The clues he said are true. Except the board house is no longer there. There is a horse face, a stone man, a face rock facing East, the four peeks looking like one peek and they are not hieroglyphs.
You hit the nail on the head because them greedy s.o.b. have stole from any and everyone who has something they want. Im talking about the puppets and the ones over the puppets.
@@dougeverett4350 Hello, what did you mean, can you be more detailed? you wanted to say that - “Every recreation area they have created, every monument they have protected, every park they have created is to lock away important resources or to hide critical history.” despite all the prohibitions that they themselves mine gold and exploit the places where any activity is prohibited for an ordinary person?
just to make sure everyone out there under stand the true facts of the LDM , Waltz did something at the mine that proves with out any doubt what so ever that the real LDM is in fact his mine . everyone that ever hunted for the mine missed it .. waltz did in fact tell Julia something she forgot to tell others about because it sounded like it had nothing to do with finding the mine but in fact it was the one clue that proves there is ONLY 1 real LDM . and waltz made sure of it ....it dates the mine and directly links the mine to Waltz him self .
@@GeorgiaRidgerunner his real name was Waltz there was a video done by the museum called the history of Waltz or something like that , it tells about his past and who he was very well investigated and they also say his name was Waltz i have a 1895 news paper about the LDM mine and those searching for it , and it spells his name Waltz
The Superstition Mountains was formed by volcanic ash cemented under extreme heat welded together with lava and tuff into a conglomerate. Professional geologists and assayers have said for years the composition of Superstition Mts. doesn't contain any gold. The Dutchman Jacob Waltz was actually getting the gold ore from the Mammoth and Black Queen Mines about 5 miles from the Superstition Mts. located on modern day Apache Rd. whereas the Merrill brothers and Morse Hakes had figured out where the Dutchman was getting his gold from. Shortly after his death the Mammoth and Black Queen mines were opened and the mines produced millions of dollars in gold. That is the only gold that has been found any where near the Superstition Mountains and all the years since the story that Jacob Waltz spun to protect the location of the mine was actually located shortly after his death but today its just a tale that old men like to set around and jaw about!
The matchbox made from under the Dutchman’s bed was analyzed in a non destructive test at the school of mines in Nevada. It was compared to ALL the mines in the Superstition/Goldfield mining district. This included the Mammoth the Black Queen the Bulldog and the Vulture mine at Wickenberg. The test concluded that the Dutchman’s gold was not from any of these mines and was from totally unknown source. The gold was also examined by three Arizona geologist as well as Joe Poterie the chief assayer of all the above mines. The Dutchman’s gold was not from any known mine. I know the owner of the matchbox it was gifted to him from Brownie Holmes the son of Dick Holmes who was at the bed side of Jacob Waltz when he died along with Gideon Roberts who witnessed in court that Waltz gave the gold to Holmes. You are also wrong about no gold found closer to the Superstition Mountain than Goldfield. The Palmer mine is located on a fault at the very base of Superstition Mountain on the west end. In addition Goldfield is a collapsed caldera and the Mammoth is an intrusion from volcanics. Superstition Mountain is a resurgent collapsed caldera itself in EXACTLY the same volcanics as Goldfield.
@@larryhedrick254 Your a victim of stupidity,again it is has been proven through assays there isn't any gold not so much as a nugget ever found in the Superstition Mountains unless its been planted there.
David I’m not asking because I have issue it’s none of my business and I’ll assume it’s all worked out but is most of your LD videos copied from mysteries of the superstitions channel? Or you bringing in from multiple sources. I appreciate any guidance. With 1.2 thousand videos it’s hard to sort
@@DavidJonesOpalImages I should of known sorry about that. Thanks for the great work. I started watching religiously about six months before Charlie passed. I always enjoy when one of the videos I stumble on has him in it. We have lost a number of important people in the treasure hunting community the last few years. You happen to be going to the treasure hunter rendezvous next weekend?
If you had a gold mine and you had gold stashed in the Superstition Mountains, where would you put the house you lived in. Would you put your house on the opposite side of the mountains from your mine? Where would you live if you wanted to keep tabs on your mine?
Myron: The Dutchman did not build the board house and Matt Cavaness, who did build it in 1875, did not build it for any reason that had anything to do with the Dutchman or the gold mine. He built it because it was a perfect location for his cattle ranch. The board house later became a clue because of the newspaper notoriety of the search for a dutch Hunter, named Adolph Ruth, who lost his life searching for the mine in 1931.
