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Some people only dream about visiting the wild west I am Lord Rick and I live it!





    


 This exploration was a spinoff of my tour to three lakes as the two seemed to be connected.  Aztec tales have seemed to have swept the area a few times during the 1900s. Perhaps these gold rushes back in the day occurred due to the fact that life in the wild west also meant a struggle against death.

This addition to our site gives our viewers a chance to view one of the oldest areas of our country where the west is still perhaps wild. With hidden cemeteries, white rock, ghost towns, gun smoke film set and legends of gold their is never a dull moment.

In this addition to the site your going to see all of these things all within one exploration. Although some might not agree I believe that Freddie Crystal was onto something. Back in the day when he showed a map that may have led to treasure what they did not realize is that the greatest treasure of all may have been the skeletal remains found hidden in mines/caves said to be much older then when pioneers first settled here.

I spent many days studying video footage here at our offices and felt that their is a certain oddity about this location. Granted some believe their are hidden passages in the Johnson Canyon caves however the people of Johnson Canyon did heavily mine the area so anything archaological may have been destroyed or signs as to where the gold was relocated to.

Although some felt the Aztecs never went this far north I have learned that the native american people migrated thousands of miles so why would it be any different for the Aztecs. They were an advanced civilization who could move thousands of pounds of gold for miles with its own armies.

I did not have an opportunity to visit the mines but I did hike in close to them. During that hike I climbed the Escalante Staircase, Visited a Cemetery and farmstead in the wildnerness. I had my dinner out by an old sandstone rock formation and even seen these rodents that can climb down a rock faster then your eyes can keep up with it.

I have read that a mining company wishes to purchases the area digging it up sadly the caves are of historical signifances and need to be properly excavated. Not only should they be preserved but there also needs to be taken into consideration the fact that this may be one of the last frontiers in the United States where the wild west was won.

I would love to revisit the area but like most men who come out of here with more questions then answers I am just admiring its beauty. I have no intentions of finding the gold however it needs to go to a museum. Whether the gold is buried deeper within these caves which partially collapsed or up at three lakes the thought of alteraing history is definitely exhilerating.  Crystal spent countless days searching for clues and some feel he was very close to unlocking these caves secrets as one passage had a wall sealed up with mortor while other walls within the cave told of a tale.

Within the white cliffs the mystery may remain but man may cover it up only concealing it forever. The Aztecs were an advanced culture and on Montezumas grave he swore that nobody would ever have his gold. Just as he cursed the land around him it has kept adventurers seeking treasure and signs of southern Utahs greatest mystery. Feel free to check out our trip to Click Here: Three Lakes thank you.

Copywritten By
Lord Rick ~ AngelOfThyNight


   
      

       

         

        

   

Dusk

           

   
 

