KRUGER MILLIONS
President Kruger’s Hidden Gold
Overview
According to legend, somewhere in South Africa lies hidden a hoard of gold allegedly hidden by President Paul Kruger between 1899 and 1902.
In an attempt to prevent the gold falling into the hands of the invading British forces during the Second Boer War it is said that a treasure consisting of gold bars, coins, and diamonds worth up to $500,000,000 in todays terms was taken out of Pretoria by train and hidden before Kruger was exiled in 1900.
Over time this legend was declared a myth despite stories from 1905 and 1947 claiming to the treasures existence. In more recent history a hoard of Kruger ponds was found on farmland in the 1960’s.
In February 2021 the Business Insider published an article claiming that a large stash of coins had been discovered in a Swiss vault and is believed to be a part of the missing Kruger Millions.
In 1947, a man claimed to have found a portion of the treasure at Laurenco Marques, after following a map stitched into the cover of a Bible.[4]
Sourced from: Wikipedia
REFERENCES:
- Munnion, Christopher (8 June 2001). “Town under siege as missing ‘Kruger gold’ is found on farm” – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
- ^ Menahem Fogel (January 25, 2010). “Mpumalanga – Mystery of the Kruger Millions – Israel Guide – Jerusalem Post”. www.jpost.com. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
- ^ “THE “KRUGER MILLIONS” SEARCHES FOR TREASURES”. The Mercury. CXXX (19, 175). Tasmania, Australia. 23 April 1929. p. 10. Retrieved 13 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ “BIBLE MAP REVEALS KRUGER MILLIONS”. The Barrier Miner. LX (17, 784). New South Wales, Australia. 4 November 1947. p. 1. Retrieved 13 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
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The Legend
Born Stephanus Johannes Paulus Kruger on 10th October 1825 near the eastern edge of Cape Town. As a child he took part in what is known as the Great Trek and became the protégé of Andries Pretonus, leader of the Voortrekker. Witnessing the signing of the signing of the Sand River Convention with Britain in 1852. Kruger was elected Vice-President in 1877 and then President in 1883.
In 1886 the Witwatersand Gold Rush brought an influx of thousands of predominantly British settlers to South Africa which created tensions with the locals. This tension dominated Kruger’s Presidency until he left for Europe in 1900 just as the Second Boer War had turned against the Boers. Shortly after this, Kruger died in Switzerland in 1904.
Born near the eastern edge of the Cape Colony, Kruger took part in the Great Trek as a child during the late 1830s. He had almost no education apart from the Bible. A protégé of the Voortrekker leader Andries Pretorius, he witnessed the signing of the Sand River Convention with Britain in 1852 and over the next decade played a prominent role in the forging of the South African Republic, leading its commandos and resolving disputes between the rival Boer leaders and factions. In 1863 he was elected Commandant-General, a post he held for a decade before he resigned soon after the election of President Thomas François Burgers.
Kruger was appointed Vice President in March 1877, shortly before the South African Republic was annexed by Britain as the Transvaal. Over the next three years he headed two deputations to London to try to have this overturned. He became the leading figure in the movement to restore the South African Republic’s independence, culminating in the Boers’ victory in the First Boer War of 1880–81. Kruger served until 1883 as a member of an executive triumvirate, then was elected President. In 1884 he headed a third deputation that brokered the London Convention, under which Britain recognised the South African Republic as a completely independent state.
Following the influx of thousands of predominantly British settlers with the Witwatersrand Gold Rush of 1886, “uitlanders” (out-landers) provided almost all of the South African Republic’s tax revenues but lacked civic representation; Boer burghers retained control of the government. The uitlander problem and the associated tensions with Britain dominated Kruger’s attention for the rest of his presidency, to which he was re-elected in 1888, 1893 and 1898, and led to the Jameson Raid of 1895–96 and ultimately the Second Boer War. Kruger left for Europe as the war turned against the Boers in 1900 and spent the rest of his life in exile, refusing to return home following the British victory. After he died in Switzerland at the age of 78 in 1904, his body was returned to South Africa for a state funeral, and buried in the Heroes’ Acre in Pretoria.