@@larryhedrick254 Yes, but he did have a house in Phoenix.:) gold is pretty heavy to haul around. I think he would have thought about some things in a practical way based on how hard it would be to lug out the gold. I think logistics were more of a problem back then
@@larryhedrick254 I guess what I am saying is I think the mine is on the West Side closer to where his house was in Phoenix. I think the board house clue just makes that even more of a likely hood.
@@myronww It’s 42 miles from where his house was in Phoenix to the EAST end of Superstition Mountain where it Board house was located. To get there he would have gone around the south side of the Superstition.
It’s all flat land going around and it makes no sense to go THROUGH the Superstitions to get to the board house where Waltz stated was the starting place to get to his mine. The closeness to his home in Phoenix has no bearing on it mines location.
Donna It sat abandoned for years and I tried to get the owner to allow the museum to tear it down for the lumber but I never got permission. It’s been gone for many years and I don’t know just what was the final outcome.
@@larryhedrick254 Larry could you tell me if you know what was going on around Canyon Lake back in 1908. I have found 2 rocks. One was a trail marker left by natives and the other was marked 1908 about 20ft apart
@@donnacarr4599 The Apache Trail, the road built to construct Roosevelt Dam, was started in 1903 and finished in 1905. The dam was dedicated in 1911. None of the lower dams were constructed (Canyon Lake) in 1911. In 1908 millions of pounds of materials were being shipped from the Mesa railhead to Roosevelt Dam right through where Canyon Lake would be eventually filled. There were trail markers made out of cement every mile and every half mile from one end of the trail to the other. One of those markers is in the museum. You may have found temporary markers placed where the permanent markers of cement would be installed. All I can add is that there was horrendous activity around and all through the area from 1903 on.
You know these videos you're stealing from 'Mysteries of the Superstition Mountains' are copyrighted. Copyright infringement is a federal crime. You better hope their production company doesn't press charges.
That's a relief, sorry about the mistake. I have enjoyed your videos for years and it made me a little mad to think someone was stealing all your hard work. Thanks again for your great videos
This is from Mysteries of the Superstition Mountains....Hope you got permission for this....No worries...Snitches end up in Ditches where I come from so...
Evil prevails when good men remain silent . Just sayin. It's a balancing act. Each of us has to decide what is serious enough to speak up about , and what's not. I wouldn't say anything about pirating videos . They always catch up with em anyway. Kidnapping , and murder ?!?!? Well , that's cat of another fur !!
no the mine is not under the board house , the mine is real and i do agree with what Waltz said about the board house , knowing where the mine is i can say he is in fact telling the truth when he stated this clue ... yes i am Blindbowman and yes i found the mine in the fall of 2006 .
@@secretsquirrel6718 i don't know what your Uncle found but it was not the real LDM ... LOL there are a lot of old mines out there and twice as many that have been filled in threw the years .. if you believe your Uncle found it back in the 70's then you better start doing some better research ...
I really enjoy these videos. I watch them daily. I trust the research made.
The clues he said are true. Except the board house is no longer there. There is a horse face, a stone man, a face rock facing East, the four peeks looking like one peek and they are not hieroglyphs.
If the LDM was a very rich mine you can bet the u.s. guvment snatched it many moons ago
You hit the nail on the head because them greedy s.o.b. have stole from any and everyone who has something they want. Im talking about the puppets and the ones over the puppets.
Yep. Just like victorial peak on white sands
They've done it elsewhere. National parks ,forests and all federal land is exploited
@@dougeverett4350
Hello, what did you mean, can you be more detailed? you wanted to say that - “Every recreation area they have created, every monument they have protected, every park they have created is to lock away important resources or to hide critical history.” despite all the prohibitions that they themselves mine gold and exploit the places where any activity is prohibited for an ordinary person?
Can't find what dosnt exist
just to make sure everyone out there under stand the true facts of the LDM , Waltz did something at the mine that proves with out any doubt what so ever that the real LDM is in fact his mine . everyone that ever hunted for the mine missed it .. waltz did in fact tell Julia something she forgot to tell others about because it sounded like it had nothing to do with finding the mine but in fact it was the one clue that proves there is ONLY 1 real LDM . and waltz made sure of it ....it dates the mine and directly links the mine to Waltz him self .
