Busy Beale !

born in Bavaria, Germany, on May 19, 1842, the son of Sigmund and Clara Guggenheimer. His father died in 1844, aged 36 years. On June 13, 1888, his mother completed the 73d year of her life. The Virginia branch of the Guggenheimer family settled in this State in 1838. Max Guggenheimer landed in New York City in August, 1856. He came at once to Lynchburg arriving August 20th. His purpose in coming to America was to study thoroughly here the English language, and his intention then was to return to Germany in a year or two. He at once entered Mr. Reed's private school, which he attended about eighteen months, keeping books for his brother-in-law during this time, evenings. Leaving school then he became clerk and bookkeeper for his brother-in-law, who was carrying on n dry goods business in Lynchburg, and so continued until the war began. He then, at age of nineteen years, went into service in the Lynchburg Home Guards, April 23, 1861, and was with this company until discharged in the fall of 1862, on account of disability. He went to Chattanooga, whence he returned in 1863, since which time he has remained in Lynch burg. Immediately after the close of the war, he entered into partnership with his brother-in-law, Nathaniel Guggenheimer in a dry goods business established by the latter in 1842. The brother-in-law being unfitted by sickness to transact business, Max became its head, and Nathaniel dying on January 16, 1866, Max has also been the head of the family since that date, the family consisting of the widow of Nathaniel and her five children. The business of which he is the head has been one of vast proportions and constant increase since that date. The largest amount of sales of the old firm was $40.000 in 1860; to-day it is known as the largest wholesale house in the State. When the retail trade had reached a business of $200,000 it was given up that the attention of the firm might be given entirely to its growing wholesale trade, Mr. Guggenheimer understanding, as far back as 1868, that Lynchburg was geographically located to do a good and healthy distributing trade. In 1870 wholesale boots and shoes was added to the dry goods department. In 1876, on account of the great extent of the dry goods business, Mr. Guggenheimer retired from the shoe business, and with special capital, started, in conjunction with two gentlemen from Baltimore, the first exclusive wholesale shoe house in the city. He retired from this firm in July, 1887, and in June 1888, opened the second exclusive wholesale shoe house. He had a younger brother who was a short time in service during the late war, in a Lynchburg battery, and Maurice Guggenheimer his cousin, served through the war in the 2d Virginia Artillery, dying in March, 1885. The wife of Mr. Guggenheimer, Bertha V., daughter of M. Rosenbaum, was born in Richmond, Virginia, in December, 1857. They were married by a Jewish Rabbi of Baltimore, and have one daughter, Cecile Isabelle, born October 23, 1877. The father of Mrs. Guggenheimer was born in Wurtburg, Bavaria, Germany, her mother in Richmond, Virginia. Mr. Guggenheimer was a member of the city council in 1879 and 1880. chairman of its finance committee; resigned in February. 1881. He has been president of the opera company; president of the Jewish Congregation; director of the Lynchburg National Bank.
 

Yes... I find the last few words very interesting.
 

...and he knew James Beverly Ward, his Hutter cousins, and John William Sherman, the cousin who printed and advertised the Beale Papers.
YEP! CSA "Max" was a FREEMASON, a Jew buried in a CHRISTIAN Cemetery; HIS quote... "The Devil wouldn't look for a Jew in a CHRISTIAN grave-yard!" LOL! GREAT sense-of-humor!
 

Looks like BEALE had fun creating those ciphers and thinking how it would make anyone crazy trying to decode those enigmas. I only have looked at the 3 pieces of evidence for over a month, and I am still scratching my brain over B1...BUT i noticed that we all have been overlooking a few specific aspects of those ciphers...he planted some useful numbers and I have already an idea of how he was thinking...Beale only had a pencil & Paper: you don't need Quantum Computing to resolve the mystery...but U need good eyes!!!...keep u posted...
 

Keep in mind that the only source of a Thomas J Beale, the perilous adventure treasure story exists ONLY in Ward's 1885 published Beale Papers job print dime novel pamphlet.
There is NO outside collaborating documented evidence that supports the Beale narrative story which makes the C1 & C3 containing an actual solvable message suspect.
 

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