Johnson Canyon

Posted by Spencer Coles in

Montezumas Treasure

February 1519 a fleet of eleven Spanish ships landed on the coast of Mexico near the modern day port of Vera Cruz. Onboard was a force of nearly six hundred Conquistadors; led by the infamous Hernán Cortés, they had come to Mexico to conquer the land and convert its people to Christianity in the name of the Holy Roman Church… And if they all got filthy rich in the process — that was okay too!
Portrait of Hernan Cortes
Hernan Cortés
When news of the strange, white-skinned men reached the Aztec emperor, Montezuma, he must have been reminded of the prophecy of Quetzalcoatl, the Aztec sun god, which stated that one day the god would return to the land of the Aztec to claim his throne – and he would be known by his shining hair and white skin.
Montezuma dispatched servants bearing rich gifts for the newly arrived gods in hopes that they would go away and leave him in charge. But Montezuma’s plan backfired – when Cortés saw the precious objects, crafted from gold and silver, he knew he’d come to the right place – he immediately set his sights on the Aztec’s capitol city of Tenochtitlán, (present day Mexico City).
On November 18, 1519, Cortés entered the Aztec capital and was received as a god at a lavish ceremony in Montezuma’s palace.
Montezuma was use to being at the top of the food-chain, so after the ceremony he once again tried to persuade Cortés and his men to leave the city by offering more gifts of gold and silver, but this just intensified the Spaniards lust for gold. Cortés placed Montezuma under house arrest and then, along with about 600 native Tlaxcalan allies, the Spaniards set up base in one of the Aztec’s many ceremonial temples.
With Montezuma imprisoned the conquistadors went about ransacking his palace where they found a secret vault so full of treasure that it took three days just to divide the spoils. It was enough to make every Spaniard rich beyond his wildest dreams – but still they wanted more…
In the following months Cortés began a bloody campaign of terror. His men terrorized the city, torturing and killing it’s inhabitants in an attempt to obtain even more treasure – including the location of the fabled city of El Dorado.
The Aztecs eventually grew weary of the Spaniard’s tyranny, and over time they began to question Cortés’ divinity as well, so when a group of conquistadors destroyed one of the cities main temples, and slaughtered it’s high priests, things turned against the Spaniards.
On June 30, 1520, the Aztec people rose against the Spaniards. Cortés forced the imprisoned Montezuma to appear upon the piazza of his house in an attempt to pacify his subjects. But apparently, the people had had enough of Montezuma as well. The Emperor was stoned to death by his own people.
With their hostage dead, Cortés and his men were forced to flee the city. They retreated amid a full on uprising, attacked from all sides by Aztec spears and stones. As the conquistadors fled the city, they threw down their newly won fortunes, littering the cities’ network of concentric irrigation channels with the treasure they had stolen from Montezuma’s treasury.
Many of Cortés’ men died on that dark and rainy night. It’s said that the bodies of the dead were piled so high in the citie’s canals that one could walk across them, from one side to the next – a grisly bridge of corpses. The night came to be known as La Noche Triste (The Sad Night).
Cortés rebuilt his army and a year later returned to Tenochtitlan. On August 13, 1521, with the help of his Tlaxcalan allies, Cortés took the city back. The new Aztec emperor, Cuauhtémoc, was captured while fleeing the city and tortured to reveal the locations of the Aztec treasure. But even with his feet held in a fire, the doomed Emperor couldn’t produce more than a canoe full of trinkets. According to Cuauhtémoc, the treasure was forever lost.
In desperation Cortés allowed for the torturing of anybody who he thought might help him discover the location of the treasure, men, women or children.
As the story goes, the only information ever gleaned by torturing these poor people was that the treasure had been taken north and hidden at the bottom of a lake. Cortés would later search approximately 5,000 lakes in the surrounding regions in an effort to find Montezuma’s treasure…
He never did.
WHERE DID MONTEZUMA’S TREASURE GO?
There are many theories about what happened to Montezuma’s Treasure. Some historians believe that it remains right where it was dropped that fateful night when the Conquistadors fled from Tenochtitlan, buried for all time beneath layers of silt and cement of modern day Mexico city.
Others believe the treasure was retrieved from the irrigation channels by the Spaniards when they took the city back, sent to Spain, then lost at sea when the ship that carried it was sunk by a tropical storm. But surely the most interesting theory involves an incredible journey of Biblical proportion.
There’s a persistent tale handed down by descendants of the Aztecs in Costa Rica – it goes a little something like this:
When Cortés and his soldiers were driven from Tenochtitlan on La Noche Triste, the Aztec high Priests knew it would only be a matter of time before the Spaniards returned. They realize that they could not defend against the conquistador’s superior weapons forever – their civilization was doomed.
The priests dug up the body of their fallen leader, Montezuma, then led a procession of more than 2,000 men on a mass exodus in search a new land to the north, a land that would be safe from the barbaric Spaniards.
The priests took with them the collected treasures of the Aztec empire, tons of gold and silver in the form of sacred religious objects they would need to reestablish their once great civilization.
According to the legend, the treasure-bearing slaves traveled in a northwesterly direction for many moons, and when they came to a mountain on the edge of a desert, the treasure was hidden and the slaves put to death.
There is much disagreement about just how far north the exodus traveled, but certainly the most interesting theory circulating among the treasure hunting community is that the treasure was carried over two thousand miles to southern Utah.