@@GeorgiaRidgerunner his real name was Waltz there was a video done by the museum called the history of Waltz or something like that , it tells about his past and who he was very well investigated and they also say his name was Waltz i have a 1895 news paper about the LDM mine and those searching for it , and it spells his name Waltz
Thank you, For Amazing Story!!
The clue about the board house was a milk or dairy barn for milk cows
Sounds like a wild goose chase death awaits you if there's gold the Apaches ain't gonna tell ya
The Superstition Mountains was formed by volcanic ash cemented under extreme heat welded together with lava and tuff into a conglomerate. Professional geologists and assayers have said for years the composition of Superstition Mts. doesn't contain any gold. The Dutchman Jacob Waltz was actually getting the gold ore from the Mammoth and Black Queen Mines about 5 miles from the Superstition Mts. located on modern day Apache Rd. whereas the Merrill brothers and Morse Hakes had figured out where the Dutchman was getting his gold from. Shortly after his death the Mammoth and Black Queen mines were opened and the mines produced millions of dollars in gold. That is the only gold that has been found any where near the Superstition Mountains and all the years since the story that Jacob Waltz spun to protect the location of the mine was actually located shortly after his death but today its just a tale that old men like to set around and jaw about!
The matchbox made from under the Dutchman’s bed was analyzed in a non destructive test at the school of mines in Nevada. It was compared to ALL the mines in the Superstition/Goldfield mining district. This included the Mammoth the Black Queen the Bulldog and the Vulture mine at Wickenberg.
The test concluded that the Dutchman’s gold was not from any of these mines and was from totally unknown source.
The gold was also examined by three Arizona geologist as well as Joe Poterie the chief assayer of all the above mines. The Dutchman’s gold was not from any known mine. I know the owner of the matchbox it was gifted to him from Brownie Holmes the son of Dick Holmes who was at the bed side of Jacob Waltz when he died along with Gideon Roberts who witnessed in court that Waltz gave the gold to Holmes. You are also wrong about no gold found closer to the Superstition Mountain than Goldfield. The Palmer mine is located on a fault at the very base of Superstition Mountain on the west end. In addition Goldfield is a collapsed caldera and the Mammoth is an intrusion from volcanics. Superstition Mountain is a resurgent collapsed caldera itself in EXACTLY the same volcanics as Goldfield.
@@larryhedrick254 Your a victim of stupidity,again it is has been proven through assays there isn't any gold not so much as a nugget ever found in the Superstition Mountains unless its been planted there.
Could you imagine , inviting some hard living grunt types to live in your home with your daughter ??? What a different time they lived in.
The mine was near Roger's spring but it been worked out. Nothing left.
How would you know that?
Jack Purcell
The Lost Adams Diggings: Myth, Mystery and Madness
Great video
Alright!! Amazing!!
Maybe the mine is under the board house?
No.. it's near Roger's spring but it's already been worked out.
David I’m not asking because I have issue it’s none of my business and I’ll assume it’s all worked out but is most of your LD videos copied from mysteries of the superstitions channel? Or you bringing in from multiple sources. I appreciate any guidance. With 1.2 thousand videos it’s hard to sort
No thank you for asking I am the producer of Mysteries of the Superstition Mountains Charlie and I started the show my years ago
@@DavidJonesOpalImages I should of known sorry about that. Thanks for the great work. I started watching religiously about six months before Charlie passed. I always enjoy when one of the videos I stumble on has him in it. We have lost a number of important people in the treasure hunting community the last few years.
You happen to be going to the treasure hunter rendezvous next weekend?
@@legacyXplore Thanks for watching!
What about drone exploration. Seemed that would be easier.
Tokyo
Drones are forbidden to operate within the wilderness according to the Forest Service.
If you had a gold mine and you had gold stashed in the Superstition Mountains, where would you put the house you lived in. Would you put your house on the opposite side of the mountains from your mine? Where would you live if you wanted to keep tabs on your mine?
Myron:
The Dutchman did not build the board house and Matt Cavaness, who did build it in 1875, did not build it for any reason that had anything to do with the Dutchman or the gold mine. He built it because it was a perfect location for his cattle ranch.