Sourced from: Wikipedia
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The Treasure
The Witwatersand Gold Rush of 1886 was a result of an Australian prospector who had reported finding a gold reef between Pretoria and Heidelberg.
This gold rush led to the sudden development and expansion of Johannesburg changing its economic state from being on the verge of bankruptcy to a center of wealth almost overnight.
In July 1886 an Australian prospector reported to the Transvaal government his discovery of an unprecedented gold reef between Pretoria and Heidelberg. The South African Republic’s formal proclamation of this two months later prompted the Witwatersrand Gold Rush and the founding of Johannesburg, which within a few years was the largest city in southern Africa, populated almost entirely by uitlanders.[2] The economic landscape of the region was transformed overnight—the South African Republic went from the verge of bankruptcy in 1886 to a fiscal output equal to the Cape Colony’s the following year.[3] The British became anxious to link Johannesburg to the Cape and Natal by rail, but Kruger thought this might have undesirable geopolitical and economic implications if done prematurely and gave the Delagoa Bay line first priority.[2]
The President was by this time widely nicknamed Oom Paul (“Uncle Paul”), both among the Boers and the uitlanders, who variously used it out of affection or contempt.[4] He was perceived by some as a despot after he compromised the independence of the republic’s judiciary to help his friend Alois Hugo Nellmapius, who had been found guilty of embezzlement—Kruger rejected the court’s judgement and granted Nellmapius a full pardon, an act Nathan calls “completely indefensible”.[5] Kruger defeated Joubert again in the 1888 election, by 4,483 votes to 834, and was sworn in for a second time in May. Nicolaas Smit was elected vice-president, and Leyds was promoted to state secretary.[6]
Much of Kruger’s efforts over the next year were dedicated to attempts to acquire a sea outlet for the South African Republic. In July Pieter Grobler, who had just negotiated a treaty with King Lobengula of Matabeleland, was killed by Ngwato warriors on his way home; Kruger alleged that this was the work of “Cecil Rhodes and his clique”.[6] Kruger despised Rhodes, considering him corrupt and immoral—in his memoirs he called him “capital incarnate” and “the curse of South Africa”.[7] According to the editor of Kruger’s memoirs, Rhodes attempted to win him as an ally by suggesting “we simply take” Delagoa Bay from Portugal; Kruger was appalled.[6] Failing to make headway in talks with the Portuguese, Kruger switched his attention to Kosi Bay, next to Swaziland, in late 1888.[6]
In early 1889 Kruger and the new Orange Free State President Francis William Reitz enacted a common-defence pact and a customs treaty waiving most import duties.[8] The same year the volksraad passed constitutional revisions to remove the Nederduits Hervormde Kerk’s official status, open the legislature to members of other denominations and make all churches “sovereign in their own spheres”.[1] Kruger proposed to end the lack of higher education in the Boer republics by forming a university in Pretoria; enthusiastic support emerged for this but the Free University of Amsterdam expressed strong opposition, not wishing to lose the Afrikaner element of its student body.[9] No university was built.
