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  1. 7 de abr. de 2020 · Hunting James Copeland's Lost Treasure. Legend has it there's pirate gold in Catahoula Creek

  2. Copeland detailed how his clan had buried some $30,000 in gold in a swamp near Mobile and later reburied the treasure in the Catahoula Swamp of Hancock County, Mississippi. Rumors have circulated for decades of Copeland gold caches, still unclaimed, hidden around the shores of the Gulf of Mexico .

  3. 27 de nov. de 2021 · James Copeland’s Hidden Barrels of Gold: $30,000 in gold: Catahoula swamp in Hancock County Mississippi. The Sunken Treasure of Steamboat The Ben Sharrod: $75,000 in gold coins: The east bank of the Mississippi River, about 30 miles south of Natchez, Mississippi. Farmer Zack Goforth’s Buried Wealth: $30,000 in gold coins

  4. From the late 1830s through the 1850s outlaw James Copeland and his clan terrorized settlers on the frontiers of southern Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana. Consequently, a tremendous crowd gathered on the banks of the Leaf River just outside the town of Augusta in Perry County on 30 October 1857 to witness his hanging for murder. […]

  5. 27 de feb. de 2007 · Before his death on the gallows, James Copeland made a full confession to Sheriff Pitts at Perry County. He detailed how his clan had buried some $30,000 in gold in a swamp near Mobile and later reburied the treasure in the Catahoula Swamp of Hancock County, Mississippi.

  6. This is to certify that I was present at the execution of James Copeland, who was executed at Augusta, Perry county, Miss., the 30th day of October, 1857; and heard the Sheriff, J. R. S. Pitts, ask him, the said James Copeland, if the detailed history and list of names given as members of the Wages and Copeland clan were correct, and he answered the Sheriff in the affirmative that they were.

  7. Description. Jesse James, John Dillinger, Machine Gun Kelly, Bonnie and Clyde—James Copeland (born 1823) was the granddaddy of them all. This is his notorious history as recorded by the sheriff who arrested him in 1857. During the 1830s, '40s, and '50s, Copeland and his gang of outlaws ranged over territory extending from Mobile Bay to Lake ...