Thursday, May 21, 2009

The Golden Farm

On May 24, 1865 two wagon trains filled with gold, one containing the last of the Confederate Treasury and the other money from Virginia banks, were robbed at Chennault Crossroads in Lincoln County, GA.

Chennault Plantation, owned by Dionysius Chennault who was an elderly planter and Methodist minister, played a significan role in the story. The gold was to be returned to France who had loaned the money to support the Confederacy. Jefferson Davis had given his word that the gold would be returned regardless of the outcome of the war. Towards the end of the war, Captain Parker of the Navy and a group of other volunteers, brought the gold from Richmond, VA to Anderson, SC by train and from there by wagon hoping to get to Savannah to load it on a waiting ship.

Accordinly the group set out on their assigned mission, but unfortunately their scouts met Union troops before they got to Augusta. The group returned to the Chennault Plantation. Parker was unable to receive further instruction from Davis because he had already left Washington. It was on this night that the gold disappeard in a hijacking about 100 yards from the porch of the house. One theory says that the gold was divided among the locals.

Union troops later came to the Chennault Plantation to find the gold. They tortured the occupants of the house trying to force them to reveal where the gold was hidden but to no avail. The entire Chennault family was taken to Washington, DC to undergo intensive interrogation. They were questioned thoroughly as to the whereabouts of the gold, but the Chennaults could not tell anything that was not already known. They were released a few weeks later and returned to their home in Georgia.

As time went by, the Chennault plantation became known as the "golden farm," and for many years after that people came there to search for the missing gold. Down through the years, many gold coins have been found along the dirt roads near the plantation following a heavy rainstorm.

Legend persists that the treasure was hastily buried on the original grounds of Chennault Plantation and remains there today...

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