wrmickel1
Bronze Member
Its leave-it-rite where you found it.:sly:
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View attachment 1191068
I thought that this was proven to be a hoax long before the stone maps and that some of the stone maps legend was interpreted from the rendering of this picture.The story and all the maps were debunked (supposedly) by the authors who researched it starting in from 1965 to 73? All the maps with tops, horses head,locations theories from 45 years ago. Its a news paper article in a pdf form so it takes it a few minutes to open.
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb...rticles/Are the Peralta Stone Maps a Hoax.pdf
I keep posting this..... has any of the legend hunters read this old news paper article by Bernice and Jack Mcgee and its research?
Several were removed by another mod for rule violations.I didn't know that.
Thank you for bringing it to my attention.
May I ask what happened to Frank's post from last night? Do you know if it was it removed by the mods or by Frank himself?
Thank you for the help!
Tnmountains,
Nothing has ever been PROVEN one way or another regarding the Stone Maps (other than a good portion of their modern history since 1949).
Bernice and Jack McGee (in the article) believe the Stone Maps are hoaxes because they were operating under the premise of the story that the Peralta/Gonzalez Families MADE and BURIED the stone maps during the massacre. That story in and of itself is ridiculous. They were correct in thinking that the story could not be true. Does not mean they couldn't have been made somewhere else, at another time, by someone else.
If they were made by James Addison Reavis for his Peralta Land Grant Fraud in the 1880s, Reavis would have mentioned it when he detailed his entire fraud scheme in an interview with the San Francisco Call Newspaper in 1899:
View attachment 1191212 View attachment 1191213
He details getting Spanish Scribes to do his forging of documents. He details many things, but never once mentions forging (or having made) any stone maps. They would have been one of the keys to his land fraud (just like the rectangular marking found on the big boulder:
View attachment 1191217
Mike
Howdy Lynda,
All of those quotes are wonderful quotes, I'll take them all.
Homar
Postby somehiker » Fri Jul 24, 2015 11:19 pm
Bad Knees wrote:
I'm convinced that Travis made the Peralta Stones, I'm not convinced
it was for entirely innocent motives.
Why would a man use 25 pound stone slabs to copy maps when paper is such an easier and lighter medium to work with, and much more portable.
Why did Travis concoct the elaborate story of their 'discovery'?
Hopefully, all will be explained in Ryan's upcoming book.
Where can I get in line for my autographed copy (Ryan, Frank, Joe), with of course, a personalized handwritten note?
The man was writing a book, a work of fiction, from which he undoubtedly hoped to earn back some or all of the money he had invested in his quest. He needed something that would make this adventure story stand out amongst the others that lined bookstore shelves. What better a zinger than a set of stone slabs covered with mysterious images, treasure symbols, and Spanish phrases. Such are a rarity in classic treasure tales, and Travis' personal arts and crafts project would serve this purpose well, as would his fanciful tale of having found them in the desert by chance. Or so he told his friends while sharing and discussing the now discredited tablets with them in Hood River, even going so far as to tell Bob Bair that he had added the zeros to the back of his own heart stone. One could argue that he was not really lying to them, but merely testing their gullibility as a measure of his abilities to "wow" his potential readers. Just another map on parchment or cow hide would be less likely to draw the attention he sought as a writer. On the other hand, maybe he just wanted a fancy collection of door stops and paper weights.
But somebody saw one and said "WHOA....that looks like a Spanish Treasure Map !!!!".
And so it all began.....
Regards:SH.
Mike,
Posted on other sites, and looking for a logical answer from anyone:
_____________________________________________
I do have one question......It's been pretty well established that Travis T. did carve the Stone Maps. He may have done them by copying them from a paper or skin map. Why would he then transfer them to the very unwieldy stone slabs which needed to be carried around in the trunk of his car. What logic could be found in that fact, other than to create something for sale.
Where is the original that he copied onto the stones? Now there is something that would have some huge value, because they could be authenticated. If his wife didn't know, who would? If they existed, she should have sold them, along with the story, to her "sucker". $$$$$$$$$
Take care,
Joe
Who did the mapping for the Spanish?
Mike,
Posted on other sites, and looking for a logical answer from anyone:
_____________________________________________
I do have one question......It's been pretty well established that Travis T. did carve the Stone Maps. He may have done them by copying them from a paper or skin map. Why would he then transfer them to the very unwieldy stone slabs which needed to be carried around in the trunk of his car. What logic could be found in that fact, other than to create something for sale.
Where is the original that he copied onto the stones? Now there is something that would have some huge value, because they could be authenticated. If his wife didn't know, who would? If they existed, she should have sold them, along with the story, to her "sucker". $$$$$$$$$
Take care,
Joe