Some interesting reading

Interesting indeed and thanks for the post. As the eternal skeptic, I pondered a few of the statements in the passage.......

Silver ore on a hill top? Is is possible that John Swift was mining a hilltop instead of a cave....both?

Is silver ore really snow proof? 12 to 18 inches worth?

I understand having a gun repair kit on a long hunt but would a hand bellow really be necessary?

In my critique of this passage, the arrangement seems to be all over the place. The paragraph that details what a Long Hunter might have taken with him (bellows) seems to be convienently sedge wayed to introduce the ore discovery.

At any rate, it is a very good read....a great snapshot of Pioneer life.
 

Good read. Alot of names, dates, and places. A good look into the past. I think they used bellows to make bullets, were they to find a lead seam..
 

Speaking of lead.. Has anyone ever found the supposed lead seam in Johnson Co. that the indians kidnapped Jenny Wiley worked? We know about the rockhouse where she was kept, and it couldn't have been far.. I was down that way the other day, and it made me think of that.
 

long hunters would have their shot bag and if heading to a new location, small bars of lead to melt has needed. if the area was well known they would know of lead deposits.
there are a few deposits of lead in johnson county. one is on joes branch upper part of johns creek and on mudlick creek.
 

Interesting stuff,looks as if long hunters were basically the mountain men,trappers of the 1800s.
 

long hunters would have their shot bag and if heading to a new location, small bars of lead to melt has needed. if the area was well known they would know of lead deposits.
there are a few deposits of lead in johnson county. one is on joes branch upper part of johns creek and on mudlick creek.

I've heard about the Joe's creek deposit. Mudlick crk...isn't that close to where Jenny Wiley was held? Or am I confusing it with another. Seems like I remember the name of the location getting changed to Mudlick, or from Mudlick as a possible location of the rockhouse where she was kept. Anyway, to the point, I would like to find a lead deposit location, and see if a MD would locate it, or would I need a Geiger counter.
 

Remember the famous land grant as well:

"Robert Breckenridge and John Filson, as tenants in common, entered 1000 acres of land upon the balance of a treasure warrant No. 10117, about sixty or seventy miles northeasterly from Martins Cabins in Powell Valley to include a silver mine which was improved about seventeen years ago by a certain man named Swift at said mine. Where-in Swift reports he has extracted from the ore a considerable quantity of silver, some of which he made into dollars, and left at or near the mine, together with apparatus for making the same. The land to be in a square and the lines to run at the cardinal points of the compass including the mine in the center as near as may be. This is Lincoln County No.10117, issued on May 17, 1788, and filed in the land office at Richmond, Virginia."
 

I've heard about the Joe's creek deposit. Mudlick crk...isn't that close to where Jenny Wiley was held? Or am I confusing it with another. Seems like I remember the name of the location getting changed to Mudlick, or from Mudlick as a possible location of the rockhouse where she was kept. Anyway, to the point, I would like to find a lead deposit location, and see if a MD would locate it, or would I need a Geiger counter.

A MD would be sufficent.
 

Interesting indeed and thanks for the post. As the eternal skeptic, I pondered a few of the statements in the passage.......

Silver ore on a hill top? Is is possible that John Swift was mining a hilltop instead of a cave....both?

Is silver ore really snow proof? 12 to 18 inches worth?

I understand having a gun repair kit on a long hunt but would a hand bellow really be necessary?

In my critique of this passage, the arrangement seems to be all over the place. The paragraph that details what a Long Hunter might have taken with him (bellows) seems to be convienently sedge wayed to introduce the ore discovery.

At any rate, it is a very good read....a great snapshot of Pioneer life.

Interstingly enough there is an "ice test" for silver because it is thermally conductive.
 

Lincoln County, huh. One in WV. Not Ky or Va. The treasure is in WV.
 

Lincoln County, huh. One in WV. Not Ky or Va. The treasure is in WV.


Wrong. Lincoln County, was organized in 1780, was one of three counties formed out of the original Kentucky county, WV., which then constituted the westernmost part of Virginia. The other counties were Fayette and Jefferson. In 1792 the three counties were separated from Virginia and became the Commonwealth of Kentucky, the 15th state. Thus, in 1788 a treasure warrant would have been filed in Richmond, VA since it was actually part of Virginia at that time and not kentucky. See the link below.

http://www.sos.ky.gov/NR/rdonlyres/D5622E2D-84DA-471F-B329-3D789107F2BA/0/Animated1776.gif
 

We'll see one day, won't we? You E. Ky guys just keep on keepin' on. Fruitless.
 

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