HawkeyeJon
Newbie
- Oct 3, 2008
- 2
- 0
In 1971, Thomas Penfield wrote the "Directory of Buried or Sunken Treasures and Lost Mines of the United States", containing 2,269 treasure leads throughout the U.S.
In 1985, Thomas P. Terry came out with the 10-volume set of "The U.S. Treasure Atlas", listing close to 5,000 leads, and over 45,000 sites (ghost towns, forts, etc.).
After reading Terry's books, I became fascinated with the amount of mistakes that were made in the books. In an attempt to track the bibliography info for Terry's listings, I came across several other leads. Now, after 28 years of research, (I can't believe it been that long), a few of my friends are telling me its time to release my information. My records indicate over 11,000 lost or found mines, treasures and/or caches in the U.S. (Sorry, no ghost towns, forts, or shipwrecks, those files have not been organized yet.)
My question is, is it time for a new directory? Would anyone be interested? And I guess, what's the information worth?
In 1985, Thomas P. Terry came out with the 10-volume set of "The U.S. Treasure Atlas", listing close to 5,000 leads, and over 45,000 sites (ghost towns, forts, etc.).
After reading Terry's books, I became fascinated with the amount of mistakes that were made in the books. In an attempt to track the bibliography info for Terry's listings, I came across several other leads. Now, after 28 years of research, (I can't believe it been that long), a few of my friends are telling me its time to release my information. My records indicate over 11,000 lost or found mines, treasures and/or caches in the U.S. (Sorry, no ghost towns, forts, or shipwrecks, those files have not been organized yet.)
My question is, is it time for a new directory? Would anyone be interested? And I guess, what's the information worth?