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MARYLAND LOST TREASURES & HISTORY

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Explore Maryland Treasure Stories

$150,000 in Buried Gold in the Conococheague Valley  (In addition to the article found at this link, other stories claim that in 1921 Grover Cleveland Bergdoll and his brother Erwin were still on the run trying to avoid Federal authorities who were anxious to prosecute them for draft evasion during WWI. While staying at a hotel in Hagerstown, they had allegedly received $150,000 in gold coins as payment for some illicit activity, $110,000 of which was buried in 5 valises "as heavy as lead" somewhere in the area. One source says the hoard was cached to the S. of Hagerstown in the general vicinity of Harper's Ferry. Others believe it is located just south of Brownsville, somewhere along Hwy. 67)

Revolutionary Coins Found at Gwynn's Falls

The Mansion House Treasure.  Legends tell of two substantial treasures consisting of $65,000 and sea chests of gold and jewels, possibly that of Captain Kidd, buried or concealed in the vicinity of the Old Mansion House in the Baltimore region.  There have been at least two different stories connected with mansions in the vicinity, which has created some confusion as to the true location of possible hidden treasure.  The most well-known mansion is located on Druid Hill in the center of Druid Hill Park where the Maryland Zoo (formerly Baltimore Zoo) is now located.  According to the historical book Maryland: A Guide to the Old Line State published in 1940, "On a hilltop south of Memorial Grove in the center of the park is the former home of the Rogers family.  It is Georgian with Roman treatment. An outside stairway to the second story peristyle gives the arcaded first floor the appearance of a basement.  The house is topped with a pyramid roof at the apex of which is a square cupola.  Its first floor houses a restaurant and its basement, the park police headquarters.  A rumor that Captain Kidd had buried treasure on this hill brought so much digging by treasure seekers that the house was in danger of being undermined and they had to be restrained.  No treasure was discovered."  Regarding this property, the history of Druid Hill Park began centuries ago when the Susquehannock Indians ceded this land to Lord Baltimore in 1652.  It was a desirable place for Native Americans because of its access to the Jones Falls stream valley as well as multiple springs on the site.   It was formerly the estate of George Buchanan, one of the seven commissioners responsible for the establishment of Baltimore City.  His Auchentorlie estate included 579 of the 745 acres that comprise Druid Hill Park now.  In 1709, the land was acquired by the Scottishman Lloyd Nicholas Rogers and renamed Druid Hill who maintained the site as an orchard and plantation for many years, relying on enslaved African Americans for labor.  Before it was sold to the city by his grandson Nicholas Rogers, the property had been laid out in the same style of an English country landscape. In 1860, as part of a nationwide movement to provide large parks for urban city dwellers, Mayor Swann selected 573 acres of land to purchase for the city's first large "country park" (third largest in the country) employing creative long-term bond financing over 30 years which Nicholas Rogers, one of the major land owners, was not pleased with and was resistant to.  When the Druid Hill estate was finally purchased, only the mansion house remained amidst acres of neglected old fields and orchards, a large stand of virgin forest, the cemeteries of the Rogers family in the northwest corner of the park (see photo above left), and an unmarked slave cemetery.  (Older pictures of the mansion on Druid Hill)  (More Druid Hill Park Photos and Information)  A book about nearby Johns Hopkins entitled The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science also mentions a nearby old mansion house in an 1880 account, "On the east side of the Harford Turnpike, leading out of Baltimore City, adjoining what has for several years past been known as 'Darley Park,' about one and a half miles from the City Hall, has stood for a century past an old-fashioned, substantial and spacious mansion house, with numerous outbuildings, all of stone and old English brick.  It is just discernible through the branches of numerous aged trees, at a distance of perhaps three hundred yards from the road.  For half a century it has been known as the Barnum property, having been, and still being, in the possession of the family of that name, who were the founders of the famous Barnum's Hotel.  Thirty or Forty years ago the elder David Barnum resided there.  The tract comprises about twenty-five acres, and the grounds around the old mansion house, although sadly out of repair since the death of David Barnum some twenty years ago, are still inviting and picturesque, with their box-wood walks, bordered roadways lined with rows of cedars, fine old fruit trees, and rosebush clusters here and there.  In the rear, southeast corner of the enclosure stands the Columbus Monument, on an elevated plateau, which seems to have been artificially arranged, bearing the inscription Sacred to the Memory of Christopher Columbus, October 12, 1792."  

Another home often referred to as the mansion house (although much smaller than the mansion on Druid Hill) also owned by the Rodgers family was built by Robert A. Taylor in 1853.  This house is located on the northern outskirts of Baltimore near Rodgers Forge and Druid Ridge at 300 Dumbarton Rd., now housing the Baltimore Actors Theatre and Conservatory.  The original entrance to the home on what was once a sprawling estate is still marked by two gray stone pillars on Bellona Avenue at the west end of the Tot Lot.  The Taylor mansion with its 200-acre estate was purchased  by Joseph A. Rieman, with the easternmost section of the land eventually becoming the Estate section of the community, and the last 25 acres later passing to his daughter Mrs. Charlotte McIntosh before being sold in the 1950s to the Baltimore County Board of Education.  (Map of the Area)

 

 

 

  

 

 

 


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