Some New AZ Leads, add info if you know more about them

GoldBack

Jr. Member
Aug 19, 2010
91
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Here's a couple of new leads in AZ that I wanted to share with you all just for the fun of it. :icon_thumright:

Black jack Ketchum was a rather famous outlaw in the Arizona area. It is said that he stashed a large amount of booty in a cave. The treasure is buried in the cave located in Cochise County, in the Chiricahua Mountains about 40 miles north of Bisbee in Wild Cat Canyon.

The bandito Bonita reportedly buried $22,000,000 in gold and silver in a place called Meadows of Gold on the southwest slopes of Mount Graham near the town named after him, Bonita. This area is located in Graham County about 30 miles southwest of Safford.

The two miners were traveling through the east side of Bronco Canyon and needed to hide the gold nuggets they were carrying. They found a rock the looked like a toadstool near a small spring. Making note of the shape of the rock, the spring and the general part of the canyon they were in, they buried the nuggets (about $75,000 worth) under the rock.
Apparently they did not give enough notice to where they were, they were unable to ever find the location again. Bronco Canyon is in Maricopa County about 30 miles northwest of Fort McDowell.

This has also been referred to as the Ajo Treasure. It is said that church valuables including gold and silver bullion have been hidden along the roadway between Sonoyta Mexico and the Tumacacori Mission. The old road was called Carretta Road. (Not so new but still a good one)

The Cienega Brothers were bandits in the 1800s. They stole an army payroll of about $75,000 in gold coins. They buried the money near the old La Cienega Pony Express Station in Santa Cruz County. The station was in Pontano Canyon between Tucson and Benson.

In 1861, Union soldiers burnt the fort to the ground in order to keep it out of Confederate hands. They rebuilt it again in 1863 and used the fort until 1890. There is supposedly a large cache of gold nuggets buried under to old carpenter’s shop on the north side of the Fort.The Fort is located in Mojave County close to Mojave Springs about 20 miles east of Lake Havasu.


This is another Jesuit lost treasure. Said to be a great amount of gold church treasures and gold bars. It is said that the treasure was buried on Mission grounds. The mission is located near Calabasas, northeast of Nogales in the San Cayetano Mountains.

It is said that a $100,000 of gold that was stolen off a Wells Fargo shipment in 1865 was buried near Vail in Santa Cruz County about 17 miles southeast of Tucson on US 10.
 

goldback, thanks much for your sharing, interesting.
take care. ron
 

Here's a couple of new leads in AZ that I wanted to share with you all just for the fun of it. :icon_thumright:

Black jack Ketchum was a rather famous outlaw in the Arizona area. It is said that he stashed a large amount of booty in a cave. The treasure is buried in the cave located in Cochise County, in the Chiricahua Mountains about 40 miles north of Bisbee in Wild Cat Canyon.


The bandito Bonita reportedly buried $22,000,000 in gold and silver in a place called Meadows of Gold on the southwest slopes of Mount Graham near the town named after him, Bonita. This area is located in Graham County about 30 miles southwest of Safford.

The two miners were traveling through the east side of Bronco Canyon and needed to hide the gold nuggets they were carrying. They found a rock the looked like a toadstool near a small spring. Making note of the shape of the rock, the spring and the general part of the canyon they were in, they buried the nuggets (about $75,000 worth) under the rock.
Apparently they did not give enough notice to where they were, they were unable to ever find the location again. Bronco Canyon is in Maricopa County about 30 miles northwest of Fort McDowell.

This has also been referred to as the Ajo Treasure. It is said that church valuables including gold and silver bullion have been hidden along the roadway between Sonoyta Mexico and the Tumacacori Mission. The old road was called Carretta Road. (Not so new but still a good one)

The Cienega Brothers were bandits in the 1800s. They stole an army payroll of about $75,000 in gold coins. They buried the money near the old La Cienega Pony Express Station in Santa Cruz County. The station was in Pontano Canyon between Tucson and Benson.

In 1861, Union soldiers burnt the fort to the ground in order to keep it out of Confederate hands. They rebuilt it again in 1863 and used the fort until 1890. There is supposedly a large cache of gold nuggets buried under to old carpenter’s shop on the north side of the Fort.The Fort is located in Mojave County close to Mojave Springs about 20 miles east of Lake Havasu.