Kruger was obsessed with the South African Republic’s independence,[10] the retention of which he perceived as under threat if the Transvaal became too British in character. The uitlanders created an acute predicament in his mind. Taxation on their mining provided almost all of the republic’s revenues, but they had very limited civic representation and almost no say in the running of the country. Though the English language was dominant in the mining areas, only Dutch remained official.[11] Kruger expressed great satisfaction at the new arrivals’ industry and respect for the state’s laws,[4] but surmised that giving them full burgher rights might cause the Boers to be swamped by sheer weight in numbers, with the probable result of absorption into the British sphere.[11] Agonising over how he “could meet the wishes of the new population for representation, without injuring the republic or prejudicing the interests of the older burghers”,[8] he thought he had solved the problem in 1889 when he tabled a “second volksraad” in which the uitlanders would have certain matters devolved to them.[8] Most deemed this inadequate, and even Kruger’s own supporters were unenthusiastic.[8]
Rhodes and other British figures often contended that there were more uitlanders in the Transvaal than Boers.[12] Kruger’s administration recorded twice as many Transvaalers as uitlanders, but acknowledged that there were more uitlanders than enfranchised burghers. According to the British Liberal politician James Bryce, most uitlanders saw the country as “virtually English” and perceived “something unreasonable or even grotesque in the control of a small body of persons whom they deemed in every way their inferiors”.[13] On 4 March 1890, when Kruger visited Johannesburg, men sang British patriotic songs, tore down and trampled on the vierkleur at the city landdrost’s office, and rioted outside the house where the President was staying.[14] One of the agitators accused him of treating the uitlanders with contempt; Kruger retorted: “I have no contempt for the new population, only for people like yourself.”[9] The riot was broken up by police and the Chamber of Mines issued an apology, which Kruger accepted, saying only a few of the uitlanders had taken part. Few Boers were as conciliatory as Kruger; Meintjes marks this as “the point where the rift between the Transvaalers and the uitlanders began”.[9]
Sourced from: Wikipedia
REFERENCES:
- Davenport 2004.
- Meintjes 1974, pp. 151–153.
- ^ Meredith 2007, pp. 201–202.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Meintjes 1974, pp. 153–156.
- ^ Meintjes 1974, pp. 151–152.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d Meintjes 1974, pp. 156–159.
- ^ Kruger 1902, pp. 192–194.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c d Meintjes 1974, pp. 159–160.
- ^ Jump up to:a b c Meintjes 1974, pp. 161–163.
- Meintjes 1974, p. 124.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Meredith 2007, pp. 294–296.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Meintjes 1974, pp. 184–187.
- Meredith 2007, p. 307.
- ^ Meintjes 1974, pp. 161–163; Meredith 2007, p. 294.
By 1891 a rift between the Transvaalers and Uitlanders had begun and by 1900 the Second Boer War had turned against the Boer people causing Kruger to flee the Transvaal by rail on the 11th September 1900 crossing into Mozambique. His plan to take escape on the first outgoing steamer came to a halt when the Portuguese Governor put Kruger under house arrest for approximately a month before being extricated on the Dutch warship HNLMS Gelderland and arrived in Marseille on the 22nd November.
By April 1901 Kruger had moved and settled down in the Netherlands, publishing his memoirs in 1902. He remained in exile, moving to Switzerland in 1904 where he spent the remainder of his life before dying of Pneumonia in July 1904.
Kruger left the Transvaal by rail on 11 September 1900—he wept as the train crossed into Mozambique. He planned to board the first outgoing steamer, the Herzog of the German East Africa Line, but was prevented from doing so when, at the behest of the local British Consul, the Portuguese Governor insisted that Kruger stay in port under house arrest. About a month later Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands concluded a deal with Britain to extricate Kruger on a Dutch warship, HNLMS Gelderland, and convey him through non-British waters to Marseille. Kruger was delighted to hear of this but dismayed that Gezina, still in Pretoria, was not well enough to accompany him. Gelderland departed on 20 October 1900.[2]