      A few miles east of Kanab, a deep canyon slices northward through the Vermillion Cliffs of Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument. Johnson Canyon has an eclectic past. During the 1870’s the infamous John D. Lee, chief perpetrator in the Mountain Meadows Massacre, called the canyon home. In the mid-1900’s it served as movie set for multiple Hollywood westerns. While being featured in Gunsmoke was no doubt a prestigious achievement, what really fascinated me was the canyon’s central role in one of Utah’s biggest treasure hunts.
     In 1914, a man named Freddie Crystal walked down Main Street in Kanab clutching a treasure map. He claimed that his map revealed the hiding place of King Montezuma’s fabled Aztec treasure. When the outsider inquired around town, obliging locals informed Freddie that his map resembled a section of the White Cliffs northeast of the city limits.
     Crystal spent several years fruitlessly scouring the area, until he ran across some moqui steps carved into the canyon wall. Alongside the carvings, he found what appeared to be three sandstone tunnels. One of the tunnels, he claimed, was blocked off with stone and mortar foreign to the area.
     Mr. Crystal returned to Kanab seeking help. In return, he promised to share the abundant treasure lying in wait. Crystal and his newly gathered posse of Kanabites pitched their tents at the base of the White Cliffs near Cottonwood and Skutumpah Canyons. As they commenced digging, the group allegedly found multiple chambers and side passages within the cliffs; some blocked off with stone and mortar, just like the tunnel entrance had been.
     After a few months of digging and no treasure to show for it, most of the residents gave up their dreams of riches and resumed the normal routine of their lives. All the explorers had found in the cliffs was a sandstone chamber housing a few Native-American artifacts and human remains. Crystal, however, remained convinced that he was hot on Montezuma’s trail. He spent several more years in the canyons surrounding Kanab, searching for signs.
     Freddie Crystal believed the Aztecs had chipped those passages out of the sandstone cliff to serve as a secret cache for their riches. He subscribed wholeheartedly to old legends claiming that King Montezuma spirited off a portion of the Aztec royal treasury during their conflict with Cortez and the Conquistadors.
(story courtesy of WildernessUtah.com)


     In the spring of 1989, Grandt Child came up with another theory. He decided that the real hiding place was not in Johnson's Canyon and the signs in the canyon were a ploy to divert attention from the real hiding place. Child believes the treasure is in the lower pond of the three lakes chain, six miles north of Kanab on Highway 89. He found an Aztec treasure sign, a circle with an arrow pointing down, carved in the rock 8 feet above the water level on the wall above the lakes. The site fits the criteria for an Aztec treasure hiding technique, called a "water trap."

     Tony Thurber, friend of Child's, made a dive to explore the lake. Under the treasure sign he discovered a tunnell about four feet wide and seven feet tall that appeared to be handmade. When Thurber got 30 feet into the tunnel, he was disoriented and couldn't tell if he was going down or up, or in or out. He said he got caught in a heavy draft and was afraid he might get swept into an underground river.
     He finally found his way out. He went down again with a tether line attached, but surfaced. He got concerned when he found the line limp rather than taut as it should have been. The person holding the line said it had been taut the whole time.
     On June 22, 1989, Thurber returned with three professional divers. The divers got 70 feet back in the tunnel. Their sonar equipment showed the tunnel was 100 feet long and ended in a room 80 feet in diameter. Detectors registered heavy metal at the end of the tunnel. It was late, so they quit for the day. That night Russ, one of the divers, had a dream. In the dream he swam back to the cave, an Aztec warrior with a spear was waiting and threw the spear at Russ when he surfaced.
     Russ was the first to go down the next morning. At a certain point in the tunnell, he started screaming that someone was grabbing and choking him. As he was pulled from the water he appeared white as a sheet. Another diver went down and had the same experience.
     The divers left and returned in two weeks. They experienced the same choking sensation in the tunnell and had to be pulled up. The diving crew did not dive in the lake anymore.
     Childs decided on a plan to drain the lake. To his surprise, the pond happens to be the only known habitat of the Kanab Amber Snail. The property was fenced off by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.  Then in December of 1991, 11 geese were mysteriously placed in the pond. The gaggle of geese was accused of eating the Kanab Amber Snails. The agency decided to capture the suspects and force them to vomit. After gathering the evidence, the geese were donated to an animal sanctuary. Killing one of the endangered snails is a serious offense and carries a fine of up to $50,000 per snail. No one came forward to claim the geese.
Information courtesy Southern Utah News, June 27, 1990.