The board house later became a clue because of the newspaper notoriety of the search for a dutch Hunter, named Adolph Ruth, who lost his life searching for the mine in 1931.
@@larryhedrick254 Yes, but he did have a house in Phoenix.:) gold is pretty heavy to haul around. I think he would have thought about some things in a practical way based on how hard it would be to lug out the gold. I think logistics were more of a problem back then
@@larryhedrick254 I guess what I am saying is I think the mine is on the West Side closer to where his house was in Phoenix. I think the board house clue just makes that even more of a likely hood.
@@myronww
It’s 42 miles from where his house was in Phoenix to the EAST end of Superstition Mountain where it Board house was located. To get there he would have gone around the south side of the Superstition.
It’s all flat land going around and it makes no sense to go THROUGH the Superstitions to get to the board house where Waltz stated was the starting place to get to his mine.
The closeness to his home in Phoenix has no bearing on it mines location.
Is there anything left of the Dutchman's store out there?
Donna
It sat abandoned for years and I tried to get the owner to allow the museum to tear it down for the lumber but I never got permission. It’s been gone for many years and I don’t know just what was the final outcome.
That is sad. It would have been better off at the museum.
@@larryhedrick254 Larry could you tell me if you know what was going on around Canyon Lake back in 1908. I have found 2 rocks. One was a trail marker left by natives and the other was marked 1908 about 20ft apart
@@donnacarr4599
The Apache Trail, the road built to construct Roosevelt Dam, was started in 1903 and finished in 1905. The dam was dedicated in 1911. None of the lower dams were constructed (Canyon Lake) in 1911.
In 1908 millions of pounds of materials were being shipped from the Mesa railhead to Roosevelt Dam right through where Canyon Lake would be eventually filled.
There were trail markers made out of cement every mile and every half mile from one end of the trail to the other. One of those markers is in the museum. You may have found temporary markers placed where the permanent markers of cement would be installed.
All I can add is that there was horrendous activity around and all through the area from 1903 on.
Donna: this might help.
ruclips.net/video/-NP3bd9Na28/видео.html
I believe the LDM is the bulldog mine
Sounds like they are the same person !!
You know these videos you're stealing from 'Mysteries of the Superstition Mountains' are copyrighted. Copyright infringement is a federal crime. You better hope their production company doesn't press charges.
Check the Credits I am the Producer of Mysteries of the Superstition Mountains, I ever tell a few of the stories on the channel.Thx for protecting us.
That's a relief, sorry about the mistake. I have enjoyed your videos for years and it made me a little mad to think someone was stealing all your hard work. Thanks again for your great videos
I thought some one said a flood took out the board house ?
Warren
The flood took down his Adobe in Phoenix. The board house was located on the east end of Superstition Mountain some 40 miles away.
This is from Mysteries of the Superstition Mountains....Hope you got permission for this....No worries...Snitches end up in Ditches where I come from so...
Yes he dose
Slow at first but worth a watch...
Evil prevails when good men remain silent . Just sayin. It's a balancing act. Each of us has to decide what is serious enough to speak up about , and what's not. I wouldn't say anything about pirating videos . They always catch up with em anyway. Kidnapping , and murder ?!?!? Well , that's cat of another fur !!
As far that im concerned the mine is not in arizona, someone would of found it already.
Bollocks
Silence is GOLDEN!
no the mine is not under the board house , the mine is real and i do agree with what Waltz said about the board house , knowing where the mine is i can say he is in fact telling the truth when he stated this clue ...
yes i am Blindbowman and yes i found the mine in the fall of 2006 .
You dont know.
@@secretsquirrel6718 lol i am the only one that has found it ..
@@robertlawton3443 my uncle found it back in the 70s
@@secretsquirrel6718 i don't know what your Uncle found but it was not the real LDM ... LOL there are a lot of old mines out there and twice as many that have been filled in threw the years .. if you believe your Uncle found it back in the 70's then you better start doing some better research ...
@@robertlawton3443 hes got the gold to prove it
No one will ever find it because it's on government property...
If the gov. found it, it's gone! Just like half your check!
Actually Apache Indians know location but government doesn’t most likely from what they told me! It’s well hidden by Waltz sealed off
L
Translation ain't worth a hoot!
LDM +++++
it was the mammoth mine
Impossible
Proven wrong
What about Jacob Waltz's house right near his buried mine?