He received a rapturous welcome in Marseille on 22 November—60,000 people turned out to see him disembark.[3] Accompanied by Leyds, he went on to an exuberant reception in Paris, then continued to Cologne on 1 December. Here the public greeted him with similar excitement, but Kaiser Wilhelm II refused to receive him in Berlin. Having apparently still harboured hopes of German assistance in the war, Kruger was deeply shocked. “The Kaiser has betrayed us”, he told Leyds.[4] They went on to the Netherlands, which was strictly neutral and could not assist militarily, but would feel more like home. After another buoyant reception from the general public Kruger was cordially received by Wilhelmina and her family in The Hague, but it soon became clear to Leyds that it embarrassed the Dutch authorities to have them staying in the seat of government. The Kruger party moved to Hilversum in April 1901.[5]
Gezina, with whom Kruger had had 16 children—nine sons, seven daughters (of whom some died young)[1]—had eight sickly grandchildren transferred to her from the concentration camp at Krugersdorp, where their mother had died, in July 1901. Five of the eight children died within nine days, and two weeks later Gezina also died.[6] Meintjes writes that a “strange silence” enveloped Kruger thereafter.[6] By now partially blind and almost totally deaf, he dictated his memoirs to his secretary Hermanus Christiaan “Madie” Bredell and Pieter Grobler during the latter part of 1901,[7] and the following year they were published.[8] Kruger and his entourage relocated in December 1901 to Utrecht, where he took a comfortable villa called “Oranjelust” and was joined by his daughter Elsje Eloff and her family.[9]
Rhodes died in March 1902, bequeathing Groote Schuur to be the official residence for future premiers of a unified South Africa. Kruger quipped to Bredell: “Perhaps I’ll be the first.”[10] The war formally ended on 31 May 1902 with the Treaty of Vereeniging; the Boer republics became the Orange River and Transvaal Colonies. Kruger accepted it was all over only when Bredell had the flags of the South African Republic and the Orange Free State removed from outside Oranjelust two weeks later. In reply to condolences from Germany, Kruger would only say: “My grief is beyond expression.”[11]
Kruger would not countenance the idea of returning home, partly because of personal reluctance to become a British subject again, and partly because he thought he could better serve his people by remaining in exile.[11] Steyn similarly refused to accept the new order and joined Kruger in Europe, though he did later return.[12] Botha, De Wet and De la Rey visited Oranjelust in August 1902 and, according to hearsay, were berated by Kruger for “signing away independence”—rumours of such a scene were widespread enough that the generals issued a statement denying them.[13]
After passing October 1902 to May 1903 at Menton on the French Riviera,[14] Kruger moved back to Hilversum, then returned to Menton in October 1903. In early 1904 he moved to Clarens, a small village in the canton of Vaud in western Switzerland where he spent the rest of his days looking over Lake Geneva and the Alps from his balcony.[15] “He who wishes to create a future must not lose track of the past”, he wrote in his final letter, addressed to the people of the Transvaal. “Thus; seek all that is to be found good and fair in the past, shape your ideal accordingly and try to realise that ideal for the future. It is true: much that has been built is now destroyed, damaged, levelled. But with unity of purpose and unity of strength that which has been pulled down can be built again.”[16] After contracting pneumonia, Paul Kruger died in Clarens on 14 July 1904 at the age of 78. His Bible lay open on a table beside him.[17]
Kruger’s body was initially buried in The Hague, but was soon repatriated with British permission. After ceremonial lying in state, he was accorded a state funeral in Pretoria on 16 December 1904, the vierkleur of the South African Republic draped over his coffin, and buried in what is now called the Heroes’ Acre in the Church Street Cemetery.[18]
Sourced from: Wikipedia
REFERENCES:
- Meintjes 1974, p. 22.
- Meintjes 1974, pp. 247–250.
- ^ Meintjes 1974, pp. 250–252.
- ^ Meintjes 1974, pp. 252–254.
- ^ Meintjes 1974, pp. 254–256.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Meintjes 1974, p. 256.
- Meintjes 1974, pp. 256–257.
- ^ Kruger 1902, pp. v–vi.
- Meintjes 1974, p. 258.
- ^ Meintjes 1974, p. 259.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Meintjes 1974, p. 260.
- ^ Meintjes 1974, p. 264.
- ^ Meintjes 1974, p. 261.
- ^ Meintjes 1974, p. 262.
- ^ Meintjes 1974, p. 265.
- ^ Meintjes 1974, p. 266.
- ^ Meintjes 1974, p. 267.
- ^ Davenport 2004; Meintjes 1974, p. vii; Picton-Seymour 1989, p. 164.