OTHER THEORIES ON THE TREASURE’S LOCATION
There are many other theories about what happened to Montezuma’s Treasure, but none of them are half as fun as the Utah theory:

The Grand Canyon

In 1865, a prospector by the name of Jim White was rafting down the Colorado River. He claims to have discovered a cave that contained thousands and thousands of golden idols and other objects, Montezuma’s treasure. White reached civilization after weeks of hardships. He was starving and delirious when he got to a town. He said the cave was located near the ruins of an old Indian camp on the south bank of the Colorado in the Lower Granite Gorge of the Grand Canyon, about three miles from Pierce Ferry. Many searches have turned up nothing.

(Story coutesy http://www.treasurestories.com)

Lake Tezcuco

Some believe that when the inhabitants of Tenochtitlán got wind of the Spaniards return, they buried the remains of the city’s treasure in and around Lake Tezcuco to prevent it from falling prey to the gold-crazed Conquistadors. Today, a vast treasure trove may still remain hidden beneath nearly five centuries of mud and sludge on the outskirts of Mexico City, the modern day incarnation of Tenochtitlán. Generations of treasure seekers have sought the lost hoard without success. A former president of Mexico even had the lake bed dredged, but no treasure was found.

Guatemala

According to information first discovered by an archaeologist named Thomas Gann, Montezuma’s treasure was not sent north, but south into the jungles of Guatemala to keep it from the Spanish.

The Lost Dutchman’s Gold Mine – Arizona

Some believe there’s a link between the Legendary Lost Dutchman’s Gold Mine and Montezuma’s Gold. Jacob Waltz, (the Dutchman) found a source of pure, raw gold in the Superstition Mountains of Arizona, a location geologists say is devoid of gold deposits. It’s this apparently lack of mineral evidence which has led some researchers to speculate that the Dutchman may have actually stumbled over Montezuma’s fabled Lost Aztec Treasure.


Story From Salt Lake Tribune: "Want to find Aztec gold? Search soon"

Want to find Aztec gold? Search soon
Montezuma's treasure has been rumored to be hidden deep in mines that'll be closed shortly
By Mark Havnes
The Salt Lake Tribune
Salt Lake Tribune
Article Last Updated:04/03/2008 10:41:45 AM MDT
 
KANAB - Sorry, prospective prospectors, but you'll have to bury those dreams of unearthing Montezuma's gold.
    Land managers plan to close nearly two dozen abandoned mines on southern Utah's Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, including some shafts outside Kanab where residents used to hunt for the Aztec emperor's rumored riches.

    Old mines pose safety perils. Curious kids and other explorers can get trapped, injured or worse. Some shafts contain lethal gases.
    Douglas Powell, a geologist with the Bureau of Land Management, said the mines need to be closed to protect the increasing number of visitors who traipse through the 1.9 million-acre monument in Kane and Garfield counties.

    Steve Fluke, an environmental scientist with the Utah Division of Oil, Gas and Mining, said crews could begin closing 22 mines in September at a cost of about $1,200 per site. They sometimes use backfill, masonry, stones or steel grates - which provide access for bats that frequent some of the caves.

    The closures comply with a 1977 law that mandates shutting down abandoned mines by tapping coal royalties. In 2004, 46 mines were closed on the monument.

    There are no active mining claims on the monument now, although BLM archaeologist Matt Zweifel said he still fields occasional inquiries from hopeful prospectors.

    Conditions were much different a century or so ago. Starting around the 1880s, miners began probing these parts of southern Utah for copper, lead, manganese and coal.

    Then, in the 1920s, a man named Freddy Crystal showed up, claiming he had a map that identified Johnson Canyon, east of Kanab, as the place Montezuma's treasures - said to have been spirited from Mexico to keep out of the hands of Spanish conquistadors - had been hidden.

    Many residents caught gold fever and began burrowing into a mountain, creating what became known as Montezuma Mine.
    The treasure hunters struck out and eventually lost interest. Now, those shafts are slated for closure.
    Kane County resident Monte Chamberlain doubts the Montezuma Mine is a hazard and noted it remains popular with locals, including Boy Scouts.

