The area known as
Evesham Township was settled by English Quakers in 1672 (Evesham
Township was established in 1688). Historians are not sure if
it was named after the town of Evesham in England, or after an
early settler, Thomas Eves. The township was originally much
larger, encompassing the current towns of Marlton, Mount Laurel,
Medford, Lumberton, Hainesport, Shamong, and Washington
Township. It was bounded by the South Branch of the Rancocas
on the east and Cropwell Creek on the west. Miles and miles
of flat land and hardwood forests quickly turning to pinelands,
with only an occasional bump in the landscape.
The flat land had few rocks
to interfere with the plows, the soil was rich, roads led to major
markets such as Mount Holly and Philadelphia, and many small creeks
provided water. The air was clear, the night skies filled
with stars. Farming was a way of life up to, for the most
part, about the 1970's.
I was talking to an
old-timer named Sam a few years back, while having breakfast at
Olga's Diner, and he told me a story about the hidden treasure of
Evesham. Back in the late 1700's, a visitor arrived from
Philadelphia bearing an unusual book. The stranger did not
look like a typical European, but no one could quite figure out
where he was from. He was short, stout, rugged and
weathered. He spoke the King's English perfectly, with the
air of a gentleman. He told the locals that he had come to
climb Mount Laurel, but due to a recent injury, his ascent would
have to wait while he recovered. Of course, the locals
laughed, as the only "mountain" in Evesham was a mere 106 feet
higher than the surrounding area. He took a job as a hired
hand while he recovered from his injury. At night, he would
entertain his hosts telling stories of his many travels around the
world. The area farmers would gather on Sundays just to hear
his tales. Once, he snuck out at night under the light of the
full moon, not returning until dawn. Where he went, no one
knew. Occasionally, he was seen writing in his book, so
clearly he was an educated man.
An accident took the
stranger's life after only a few months in Evesham, and he was
buried in the nearby Meeting House cemetery, even though he was not
a Friend. After his death, the local farmers began to wonder
about that odd book, which had disappeared the night of his
death. What did it contain, where might it be, and was there
really a map, or maybe clues, to where he had stashed the treasure
he was rumored to have brought with him? Clearly he was
hiding something. But the mystery seemed to have been taken
to the grave. Still, the story lived on, handed down
generation to generation. Over the years, there were reports
of his return, about once a generation. Was it his ghost,
returning to complete his mission? No, the residents swore he
was there, or at least a visitor who looked like the stranger of
the stories told by their parents. Most stories claim the
returning visitor was seen carrying the book.
In the early 1950s, while a
local farmer was building a horse track behind his farm, he
wandered off into the woods behind his fields after a storm.
There he came across a large tree that had fallen. Under the
upturned roots he found a large clay jar, still intact.
Inside the jar the farmer found an old leather-bound book, wrapped
in tin foil. It had the initials "TJ" on the cover. He
carefully opened the book and noticed that the last half of the
book was blank. The first couple dozen pages appeared to
contain a diary of a traveler who had wandered the four corners of
the Earth.
The rest of the book
contained several sections with some sketches, odd jottings,
unusual drawings, and odd shapes. With each section the
handwriting appeared to change, as if written by different
authors.
He showed the book to
several of his neighbors at the next Monthly Meeting. One
neighbor, an octogenarian considered by most as the local
historian, noticed the initials on the cover, and walked out to the
cemetery with the farmer. There he found a simple gravestone
with no name, just the initials "TJ" carved into the stone.
The worn date on the stone appeared to read "1774 5 May." The
old man remembered a story his father had told him when he was just
a lad, a story about the well-dressed, unusual-looking stranger who
died shortly after his arrival in early Evesham, carrying an odd
book. The elder himself had seen a visitor who looked much
like the stranger of the story, maybe 26 years earlier. He
was quite sure his father had said the initials on the book were
"TJ." Could this be the book? Certainly this must be
the stranger's grave. They rode over to the Bareford Hotel
and studied the old book more carefully. Upstairs, a boarder
who had just checked in, was being brought his midday
meal.