As a result of the gold rush and change in economy in 1900 the the area of Pretoria had found itself with a large stock of gold. When the British took over they performed an inventory of the gold stock in Pretoria revealing that approximately £2,000,000 worth of gold consisting of 183,138 ounces or 457 gold bars was unaccounted for.
An intensive investigative took place which was led by Lord Alfred Milner who was in charge of finding the missing gold. Rumors began to circulate about the gold being buried somewhere nearby which ignited the imaginations of many.
When the British occupied Pretoria on June 5, 1900, Lord Alfred Milner established that gold to the value of approximately £800 000 (about R8-million in today’s terms, but bear in mind that the price of gold has gone up manyfold since 1900) had been removed from the S A Mint and National Bank between May 29 and June 4, 1900.
Gold to the value of £2,5-million was confiscated from gold mines and, according to documentary proof, £1 294 000 was removed from the S A Mint and National Bank. Gold to the value of about £2 million had disappeared ! Milner did everything in his power to find the gold but rumors began to circulate that the gold was buried somewhere and this fired the imagination of many, including that of the writer, Gustav Preller.
Armed with a pistol, he dramatically commandeered a mule wagon in Sunnyside. That night one load of gold was transported by the mule wagon, and four loads by a horse cab, to a waiting train on Pretoria station.
In the Preller collection, in the State Archives in Pretoria, there is a typed copy of the article in which Preller says: “I think it was on 28 May 1900, because on 31May I left Pretoria. Let’s say it was 28 May. In any case it does not seem that the precise date is important now”.
Ernest Meyer, Master of the Mint in 1900, was involved in the removal of the money and gold from Pretoria. On October 25, 1949, as a result of what Preller wrote, Meyer drew up a document in which the removal of the money and gold on June 4, 1900, is described.
In Meyer’s version of the events General Smuts, who was State Attorney at that time, was left behind in command at Pretoria, while the government head-quarters moved quietly and almost unobserved to Machadodorp. On June 2, the British forces were approaching Pretoria from the South. The mint was still in operation and, as was usual, was closed on Saturday June 2.
Apart from the account of the gold from the mint being loaded, there was supposed to be gold bullion in bar form from the gold mines that was also loaded. In 1930, according to Historian Hedley Chilvers however, most of the bar gold was never accounted for !
He maintains that the total value of the bar gold was £2 million (approximately 480,769 ounces or 1,202 bars) which would have a value of 26 million dollars (R6.6 billion) today – consisting of 183,138 ounces of bar gold (457 bars) was taken from the Witwatersrand mines : Robinson Mine (198 bars), Ferreira Deep (104 bars), Ferreira Mine (96 bars) and other small mines (60 bars).
12 years after the end of the war the State Mining Engineer Jan Munnik said at a public meeting : “I would ask General Botha what has been done with the 134 gold bars, worth roughly £750,000, which he had recovered from the mines, and which, at President Kruger’s departure, were left in the hands of the Commandant-General, General Botha, and two others, by government resolution. Thus far the gold has never been accounted for, and if General Botha can give a satisfactory explanation, and if there is any gold left, I would say: Hand it over to help the Empire.”
Sourced from: Sabie
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The Clues
In 1905 after being arrested for stealing a horse car, John Holtzhousen revealed that he was the last of three people left alive who had been given the duty to bury the £2 million worth of gold and diamonds near Blyde River. Holtzhousen disappeared soon after leaving a mystery which has sent treasure hunters to the Blyde River area for many years.
After years of treasure hunters digging trenches, opening graves, swashing ant heaps, and turning over old Boer fortifications in search of the elusive Kruger Millions Colonel Devys Reits, son of ex-President Reits wished to put an end to the scarring of South African commons.
Reits declared that the gold that had been unaccounted for was only to the sum of £80,000 and it was sold to France for the benefit of Boer refugees. Ultimately declaring that the legend of the Kruger Millions was nothing but a myth.
