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Offline seldomTopic starter
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« on: July 11, 2012, 10:08:03 am »
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Here is a good lead for someone in eastTexas


About 1868, a newcomer to Hardin County, Texas, made an agreement with Eli Hall to purchase a tract of land. He took a bag of 500 gold coins and started out on foot for the White Oak Settlement (now Thicket, Texas) to finalize the deal.

He followed a twisting little creek and eventually realized that he was lost. He wandered for nine days before he was finally found, exhausted, and near death. During that time, he had existed on the meat from a large water bird he managed to capture by hand.

On the eighth day, weak and despairing, he had about give up hope that he would ever be found. The gold became too burdensome for him to carry, so he cached it in a hole in the creek bank under a large, drooping holly tree.

After he was rescued, he was never able to locate the spot where he had hidden the gold. His unfortunate experience caused the little stream to be named Bad Luck Creek.

This little creek, which begins in densely-forested Polk County, winds its way for about 15 miles to join Cypress Creek.

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Offline Homefire
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« Reply #1 on: July 11, 2012, 12:12:10 pm »
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I wonder how far that creek has meandered over the years?

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Offline Idaho Jones
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« Reply #2 on: July 11, 2012, 05:40:23 pm »
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Thats what I was thinking Homefire. Bet it's under some silt and could be 100 feet or more from where the stream is now. Just thinking of that riverboat they found in a cornfield half a mile from the Mississippi a while back. People need to hide their gold on top of big boulders, all that digging is a lot of work...

Neat story Seldom, would be fun to poke around if I was in the neighborhood.

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Offline BitburgAggie_7377
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« Reply #3 on: July 11, 2012, 06:32:55 pm »
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Quote:Posted by Idaho Jones
Thats what I was thinking Homefire. Bet it's under some silt and could be 100 feet or more from where the stream is now. Just thinking of that riverboat they found in a cornfield half a mile from the Mississippi a while back. People need to hide their gold on top of big boulders, all that digging is a lot of work...



With the Big Thicket, it's hard to tell.....besides being the most thickly forested area in Texas, a lot of it is Bayou and/or swamp.  Definitely doesn't take much to rearrange water flow in those conditions, especially before the advent of flood control dams and levees on the major rivers.

BA

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