The pages after the diary
section had text written in mirror image. They had little
difficulty decoding the text. It described a hiding place
near the Cropwell Creek. The landmarks mentioned were long
gone by now, but they speculated the location was near the old
Inskeep farm. If anything was hidden there, it had been
plowed under hundreds of times by then. The next section
appeared to be some kind of code, a series of numbers. The
next time the farmer took his produce into Camden to sell, he
brought the book with him, and showed it to a professor who lived
just off Linden Street, three blocks up from the river. The
professor quickly determined that it was written in a book code,
and speculated that the book used might have been the Bible, due to
some references in the text. After a week studying the old
book, the professor determined that the the book code was based on
the Bible, specifically the Book of Acts, King James Version.
The decoded text described a hiding place near the north branch of
the Cooper River. There was no record of any treasure being
found, however.
Maybe the "treasure" had
been moved? But who moved it?
Recently, I had the
opportunity to explore the old Greentree Inn before it was torn
down to make way for yet another bank. In Evesham, historical
preservation means brick sidewalks and fake gas lamps
downtown. I went down into the cellar of the doomed inn and
looked around. It still had dirt floors and old hewn timber
beams. In the middle of the back room of the basement was a
well, maybe 40 feet deep. It used to be were the inn drew its
water before modern plumbing. In the rafters, above the well,
I found a book with a light cover of dust, wrapped in cloth.
I took it down and looked at it in the daylight after leaving the
basement. On the cover was the initials "TJ." My
God! Had I found the book that Sam had told me about that
morning at Olga's Diner? I opened it up, and much to my
amazement there it was, the diary, the drawings, the mirror code,
the book code, and some other strange codes. I had found the
stranger's mystery book! If only Sam was still around to show
off my finding. Instead, I would have to figure it out
myself.
I took the book home to
examine it carefully. I noticed that the last entry in the
book appeared to have been written very recently. An old
Camden Courier newspaper article was tucked into the back cover,
describing the book's finding in the 1950's, but there was no date
on the clipping. After the diary section, the book was
divided into several groups, each seemingly written at different
times. The last group of pages were numbered, written out,
"one" to "nineteen," with several pages torn out after page
19. On page "nine" I found the following two
lines:
JBPREX BREXIZ UZJKRXYZC JRI
XFEXXR JYRE CYFKJV YZDRCTYLCZ ELGKJV EXRUZ TYLCZ
AREEL KZIZTY DZI XPRTYLEX BREX BREALK JRI TYF FPL DFCRDVEHZEX
BFEXLI KRXY
The rest of the 19 pages
contained occasional letters, drawings, and seemingly unrelated
plain text. What could it mean? Had the "visitor"
returned and updated the book? Maybe the great, great, great
... grandson of the book's original owner? If so, maybe the
treasure had been moved again. After all, Evesham has changed
an awful lot over the years. Farm lands have turned into
developments. The old orchards are now shopping
centers. Old roads have been widened, and new roads
laid. Much of the history of the town has been lost.
And maybe the old hiding place for the treasure was about to be
disturbed once again.
I studied the code for
hours and days. I just couldn't make sense of it. I was
going to have to seek the advice of experts. The Puzzle
Masters.
PMC: Puzzle Master's Challenge
This puzzle is
part of a series of puzzles created by the greatest Puzzle Masters
of the Mid Atlantic Region. There are a number of Puzzle Masters
contributing to this series. Solve all of the Puzzle Masters'
creations, follow the storylines, gather the clues and find the
final. Will you accept the challenge?
Each puzzle is a unique work of art created and owned by each
Puzzle Master/Puzzle Team. In each cache there will be a clue that
you must gather and record. These clues will lead you to a final
mystery cache located somewhere in the mid-Atlantic region. This
series is designed to lead you on an epic adventure that will
require Master puzzle-solving skills and extensive travel to unique
locations. You must travel and log in at each cache in order to
claim a find on the final. Due to the extensive time and effort put
into this challenge, the cache can be done as a group but each
member of the group must go to each cache site and sign each log.
Dividing into sub groups and pooling their efforts will not be
allowed.Not at 39 54 .738 74
55.425
AND THE
FINAL.....
An elusive cache. It has been
missing for a long time. Can you find it?
PMC: THE PUZZLE MASTERS
Click
HERE
to view all of the PMC caches as they are released (including the
final).