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    What Happened to the 'Lost' Confederate Gold?

    By Todd Neikirk,

    1 day ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=41PDsv_0uDVW3rb00

    War exacts a significant toll. Consequently, the Confederate States of America received contributions from wealthy individuals to bolster their efforts. A substantial amount of this gold, often referred to as "treasure" by historians and enthusiasts of history, remained unaccounted for after the Civil War. The whereabouts of this treasure has been a mystery for more than 150 years, with no definitive resolution.

    Richmond, Virginia was the Confederate capital

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1rMrYt_0uDVW3rb00
    Statues stand at the grave site of Jefferson Davis in Richmond, Virginia. (Photo Credit: Robert Knopes / UCG / Universal Images Group / Getty Images)

    The Confederate States of America came about before Abraham Lincoln assumed office in March 1861, driven by their opposition to the abolition of slavery. Vice President Alexander Stephens articulated their ideology , asserting, "Upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the White man; that slavery, subordination to the superior race, is his natural and normal condition."

    Initially headquartered in Montgomery, Alabama, the Confederate capital soon relocated to Richmond, Virginia. Jefferson Davis , a Congressman from Mississippi and the former Secretary of War, was appointed as its president.

    Recognizing the substantial cost of war, Confederate leaders began soliciting donations. Women contributed jewelry, while hundreds of containers brimming with gold and silver arrived. Additionally, almost half a million dollars in reserve gold was collected from a bank in Richmond.

    Jefferson Davis leaves Richmond with the gold

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2sIJoy_0uDVW3rb00
    A political cartoon depicts Jefferson Davis making a run for it with the Confederate gold. (Photo Credit: Bettmann / Getty Images)

    On April 2, 1865, Gen. Robert E. Lee telegraphed Davis, prompting the Confederate president and several other government officials to evacuate Richmond, to avoid capture by the Union forces. That night, two trains left the capital. One carried Davis, officials and crucial documents. The other transported approximately $1 million worth of cash, gold reserves and jewelry.

    The exact amount of money and gold that accompanied Davis from Richmond isn't known. However, expenses were incurred along the way: $108,000 was paid to the troops who escorted them near the Savannah River and an additional $40,000 was spent on supplies in Georgia. The $450,000 in gold reserves, which didn't belong to the Confederacy, remained untouched.

    Jefferson Davis is arrested, but where's the gold?

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    A newspaper image of Jefferson Davis being arrested on May 10, 1865. (Photo Credit: CORBIS / Getty Images)

    Davis was on the run for much of April 1865. Abraham Lincoln was shot and killed on April 14, a loss which the Confederate president lamented, as he'd felt Lincoln would have been easier on the South than Andrew Johnson.

    After the decision was made to disband the Confederate government on May 4, 1865, Davis entrusted $86,000 to two Confederate navy officials, whom he tasked with smuggling the money to England. That didn't happen, however, and it is believed to have been stolen. Davis then deposited the reserve gold in a vault in Washington, Georgia, before continuing on.

    Davis was arrested on May 10 by members of the 4th Michigan Cavalry. When he was captured, he had his wife's shawl over his shoulders. At the time, it was reported he'd dressed as a woman to avoid capture, but was later said to have been wearing it due to his severe sensitivity to cold weather.

    Most importantly, Davis only has a few dollars on him when he was captured, which led to a long-running question: where did all the money and gold go?

    Theories abound over what happened to the money

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1T6z5t_0uDVW3rb00
    Two monetary notes produced by the Confederate States of America. (Photo Credit: Schenectady Museum; Hall of Electrical History Foundation / CORBIS / Getty Images)

    What happened to the Confederate money? Some believe it was stolen by the Union soldiers who arrested Davis, while others speculate it was hidden long before his arrest, with the aim of keeping it out of the North's hands. The gold from the Richmond bank was accounted for, but was later stolen by around 20 armed men in Danburg, Georgia.

    Of what was taken, only $140,000 was recovered.

    As for the rest of the money, little is known, and tales of money found in areas connected to the American Civil War have been told for more than 150 years.

    Civil War historian William Rawlings explained , "People like to believe there’s something out there. They left Richmond with a bunch of money, and when [Davis’ group] was captured six weeks later, they didn’t have it. The question is, what happened? And people’s imaginations take over from there."

    Confederate gold is referenced in a number of books and movies

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1ZANCO_0uDVW3rb00
    Clark Gable portrayed Rhett Butler in Gone With the Wind , 1939. (Photo Credit: Warner Bros. and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer / MovieStillsDB)

    The legend of the Confederate gold is referenced in many films. In the Civil War-era movie, Gone With the Wind (1939), Rhett Butler, played by Clark Gable , is rumored to have stolen the treasure. The lost gold also played a key role in the legendary 1966 Western film, The Good, the Bad and the Ugly . In the movie, the characters are hunting for $200,000 worth of gold that is rumored to be hidden in a cemetery.

    More from us: The Success of George H. Thomas' Union Soldiers During the American Civil War

    The Confederate gold, again, showed up in the 1994 sci-fi movie, Timecop . In the film, a thief goes back in time to hijack the money using advanced technology. Another sci-fi production, 2012's Alcatraz television show, also featured the gold, with its characters realizing the treasure was buried beneath the prison back in 1960.

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