Golden Treasures of the San Juan


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Describes lost treasures in the San Juan region of Colorado. Front endpaper map shows treasure locations in relation to modern roads.




Treasure Tales of the Rockies


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Reprint. Originally published: 3rd rev. ed. Chicago: Sage Books, 1969.







Buried Treasures of the Rocky Mountain West


Book Description

The 32 tales from the area containing the backbone of America include The Gold Behind the Waterfall (Arizona), The Treasure of Deadman Cave (Colorado), Lava Cave Cache (Idaho), Henry Plummer's Lost Gold (Montana), The Curse of the Lost Sheepherder's Mine (Nevada), Lost Train Robbery Loot in Cibola County (New Mexico), Eighty Ingots in Spanish Gold (Utah), and Lost Ledge of Gold (Wyoming). As Jameson points out in his introduction, the Rocky Mountains still have many remote areas, ....




Fortress San Juan


Book Description

To nineteenth-century gold-seekers, the San Juans Range was a formidable natural fortress. Moat like rivers, towering rock walls, and canon mazes laced across 17,000 square miles guarded its treasures and kept its secrets. If remote and unyielding terrain did not intimidate adventurers, Ute war parties did. Even so, young America's western expansion--in large part the hand--work of a generation of dreamers--demonstrated that strength of pilgrim character could triumph over unrelenting hardship and constant threat of death. The same grit and determination would be called upon to breach the San Juans fortress. But the transformation of agrarian America into a continental industrial power, "manifest destiny" by another name, had to come first. It began with mass migrations of homesteaders and gold-seekers to Oregon and California. A decade later gold discovered along Colorado's Front Range spawned a third mass migration to the Rocky Mountains. Still the San Juans fortress stood strong. Another fifteen years and another gold-rush were required. Unlike the rushes before it, the "San Juans excitement" had to await the end of the Nation's civil war and the construction of regional supply depots, toll roads and rail service. Achieving at least a semblance of peace with Ute defenders also was wise. Who were these brave hearts that transformed the American West and ultimately the San Juans range? "Of course," you answer, "they were gold seekers. "Yes," I say, "but as you will read here, they were as much more."







The Lost Sanchez Treasure


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Colorado Treasure Tales


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West


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