This is from a local school construction. The article is a little ways down the web page but cool.
http://campaign.r20.constantcontac...10801&ca=8d3022d6-004e-4246-8d2f-ab70e4f9bb8a
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vtbuck223 said:Very cool....but the second part of this has to be an April Fools joke....right? I mean a 20oz nugget is worth like 20K isn't it?
It will be interesting if they can determine cause of death. Very dangerous business. I have an ancestor who was a Voyageur....died of drowning.
There are about fifteen "good-sized" nuggets available - one weighing nearly twenty ounces. Interested students may submit their poems to Mr. Schaffer's office-door mail bin by the contest deadline - this Friday, April 1, 2016 before the end of lunchtime. Poems will be judged by the faculty of the LCHS English department. Archeological operations are expected to wrap up by next weekend. It is not anticipated the incredible find will delay construction of the gymnasium.
Win this gold nugget in this week's poetry contest. See details nearby.
Write Poem. Win Gold. Contest details for winning a gold nugget (see nearby story about the LCHS archeological discovery) are as follows: LCHS will award one gold nugget to each writer of the top fifteen poetry entries received by Mr. Schaffer in this week's poetry contest. Handwritten or printed hardcopy entries must be received in the principal's office-door mail bin by 12:18PM on Friday, April 1, 2016. Include name, date, age, and poem title. Poems may be of any legitimate poetic style and must capture any or all of the following themes: "Gold," "education," "LCHS Capstone Virtues," "LCHS." Entries will be judged by instructors of the LCHS English Department. Winning entries will be posted in the school, and each writer will be able to choose a gold nugget in the rank order of poetic quality as determined by the judges (first-prize gets first pick of the 15 nuggets).
http://www.westernmininghistory.com/articles/11/page1In 1848, a group of Cherokee on their way to California over the Cherokee Trail discovered gold in a stream bed in the South Platte basin. The Cherokee did not stop to work the stream beds, but they reported the information to other members of their tribe upon returning to Oklahoma. The information remained unused for the following decade, however, until it reached William Green Russell, a Georgian who had worked the California gold fields in the 1850s. Russell was married to a Cherokee woman, and through his connections to the tribe, he heard about the reported gold in the Pikes Peak region of the western Kansas Territory. In 1858, upon returning from California, Russel organized a party to the area, setting off with his two brothers and six companions in February 1858. They rendezvoused with Cherokee tribe members along the Arkansas River in present-day Oklahoma and continued westward along the Santa Fe Trail. Others joined the party along the way until the number reached 104.
Upon reaching Bent's Fort, they turned to the northwest, reaching the confluence of Cherry Creek and the South Platton May 23. The site of their initial explorations is in present-day Confluence Park in Denver. They began prospecting in the river beds, exploring Cherry Creek and nearby Ralston Creek, but without success. After twenty days, a number of them decided to return home, leaving the Russell brothers and ten other men behind. In the first week of July 1858, they finally discovered "good diggings" at the mouth of Little Dry Creek on the South Platte, panning out several hundred dollars of gold dust from a small pocket, the first significant gold discovery in the region.
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