Sourced from: Infobush.com
THE “KRUGER MILLIONS” SEARCHES FOR TREASURES. The persistent myth of the “Kruger millions”-the truckload of gold which President Kruger is supposed to have taken away with him when he evacuated Pretoria-should now be exploded for good and all, since Colonel Denys Reitz. a son of ex-President Reitz, has explained at Cape Town that the sum amounted only to £80,000 worth, which was sold in France for the benefit of Boer refugees. But it will be surprising (remarks a contributor to the “Manchester Guardian”) If he can really stop the treasure-seekers who scar the faces of obscure South African commons with trenches whenever a fresh “clue” is discovered. In the office of the Commissioner of Police at Pretoria there is a stack of files six feet high all devoted to the mythology . that has sprung up round the Kruger millions. Graves have been opened, ant-heaps have been smashed over square miles of veldt and the entire floor-space of ruined Boer forts has been turned over in the night: but so far the only finds recorded are two bricks of gold extracted by graverobbers from a shroud. Though no explanation was found for the bars of gold in the grave, it was proved that they left the Pretoria mint long before President Kruger’s flight. One of the most amusing searches for the Kruger millions took place in the Marico district of the Transvaal. For days stories of how the searchers had been scared during the night by the hisses of a giant snake practically “owned” the main pages of the South African papers. Eventually it was discovered that the hisses were caused, not by a snake, but by the wind blowing down a disused ant-bear hole and escaping through an old ant-heap.
Sourced from: trove.nla.gov.au
In 1947 H.J. Lessing found a map stitched into the cover of a Bible his father had given to him shortly before being killed in the Second Boer War. The map led Lessing and a friend to an area near the Swaziland border between Johannesburg and Laurenco Marques where they began to dig until they found broken ammunition boxes filled with Kruger sovereigns, other coins, and rotting Kruger banknotes.
In 2001, the Independent reported that according to officials in the eastern province of Mpumalanga, a family in the 1960’s found 4,000 Kruger ponds on their farm land in the Ermelo area which they had been selling on a piecemeal basis.
In 2016, Discovery Channel’s Expedition Unknown followed it’s host Josh Gates to South Africa as he went in search of the missing Kruger Millions. Following some leads they investigated an old train tunnel in Machadodorp where a treasure hunter had previously reported finding a gold Kruger pond.
Gates then follows another lead out to the Sudwala caves where they find another Kruger gold pond, but no Kruger Millions.
Map depicting key areas of the Kruger Millions Treasure Legend:
1.Pretoria
2.Johannesburg
3.Sudwala Caves
4.Middelburg
5.Machadodorp
6.Ermelo
7.Blyde River
8.Bible Map Treasure Find
9.Laurenco Marquee
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Conclusion
In February 2021 Business Insider reported that a stash of the Kruger Millions had been discovered in a Swiss vault and are now up for sale through the South African Mint.
According to the South African Reserve Bank the sack of Kruger Ponds was transported from the Netherlands to Switzerland shortly before the Second Boer War.
In conclusion, it would appear that despite the statement from the ex-president Reits which claimed that the legend of the Kruger Millions was a myth, nothing more than an accounting error and speculation, several caches of Krugerrands have been located over the years including this stash found in the Swiss bank.
Could this be all of the Kruger treasure caches or are there more out there waiting to be found. What do you believe?
BIBLE MAP REVEALS KRUGER MILLIONS
Portion of one of the world’s greatest lost treasures – the Kruger millions-is reported to have been found by a Johannesburg man, Mr. H. J. Lessing says he found a map stitched into the cover of a Bible which his father gave him shortly before he was killed in the. Boer War. While holidaying recently near the Swaziland border, between Johannesburg and Laurenco Maques (the territory shown in the map), Lessing said he and a friend motoring to the marked spot began to dig. “My pick struck something metallic and we soon uncovered broken ammunition* boxes filled with Kruger sovereigns, other coins and rotting Kruger banknotes,” Lessing said. “What we found would easily buy several motor cars. It is at present in the Johannesburg Bank.” The Kruger millions disappeared when Lord Roberts marched on Johannesburg. Kruger, President of the Transvaal, was able to load bullion in a special train and sent it off to Laurence Maques. This story was supported by British examination of records at Johannesburg which showed a deficit of £2,024,000. Kruger is known to have sent only £800,000 and is thought to have buried the remainder.