This is another Jesuit lost treasure. Said to be a great amount of gold church treasures and gold bars. It is said that the treasure was buried on Mission grounds. The mission is located near Calabasas, northeast of Nogales in the San Cayetano Mountains.

It is said that a $100,000 of gold that was stolen off a Wells Fargo shipment in 1865 was buried near Vail in Santa Cruz County about 17 miles southeast of Tucson on US 10.

Two of these are historical inaccurate. $100,000 of gold from an 1865 Wells Fargo shipment being buried near Vail could not have happened in 1865. The Butterfield Overland Mail Company closed in March 1861 because of the impending Civil War. Stage lines did not return to Arizona until early in 1867. There are many references for this, but a good one is in The Arizona Miner, May 18, 1867. The article tells of lines finally returning to Arizona and one line states "This will complete the service on the old Southern, or Butterfield, overland, and will greatly invigorate and accommodate lower Arizona."

The next is the one about the Cienega Brothers. There was no Pony Express Station in Pontano (Pantano) Canyon between Tucson and Benson. The Pony Express never existed in Arizona. The famous Butterfield Seneca-Cienega Stage Station was located at the junction of Davidson Canyon and Cienega Creek near present day Pantano. This stage station was destroyed in 1862 and later rebuilt when stage lines returned to the area in early 1867. The reference for this is The Butterfield Trail and Overland Mail Company in Arizona, 1858-1861, published in 2011.
 

Another is Vail. Vail is nowhere near Santa Cruz county. From Vail to Santa Cruz county is about an hour drive.

Also there was a Pantano but no present day Pantano. Its gone.
 

that story about thieves gold in vail, is tied to the cave...people have been through that system daily...from the
CCC to modern day guides

most of these stories never happened...the only place in arizona with that much gold, at the time, was the walker mining district...
 

Yes, supposedly they rob a train or a stage coach or an armored truck. Who knows. They were supposedly hiding out in the cave, buried the money or gold and it was never found. People have searched the cave but no luck. I was in the cave and didn't see any money. The park employees said they robbed a train. I've heard another story they robbed a stage coach. People change stories so you don't know what to believe. Who knows?
 

Yes, supposedly they rob a train or a stage coach or an armored truck. Who knows. They were supposedly hiding out in the cave, buried the money or gold and it was never found. People have searched the cave but no luck. I was in the cave and didn't see any money. The park employees said they robbed a train. I've heard another story they robbed a stage coach. People change stories so you don't know what to believe. Who knows?
 

the one story I did like..is about the train robbery gone wrong outside of Wilcox...
the bandits used sacks of silver dollar's ,{pesos dependent oh who you read}, to pack explosives around the safe in the mail car...did the butch an sundance thing to the safe...
blew silver all over the place...

nothing worth value in the safe...talk about instant karma...lol

http://www.tom-horn.com/story-wilcox-train.htm

ps: tom horn was hung as a murderer...known to stretch the truth...just like his namesake in modern Arizona.
 

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Yes they weren't real smart. People still go out there looking for the coins but as usual there's so many different stories as to where they stopped the car. I hear the railroad was out there digging the place up and grading it.
 

yes..it is their money after all...they keep the exact location secret...around 12 miles out east is the story I read first in the '70's.....now the location has changed to two miles west...lolol
 

Head to the tracks, get one of those little carts that you pump the handle up and down and I'll meet you at the tracks in Tucson and we'll head out there and we'll scan the whole area along the tracks for the coins. Lol!
 

My FIL was out exploring around Bowie when he was a teenager and came across a cave. Inside this cave he found a trunk of gold bars. They were too heavy to carry out and he went back later but couldn't find the cave again. He is in his 70s now so this would have been about 55 years ago.
 

My FIL was out exploring around Bowie when he was a teenager and came across a cave. Inside this cave he found a trunk of gold bars. They were too heavy to carry out and he went back later but couldn't find the cave again. He is in his 70s now so this would have been about 55 years ago.

WELCOME to Treasurenet!:icon_thumleft:
 

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