Swift's Silver Mines
The following story
was told to me (James M. Hylton) April 7, 1941, at
Wise, VA, on Wise
Mountain by Mr. Taylor Nash, aged 76 years,
and a resident of that Community. He is the
great-grandson
of old Uncle Jessie Ramey who was one of
the first early settlers in this county. Uncle
Jessie was the father
of Polly and Margaret Ramey who told him
these tales of Swift's Silver and who he says knew
and met
Swift on more than one of his trips into
this country on his way from North Carolina, from
where he came
with his little band of men not only to look
for Treasure but to hunt and seek out new land. His
grandfather
died after the Civil War but Uncle Jessie
died just before the war broke out but his family
were all aware of
his travels and knew of his stories he told
of Swift. Mr. Nash himself has sought out all the
information for
years concerning Swifts Silver and is very
much interested in the same. He has contacted men in
and
around Coeburn, Va and the Flatwoods section
near there who know more about Swift's travels
through
there in the early days. He claims that a
man who died several years ago told him he could
show him good
evidence and proof of Swift's movements through
the Flatwoods but he died before they got to make
the
trip. At least Mr. Nash says he had ample
instructions from him to warrant a search soon which
he says he
will make before the leaves fall again. Mr.
Nash is a Christian man and is truthful and
dependable in every
respect. However he had a great misfortune
to befall him about twenty years ago and through a
jam of
misplaced evidence and circumstances was
confined in the State Penal Institution at Richmond
for a crime
he did not commit. However when the clouds
cleared he was pardoned by the chief officer of the
State and
is walking through life with a clearer insight
than he might of had without this unpleasant
experience.
Sixteen
Pieces of Silver
"I will tell you
about the 16 pieces of silver before we go along any
farther with my story.
We have
all heard about swift's silver I reckon and
I have spent considerable time searching the facts
here and there
about it. I am satisfied in my mind that
Swift came through this part on his way from North
Carolina on
hunting trips. I am satisfied too that he
hid Silver away near the Flatwoods. My
great-grandfather Jessie
Ramey knew him and met him on some of these
trips. Anyway not so many years ago a negro at
Norton
went up in the hills near Flatwoods to hunt
and he found sixteen pieces of metal that was nearly
all Silver.
On his way back he met with pat Nickels and
old man Stidham. I don't know his given name and a
fellow
by the name of Connell or Conners. He showed
them the silver and gave them each a piece of it to
keep. He went on back to Norton, VA not so far away
and later died. But before he died he showed the
silver around
lots and hit it before he died. It was molded
like it had been molded in some crude mold of some
kind in dirt
or clay and had some of the dirt hanging
onto it at the time. Later the negro took a knife
and parted the
metal from the dirt. He died on the Southside
of Norton where most of the colored people live
around here.
He only died a few years back.