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The Gold House Trilogy is a highly documented account of never-before-known historic facts concerning Victorio Peak, a small mountain located on White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico. The story begins in the 1930s at a place called the Hembrillo Basin, a rugged desert area in New Mexico at a time when Doc and Ova Noss discovered a vast treasure there, a discovery unmatched in the northern hemisphere. The events that took place from the early days of the discovery until Doc Noss was murdered in 1949, up to and including 1955 when the military at White Sands Missile Range evicted Ova Noss from the treasure site are told in great detail. Ova Noss' eviction was followed by a string of thefts by the military, a windfall for select individuals at White Sands Missile Range who helped themselves to the gold, a never-ending payday for those who plundered it. Summary of the events detailed in The Gold House, The Discovery: 1) The Lorius-Heberer murders in 1935; 2) Doc's arrests, imprisonment, release and unconditional Pardon by Governor Clyde Tingley on March 3, 1936; 3) The discovery of the treasure in 1937; 4) Efforts to remove the treasure; 5) The formation of the Cheyenne Mining Company and the betrayals that followed; 6) The lawyers who represented Doc and Ova's mining company; 7) The tricks played by the Director of the Office of Silver & Gold Operations Leland Howard, the Director of the Mint Nellie Ross, and the presence of the Secret Service and the FBI; 8) Doc's renewed efforts to lift the treasure, his strange two-year disappearance, his return to Victorio Peak and his murder by Charley Ryan; 9) The roles played by Doc's business partners in the Cheyenne Mining Company, attorneys William Scoggin and Ben Newell and their roles in the murder trial of Charley Ryan as judge and defense attorney respectively; 10) Ryan's acquittal, and: 11) Ova's struggle to lift the treasure and her forced eviction from the site by the military in 1955.
One of the biggest treasures thought still to be hidden in America is the shipment of the Mexican treasury just before Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico was executed by a Mexican nationalist firing squad. He sent his wife ahead early to Europe to receive the entire treasure, but neither he, nor the treasure ever made it. Six Missourians hired to assist the Austrian Guards in taking a 15-wagon team train in which the treasure was disguised as flour barrels from Mexico through West Texas to the port of Galveston, killed the wagon masters somewhere between Horsehead Crossing over the Pecos River and Castle Gap, a deep cut "V" between Castle Mountain and King Mountain. Estimates of the value of the treasure continue to escalate over time as the gold, silver, minted coins, metal plate, and jewels achieve greater historical value, not to mention the intrinsic price increases of the gold and silver. This historical fiction is based on fact. The treasure has never been found. The last estimated worth was over $10,000,000. I now estimate the value to be at least $200,000,000, although it could be considered priceless for its historic value. Only one man survived the trip after he and his six friends shot the entire wagon master crew, and then were killed by a marauding Comanche band themselves. He made it to Fort Concho, but was barely alive. As he lay dying, he drew a map of the Castle Gap area with markers of where the treasure was buried and gave it to Doctor Black, an appropriate name for the occasion. Dr. Black got together with a friend several months later and set out to find the buried treasure. They had not counted on the rapidly shifting dirt and sand, or the rapid degeneration of vegetation from the raw powerful gusts of West Texas storms. They never found the treasure. Countless legal and illegal parties blasted holes at night with dynamite on a ranchers property, and then tried to find the treasure by day, have searched over the past 150 years plus, but failed. Emperor Maximilian lost his life, Carlota, his empress went mad. The treasure sits somewhere laughing at the world.