    "We never found gold there," he said, "but never lost a Scout, either."
    mhavnes@sltrib.com

 

Historic tunnels in Kanab to be destroyed - Corey Shuman, GRE, Inc.
April 5th, 2008

There are a series of tunnels in Kanab that have long been associated
with the Aztec empire and hidden Spanish gold. The area has never been
mined, however it has been excavated. It's an Indiana Jones type of
adventure but its real, and it's in our own back yard. In 1914,
Freddie Crystal rolled into Kanab, Utah, with a map, a map he claimed
would lead directly to a piece of the horde that had been stashed by
Montezuma hundreds of years ago. He showed the map around, looking for
information on the surrounding country. Almost everyone who saw the
map recognized the area in question as "White Mountain" and pointed
him in that direction.

Once in the area, Freddie immediately found signs that he was in the
right place, Aztec writings littered the area, and the map directed
him right to an ancient set of stairs cut directly into the mountain.
He followed the steps up to a sealed entrance, and from that point,
the hunt was on. He went back into Kanab and announced that he had
found what he was looking for, but now needed help in excavating the
site. The townspeople rallied and nearly emptied the town of Kanab.
They broke through numerous blockades in the mountain, encountering
deadfall traps and other perils showing that these tunnels were not
meant to be accessed by anyone but a descendant of the Aztecs who knew
how to disable the pitfalls. The excavation went on for almost a year,
clearing deadfall after deadfall, finding relics and ancient items,
but never the gold. Finally, with the tunnels all reopened and no gold
found the townspeople went back to their day to day lives and forgot
about the tunnels up in Johnson canyon.

Brandt Childs remembers: " "It led into a big room," he says, "but all
they found was just bones of mules and a few artifacts. No gold. But
then they found another tunnel and it had a plug in it too. So they
dug it out."

At the end of the second tunnel, the gold seekers came upon still
another cavernous room in which they discovered a large human skeleton
propped in a sitting position. "They called him Smiley," recalls
Child, "because he looked like he was smiling."

No one else in the room was smiling, however, because there was no
gold whatsoever-only a handful of pre-Columbian artifacts plus a
sacrificial altar, "where they'd tear the hearts out of men and throw
their bodies over the cliff." Also, the ashes of ancient campfires,
"with human fingers all wrapped in bark, ready for roasting, and human
legs, and things like that."

Great story, right? Pack up and you're all ready to go check out this
area. However, this brings Gold Rush Expeditions in to the story, in
the beginning of April, almost like an April fools joke, the
Department of Oil Gas and Mining (OGM) announced that they were going
to begin operations shortly to "reclaim" this mine site. "What??" This
isn't a mine site, it's an obviously a site of historic and
archeological significance. Add to that the site isn't a mine, or
anything close to it, its origins date back to the times of Cortez,
Montezuma.

So then WTF is the OGM doing down there. Well, it's the latest of a
long line of intrusions from the OGM, destroying what little is left
of Utah's history, mining and otherwise. GRE has been advocating for
years that this organization either needs to be removed, or revamped
to help preserve the amazing historical sites that Utah has to offer.
The OGM was founded to reclaim coal mines, and is funded from coal
mine money. But, in the opinion of GRE, it's not that interesting to
close up coal mines, so why not move into hard rock mines, and
historic sites? Areas of historic significance are being destroyed,
while the open abandoned coal mines across the state, the ones that
OGM should be addressing, are being left open with no attention. And
in the case of the tunnels in Johnson canyon, these sites are not well
known, and so it's easy enough for OGM to step in and destroy the
sites forever.

So what now, will OGM be successful in their bid to destroy this site
next? There is a push from Doug Powell of the Grand Staircase
Escalante National monument to "reclaim" these tunnels. And if
uncontested, this historic area will be destroyed by these groups that
are supposed to protect our resources.

GRE will be spearheading an effort to stop this closure, but we need
your help. On April 11th, GRE will be heading down to Kanab to meet
with area historians to document and tour the site. We welcome anyone
who would like to join us for this excursion. In addition will be
writing letters to the Grand Staircase Escalante Monument management,
the Division of Oil, Gas and Mining and the Kane County BLM to voice
our opposition to this destructive initiative.

If you would like to help, please email i...@goldrushexpeditions.com
for more information on how you can help. If you have any contacts in
the media that can help to bring publicity to this issue, please let
me know.Your history is being eradicated now, and you need to make
your opinions heard now to stop the destruction.
Thanks for your time and efforts.

_________________
Corey Shuman
Gold Rush Expeditions, Inc.
Utah Ghost Town and Mine Preservation


 


 

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