for several days around the area believed to be the site Felicia described. Their dig yielded no Mexican gold bars, coins, or jewels. The Cortez family left East Texas empty-handed and disheartened.

I have done a little looking at this one over the years and came to the conclusion that A the Indians recovered it and re hide it or B. The Cortezs recovered it years latter.   

Linkback:

You are not allowed to view links.
Please Register or Login

http://www.thunting.com/smf/index.php/topic,34917.msg212571.html#msg212571




Logged

If you believe everything you read you are reading to much.
Treasure is a Harsh  Mistress

Offline RebeccaTopic starter
Pull Tab
*

Join Date: Jan, 2012
Thank you1

Activity
0%
Female
United States
Posts: 14
Referrals: 0

50.00 Gold
View Inventory

Awards

Garrett Pro
« Reply #6 on: February 05, 2012, 07:41:19 pm »
Go Up Go Down

I was more thinking that they would have to come across the river using the El Camino Real passages and it was more closer to Crockett then to Elkhart. I agree with you on the Indians.  There's just no way she and 1 servant to bury 5 burro's load of Treasures in a hurry and be completely covered.

Linkback:

You are not allowed to view links.
Please Register or Login

http://www.thunting.com/smf/index.php/topic,34917.msg212574.html#msg212574




Logged
Offline RebeccaTopic starter
Pull Tab
*

Join Date: Jan, 2012
Thank you1

Activity
0%
Female
United States
Posts: 14
Referrals: 0

50.00 Gold
View Inventory

Awards

Garrett Pro
« Reply #7 on: February 06, 2012, 12:48:08 am »
Go Up Go Down

This is why I thought the Cortez's Treasures and Elkhart,Texas Pilgrim church and Grave site was the place the Treasure to be in   Undecided

Locals tell tales of a ghostly nun who roams about the old historic Pilgrim Cemetery near Elkhart. Some say this feminine apparition is Felicia Cortez and she is guarding her fortune of gold bars, coins and jewels.

No one has ever taken credit for the discovery of Felicia’s fortune, but locals still reminisce about the buried treasure near Elkhart, Texas and those who visit the old Pilgrim Cemetery are always on the lookout for a determined seniorita who guards her family fortune.

Linkback:

You are not allowed to view links.
Please Register or Login

http://www.thunting.com/smf/index.php/topic,34917.msg212592.html#msg212592




Logged
Offline foolsgold
Bronze Member
*

Join Date: Apr, 2010
Thank you0

Activity
0%
Male
United States
Posts: 219
Referrals: 0

995.00 Gold
View Inventory

Awards
« Reply #8 on: February 06, 2012, 01:03:16 pm »
Go Up Go Down

another interesting story, thanks for posting, and welcome!

Linkback:

You are not allowed to view links.
Please Register or Login

http://www.thunting.com/smf/index.php/topic,34917.msg212611.html#msg212611




Logged
Offline ArfieBoy
Knight
Gold Member
*

Join Date: Apr, 2011
Thank you299

Activity
4%
Male
United States
Posts: 3430
Referrals: 0

16056.00 Gold
View Inventory

Awards

Compass X-70; Compass X-200; Compass Coin Scanner Pro II; Whites Coinmaster 2/DB Series 2
« Reply #9 on: February 06, 2012, 04:58:10 pm »
Go Up Go Down

Another great story, Seldom!  Great  Thanks for sharing it.  And thanks, Rebecca, for bringing it up and posting more info about it.  Really enjoyed it!                          Detecting

Linkback:

You are not allowed to view links.
Please Register or Login

http://www.thunting.com/smf/index.php/topic,34917.msg212631.html#msg212631


ArfieBoy


Logged

Government can not give anything to anyone...  without first taking it from someone else!

Print
Pages:  1 2 3   Go Up
Jump to:  

Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2005, Simple Machines | Sitemap
Copyright THunting.com