bfloyd4445
Sr. Member
- May 18, 2015
- 257
- 190
- Detector(s) used
- Garrett AT Gold
- Primary Interest:
- Other
Something that might give a little more creedence to the possible veracity of this story is that this confession was made while he and his son were on the way to dig up the buried bars. He was on a wagon pulled by a mule. The mule kicked him in the back and left him unable to move and bleeding from the mouth. Eventually another wagon came along and those people helped get this man to a doctor,he died on the way. The story comes from one of the men on the second wagon. They returned to search, but had only iron rods and stabbed them into the ground all along the corral perimeter. He said that the ground was too hard to penetrate more than a few inches. Years later in the 1950s ,that man related this story to a man he met who thd a metal detector. The guy with the metal detector went to search but he went alone and couldnt locate the remains of the corral. I mentioned this story since with the aid of google earth it appears to me at least that at the site that must be the narrows mentioned in the story, there seems to be the vague outlines recognized by a lack of,vegetation,or better yet vegetation and ajoining bald areas that might suggest to someone with imagination ,the perimeters of former existing manmade structures. Being a corral and livery stable, one should further be able to confirm that hypotheris by finding evidence oh horse activity ,such as horseshoes,nails and the like.
How do you know the son didn't go and dig up the bars before passing the story along? That seems the logical way it would have went.