Sourced from: trove.nla.gov.au
Officials in Ermelo, in the eastern province of Mpumalanga, last week admitted for the first time that they were keeping secret the location of the “Kruger millions,” allegedly found by a Zulu family in the 1960s.
Ever since the discovery, the family had allegedly dug up and sold coins from the treasure on a piecemeal basis.
According to South African reports, a Zulu family of farm labourers which has lived in the Ermelo area for more than 100 years has dug up some 4,000 gold coins known as Kruger pounds and may have sold up to 400 of them but only for their scrap value since the 1960s.
Sourced from: Independent.ie
Josh heads to Pretoria, South Africa and meets historian, Fransjohan Pretorius. Fransjohan gives him background on the Boer War and Paul Kruger. Josh takes the Delagoa Bay Railway to Machadodorp where the gold was unloaded. He looks for the gold in an old train tunnel but doesn’t find anything. He goes to the Gold Reef City Mint and meets director, Glenn Schoeman. A treasure hunter found a coin he believed was a Kruger coin and sent it for authentication. Josh and Glenn test it and find it’s a genuine coin.
Josh goes to meet archaeologist Anton Van Vollenhoven at the Sudwala Caves. They explore the caves because one legend tells of a Boer Officer named Fritz Joubert Duquesne who supposedly brought the coins to the cave. They find a tin can and a new coin but no gold. Josh then goes to meet Edward Mabunda, a Shangaan tribesman, in Hazyview. Josh gets permission from the village chief to search for the millions in Kruger National Park and the chief gifts him a spear.
Josh heads to meet the treasure hunter who found the authentic Kruger coin – Lukas Van Der Merwe. Along the way, he sees a lion, a hippo, impalas, and elephants. He meets Lukas, Nico Moolman, and Sergeant Mark Preston at an anti-poaching unit base camp. They go to an area in the bush and search for the coins with metal detectors and find an old bullet. At night they use a drone and find the front of a Boer saddle, a horseshoe, and an old pistol.
Sourced from: expeditionunknown.fandom.com
A stash of rare gold coins discovered in a Swiss vault – and believed to be part of the puzzle of the missing Kruger Millions – are now for sale.
It’s commonly assumed that somewhere between Pretoria and Mozambique – possibly where the small town of eNtokozweni is located in Mpumalanga – a large portion of the gold coins and bars were buried, to be used to fund the fight at a later stage. Kruger arrived in France by ship on 22 November 1900, with no sign of the gold stash.
The mystery of the missing “Kruger Millions” has inspired intrepid treasure hunters and braai-side theorists alike. In 2001, it emerged that a family of farm workers had discovered some of these Kruger pods near Ermelo in Mpumalanga as early as 1960. Beyond that, however, the gold has remained hidden.
That was until the recent discovery of a Swiss vault.
According to the South African Mint, a subsidiary of the South African Reserve Bank (SARB), the sack full of Kruger ponds was transported from the Netherlands to Switzerland shortly before the start of the Second World War. The treasure remained in a vault until it was recently sold at auction.
Sourced from: businessinsider.co.za
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Written By
ADAM L C
Director of Areas Grey
Adam is an avid treasure hunter, seeker of adventure and the creator of Areas Grey. After travelling for almost half his life and cataloguing over 100 treasure legends along the way. He decided this was simply far too much treasure for one person to chase! As a result he created Areas Grey so he could share his stories, connect with other treasure hunters and put a little more adventure in the lives of the treasure hunting community.
Adam is a Private Investigator and former Wilderness Guide with a passion for history and archaeology. With the skills, knowledge and gear, Adam is always eager to go on the next fortune seeking adventure and connect with fellow treasure hunters along the way.
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