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  2. Great Kentucky Hoard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Kentucky_Hoard

    The Great Kentucky Hoard is a hoard of more than 700 gold coins unearthed in an undisclosed part of Kentucky, United States, in the 2020s by a man on his own land. The finder of the hoard has remained anonymous. There were a total of more than 800 Civil War–era coins, of which over 700 were gold coins.

  3. Kentucky Gold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kentucky_Gold

    Kentucky Gold was a bay horse bred in Kentucky by Leslie Combs II of Spendhrift Farm. Having been sired by Raise A Native out of the mare Gold Digger he was a full-brother to Mr. Prospector. [2] At the Keeneland Sales in July 1974 the yearling was sold for a then world-recond price of $625,000, with Mr & Mrs W Gilroy of Chicago winning the ...

  4. Fort Knox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Knox

    Fort Knox is a United States Army installation in Kentucky, south of Louisville and north of Elizabethtown.It is adjacent to the United States Bullion Depository (also known as Fort Knox), which is used to house a large portion of the United States' official gold reserves, and with which it is often conflated.

  5. 'Most insane thing ever': The money is now rolling in for man ...

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    Imagine stumbling across such a fortune in your backyard.

  6. How fake package from KY helped police catch scammer stealing ...

    www.aol.com/fake-package-ky-helped-police...

    Since the gold had come from Kentucky the first time, a detective from the Lexington Police Department mailed a fake envelope to simulate the route the cons were expecting the package to take, a ...

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  8. Swift's silver mine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swift's_silver_mine

    Swift claimed to have preceded Daniel Boone into Kentucky, coming to the region in 1760 on a series of mining expeditions. [2] The journal recounts how a wounded bear led Swift to a vein of silver ore in a cave, and how that for the next nine years, he made annual treks back to the site of the mine, carrying out "silver bars and minted coins."

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