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This tale involves two German men, Jacob Waltz and Jacob Weiser. However, Blair argued that there is a strong likelihood that there never was a second man named Weiser, but rather that a single person named Waltz was, over the years, turned into two men as the legend of the Dutchman's mine evolved.
The author T.E. Glover in his book, The Lost Dutchman Mine of Jacob Waltz, [citation needed] wrote of a U.S. Cavalry trooper named William Edwards who was present for the discovery of the deceaseds' remains. The Cavalry leaders assumed that these were bodies from an Indian battle between fighting tribes.
Jacob "Dutchman" Waltz – Waltz was a German immigrant who in the 19th century discovered a gold mine in Arizona and kept its location a secret, hence the name "Lost Dutchman's Mine". The Lost Dutchman Mine is supposedly located in the Superstition Mountains east of Phoenix. Waltz died an itinerant poor farmer on October 25, 1891, at age 81.
Some troops leave the battlefield injured. Others return from war with mental wounds. Yet many of the 2 million Iraq and Afghanistan veterans suffer from a condition the Defense Department refuses to acknowledge: Moral injury.
"Saw XI" and a long-gestating sequel to the 1997 slasher "I Know What You Did Last ... Euphoria" actor Jacob Elordi as Frankenstein's monster. They're joined by Christoph Waltz, Mia Goth, Ralph ...
Travelodge staff had observed Stephen Cole "acting strangely" and the hotel chain would not have accepted his booking if it had known about his background, the coroner previously heard.
It will star Oscar Isaac, Mia Goth, Jacob Elordi, Ralph Ineson, and Cristoph Waltz. And it will be released by Netflix. Why we’re excited: Guillermo Del Toro is famous for loving monsters.
The "Dutchman" was actually a German immigrant named Jacob Waltz (c. 1810–1891). [1] The story goes that the stones are named for an obscure "Peralta family", supposedly an old and powerful Mexican family. Some people named Peralta owned a cattle ranch that included what is now Oakland, California at the time of the Mexican–American War.