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Find affordable pirate treasure map items
 $15.85 | |
|  $2.99 | |
|  $2.19 | |
|  $0.99 | |
|  $7.95 | |
|  $3.49 | |
|  $4.99 | |
|  $4.99 | |
|  $7.87 | |
|  $9.99 | |
|  $6.95 | |
|  $0.99 | |
|  $3.99 | |
|  $7.95 | |
|  $0.99 | |
|  $7.95 | |
|  $18.89 | |
|  $4.95 | |
|  $49.99 | |
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myLot pirate treasure map commmentary
| Legendary Lost Treasures of the Northeastern United States | | The world is full of stories about lost gold mines and treasures. The most famous might be the Lost Dutchman Mine of the southwest. We have all heard of Captain Kidd's treasure. I personally have seen about twenty maps each allegedly depicting the location of his buried booty. They range everywhere from Oak Island in Canada to the Caribbean. This treasure was actually once believed to have been buried along the Hudson River. In the 19th Century someone bought up all the shoreline in the supposed location, built a levy, siphoned off the water, then proceeded to dig up the area. Needless to say he found nothing.
There is also no shortage of lost mines in the area which held vast stores of silver. The least known of which was the Lost Tinker Mine. About all that is known about it comes from an old and shaggy obituary from the 1940s. It simply states that an old Indian had died who was the last living person who knew the location of the mine. He so hated the white man for his misdeed against the Indian that he swore that he'd never tell it's secrets to any white man and he'd take it to his grave. If he did have a secret he must have taken it with him.
Another somewhat more widely... | |
| | | Pirate Democracy | | I found this using stumbleupon, goddess I love stumbleupon, find such cool stuff.http://www.unknowncountry.com/news/?id=5415
[b]NOT a referral link[/b]
Sociologists from Florida who are studying old-fashioned pirates who sailed the oceans in the 17th and 18th centuries (not the modern, movie kind) say that pirates were pioneers when it came to exploring new territory and meeting the native peoples they found there.Researcher Jason Acosta says, "Hollywood really has given pirates a bum rap with its image of bloodthirsty, one-eyed, peg-legged men who bury treasure and force people to walk the plank. We owe them a little more respect." He ought to know, since one of his ancestors was a pirate who fought for the United States in the Battle of New Orleans. He compared pirate charters with the Declaration of Independence and the US Constitution and was amazed by the similarities.Like the American revolutionaries, pirates developed three branches of government with checks and balances. The ship captain was elected, just as the US president; the pirate assembly was comparable to Congress; and the quartermaster resembled a judge in settling shipmate... | |
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myLot pirate treasure map commmentary
| Legendary Lost Treasures of the Northeastern United States | | The world is full of stories about lost gold mines and treasures. The most famous might be the Lost Dutchman Mine of the southwest. We have all heard of Captain Kidd's treasure. I personally have seen about twenty maps each allegedly depicting the location of his buried booty. They range everywhere from Oak Island in Canada to the Caribbean. This treasure was actually once believed to have been buried along the Hudson River. In the 19th Century someone bought up all the shoreline in the supposed location, built a levy, siphoned off the water, then proceeded to dig up the area. Needless to say he found nothing.
There is also no shortage of lost mines in the area which held vast stores of silver. The least known of which was the Lost Tinker Mine. About all that is known about it comes from an old and shaggy obituary from the 1940s. It simply states that an old Indian had died who was the last living person who knew the location of the mine. He so hated the white man for his misdeed against the Indian that he swore that he'd never tell it's secrets to any white man and he'd take it to his grave. If he did have a secret he must have taken it with him.
Another somewhat more widely... | |
| | | Pirate Democracy | | I found this using stumbleupon, goddess I love stumbleupon, find such cool stuff.http://www.unknowncountry.com/news/?id=5415
[b]NOT a referral link[/b]
Sociologists from Florida who are studying old-fashioned pirates who sailed the oceans in the 17th and 18th centuries (not the modern, movie kind) say that pirates were pioneers when it came to exploring new territory and meeting the native peoples they found there.Researcher Jason Acosta says, "Hollywood really has given pirates a bum rap with its image of bloodthirsty, one-eyed, peg-legged men who bury treasure and force people to walk the plank. We owe them a little more respect." He ought to know, since one of his ancestors was a pirate who fought for the United States in the Battle of New Orleans. He compared pirate charters with the Declaration of Independence and the US Constitution and was amazed by the similarities.Like the American revolutionaries, pirates developed three branches of government with checks and balances. The ship captain was elected, just as the US president; the pirate assembly was comparable to Congress; and the quartermaster resembled a judge in settling shipmate... | |
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