The Beale Papers


Book Description




The Beale Papers


Book Description

These papers were written in the early nineteenth century and supposedly lead to a great fortune that is buried somewhere in the hills of Virginia. To date, it has never been recovered. The papers were left locked inside a metal box, in the care of a trusted friend. He had instructions to open them if, after ten years, nothing more had been heard of their owner, Mr Beale.




The Beale Papers


Book Description

This volume follows a historical account of two brothers, George Hart (1874-1968) and Clayton Hart (1876-1949), who attempted to decipher the infamous cipher texts known as the Beale Papers. The ciphers, alleged to provide the secrets of a treasure buried somewhere in the county of Bedford, Virginia, were authored by a mysterious figure named Thomas Jefferson Beale who led a hunting party of thirty men to New Mexico. But when they happened upon a gold mine amassing a fortune, they traded some of the gold to obtain silver and jewels, transported their loot back to Virginia in two shipments, and buried it for safe keeping in November 1819 and December 1821. The three cipher texts are alleged to detail the contents of the treasure, the instructions to locate the treasure, and a list of heirs to which portions of the treasure should be distributed. Only one of the three cipher texts were ever solved by using the Declaration of Independence as a key, detailing the contents of the treasure. Despite the publicity the papers received since their publication, none have come forward with the solution. Included in this volume is the text from an 1885 pamphlet attributed to J.B. Ward, detailing The Beale papers, and the narrative of George L. Hart, providing additional history and research that he and his brother discovered in search of the treasure between 1898 and 1922. The typeset manuscript was printed and submitted to the Roanoke Library in 1964 and is now published for the first time.







The Beale Papers


Book Description

First printed in 1885, this is pamphlet is a restored facsimile-reproduction of the original historic tract entitled The Beale Papers. These papers were the center of a controversial claim, wherein a narrative describes the origins of a treasure, amounting to a modern estimate of $20 million, that was buried somewhere in the Virginian county of Bedford in 1819 and enlarged again with another deposit in 1821. The narrative speaks of a mysterious figure named Thomas Jefferson Beale who left these papers with his innkeeper after some short visits and was never heard from again. The numeric cyphers within, once decoded, are said to provide the precise location of the treasure; since believed to be in the foothills of Blue Ridge Mountains. These cyphers have been challenged by several prominent researchers, cryptologists, mathematicians, and historians since they were first made public. Genealogists too have endeavored to discover the identity of their author and, in the mid 1900s, The Beale Cypher Association was developed to both conduct research on and compile a library of reports and memoranda concerning the cyphers. David Khan, author of Codebreakers, declared in 1972 his belief that the papers were an elaborate hoax. Yet in 2001, a Freedom of Information Act request lead to the declassification of a plethora of reports and studies of The Beale Papers, held by National Security Agency (NSA).Though with all the controversy and fame brought to this story in centuries past, none have alluded to its discovery. Even to this modern day, none have been able to come publicly forward to legitimately provide the solution to the riddle within, nor give proof that the treasure has been claimed. Are these cyphers an unbreakable code without the required key? Are the papers simply a centuries old American hoax meant to attract tourism to the county? or, turn a profit in pamphlet sales? Whatever the truth of the matter is, this document is a mysterious piece of early American history that is enveloped with such obscurity that hundreds, if not thousands of men, have dedicated decades of their life to solving the puzzle, or searching within the wilderness of Bedford County, with the small yet lingering hope that they with discover the Beale Treasure.




The Beale Papers, Containing Authentic Statements Regarding the Treasure Buried in 1819 and 1821 Near Bufords, in Bedford County, Virginia (Dodo Press


Book Description

The Beale ciphers are a set of three ciphertexts, one of which allegedly states the location of a buried treasure of gold and silver estimated to be worth over 30 million US dollars in the present time. The other two ciphertexts allegedly describe the content of the treasure, and list the names of the treasure's owners' next of kin, respectively. The story of the three ciphertexts originates from an 1885 pamphlet detailing treasure being buried by a man named Thomas Jefferson Beale in a secret location in Virginia in 1820. Beale entrusted the box containing the encrypted messages with a local innkeeper named Robert Morriss and then disappeared, never to be seen again. The innkeeper gave the three encrypted ciphertexts to a friend before he died. The friend then spent the next twenty years of his life trying to decode the messages, and was able to solve only one of them which gave details of the treasure buried and the general location of the treasure. Since the publication of the pamphlet, a number of attempts have been made to decode the two remaining ciphertexts and to find the treasure, but all have resulted in failure.




The Beale Treasure


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The Code Book: The Secrets Behind Codebreaking


Book Description

"As gripping as a good thriller." --The Washington Post Unpack the science of secrecy and discover the methods behind cryptography--the encoding and decoding of information--in this clear and easy-to-understand young adult adaptation of the national bestseller that's perfect for this age of WikiLeaks, the Sony hack, and other events that reveal the extent to which our technology is never quite as secure as we want to believe. Coders and codebreakers alike will be fascinated by history's most mesmerizing stories of intrigue and cunning--from Julius Caesar and his Caeser cipher to the Allies' use of the Enigma machine to decode German messages during World War II. Accessible, compelling, and timely, The Code Book is sure to make readers see the past--and the future--in a whole new way. "Singh's power of explaining complex ideas is as dazzling as ever." --The Guardian







If Beale Street Could Talk (Movie Tie-In)


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A stunning love story about a young Black woman whose life is torn apart when her lover is wrongly accused of a crime—"a moving, painful story, so vividly human and so obviously based on reality that it strikes us as timeless" (The New York Times Book Review). "One of the best books Baldwin has ever written—perhaps the best of all." —The Philadelphia Inquirer Told through the eyes of Tish, a nineteen-year-old girl, in love with Fonny, a young sculptor who is the father of her child, Baldwin’s story mixes the sweet and the sad. Tish and Fonny have pledged to get married, but Fonny is falsely accused of a terrible crime and imprisoned. Their families set out to clear his name, and as they face an uncertain future, the young lovers experience a kaleidoscope of emotions—affection, despair, and hope. In a love story that evokes the blues, where passion and sadness are inevitably intertwined, Baldwin has created two characters so alive and profoundly realized that they are unforgettably ingrained in the American psyche.