Was Sir Francis Bacon a Master Designer of Home Land Security?
The ingenious designers of the Treasure Vault at Oak Island were men such as Sir Isaac Newton, Sir Francis Bacon, Washington Shirley, and Benjamin Franklin along with others, who over Centuries devised their cumulative plan.
Bacon through his writings left many clues and riddles which his followers used with the construction of Oak Island.
Riddles the likes of:
How could a treasure be buried at Oak Island but not on Oak Island, buried under water but not get wet?
Like a child’s riddle:
Where can you find an ocean without any water?
These Freemasons planned on the infrequency of man to use his mind to “Think outside the Box”.
Like the old westerns where the bank robbers planted the dynamite at the front of the one foot thick metal safe’s door when it was obvious that the walls surrounding the vault were only made of brick and mortar, these Freemasons knew that any treasurer hunters would first come knocking at their front door.
The Freemason’s door could have been the envy of Fort Knox with its Money Pit’s Shaft consisting of a 170 foot impervious thick entrance made of dirt, wood, cement, metal and armed with traps of water and possibly poisonous vapors.
To date, the Freemason’s logic has been sound as for 250 years no Treasure Hunter has been able to crack this safe’s door.
This same ingeniously shown logic may also be these Freemason’s weakness, as they too are governed by it and will not deviate from the laws of geometry or mathematics.
I believe their compulsion to leave bread crumbs, clues, and riddles to challenge the wisdom of those who follow will eventually divulge the location to their treasurers.
They never imagined the ability of today’s Treasure Hunters to share information on forums like this, information such as:
Francis Bacon’s first attempt at a Treasure Vault:
Dr Orville Ward Owen, a follower of Bacon's ciphers followed instructions in a Baconian cipher and discovered a mysterious underground chamber beneath the bed of the River Wye, in the West of Britain. Although it was disappointingly empty, further Baconian ciphers were to be found carved on the walls.
The ability of the Cornish tin miners in Cornwall, England to tunnel under the ocean floor with some of their tunnels approaching so close to the ocean’s floor that today one can hear the ocean’s waves from within.
The computer technology of a program like Stellarium which can map the celestial markers used by the Freemasons to mark their final location to the Vault.
The problem I did experience was in trying to determine the Logic as to why they would have constructed a tunnel from the Money Pit all the way to their Treasure Vault at the top of the North/West end of the Island.
It could not have been solely to distance the treasure from the door (Money Pit) or be more accessible for the returning ships to retrieve it.
Their Logic had to be something more.
It was only after my triangulation pointing to the whereabouts of this Vault showed the Treasure Vault was located a short distance off shore that I realized I too needed to “Think outside the Box”.
The Treasure is not “On” Oak Island but “At” Oak Island, located roughly 50 feet off shore, 20 feet under the ocean's floor, contained in a water tight cement, wooden lined Treasure Vault.
When the American Freemasons returned they only had to make a small inclined tunnel originating from the shore down into the Vault located 20 feet under the ocean’s floor to retrieve their Treasures and once finished hide this small entrance.