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Hermann Wolfe's
Trading Post Cache
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Arizona Treasure Stories
A
mountain man and beaver trapper of Prussian origin named Hermann Wolfe
(also recorded as Herman Wolf and Johann Hermann Woolf) was said to
have accumulated and stashed away in the ground approximately $250,000
to $350,000 in silver and gold coins buried in easy-to-remember
locations with landmarks and along old fence lines in cans, glass jars,
buckets, and pots near his old Indian trading post on the Little
Colorado River east of Flagstaff, Arizona.
Although
he supposedly confided in a close friend shortly before his death
regarding the whereabouts of some of his buried treasure, the only
caches known to have been discovered include a 1901 find of a small jar
containing 20 gold coins and a 1918 find of an old metal bucket that
was filled with silver Mexican pesos, both near his old store and not
in the vicinity he had indicated to the friend, which led to a brief
"rush" of treasure hunters who failed to find anything else, although
it is believed much more remains to be discovered.
To
give you a little background on the man, his life, and the history of
the region which may help in your research and treasure hunting, Wolfe
was believed to have been born around 1805, and fled Germany after he
was involved in a duel. He joined Christopher "Kit" Carson's
mountain men in 1838 shortly after Kit's Indian wife died and at the
time of a severe economic depression following the Panic of 1837 with
William E. "Billy" Mitchell of Ohio, Fred Smith of Texas, and W.C.
Seifert. He was described by Smith in a letter to his sister
as a 6' tall, prematurely grey, moody, silent, and a skilled top-notch
gunslinger who didn't back down from any
confrontation.
Beaver
had become a scarce commodity in the north from over-trapping and the
days of the fur brigades in the Rocky Mountains were over, but when the
U.S. Army acquired the southwest territory which also opened up Arizona
for settlers, and they started rounding up the native Indians for
removal, Wolfe headed down the Little Colorado River channel surrounded
by cliffs 1,000 feet high in spots between Grand Falls and
Winslow on the western edge of the Melgosa Desert (the upper
region of the Painted Desert) where he discovered an abundance of
beavers living amongst the willow trees that lined the banks, which he
proceeded to trap for their meat and valuable furs to trade, as well as
started trapping along several of the other small tributaries of the
Grand Canyon.
Beaver
hunters would often follow the old Santa Fe trail that led to Taos, New
Mexico on trapping expeditions, traveling in groups for mutual
protection from rogue Indian attacks, but while alone on one of his
first such ventures in the Spring of 1848 headed for Santa Fe, Wolfe
was ambushed by a group of Apaches who relieved him of all of the furs
loaded on his two pack mules, but they let him leave with his life.
Wolfe
moved around quite a bit before settling down permanently along the
Little Colorado River. He was reportedly trapping in Utah at
the Valley of the Green River in 1857, in New Mexico in Taos in 1859
which had come to be known as the capital of the fur trade in the
southwest, then returned briefly to Arizona where he managed to avoid
further Indian confrontations and befriended the Navajo people who had
taken refuge and hunted in Canon Diablo, and who afforded him
protection, and then went back to Taos, Santa Fe, and St. Louis,
Missouri from where he disappeared for five years beginning in 1861 at
the start of the Civil War, so it is assumed he entered the military
service although no credible record to my knowledge has ever been
found.
I
might mention at this juncture that besides Hermann Wolfe's treasure
cache, many men who had traded with the Navajo in Canon Diablo had
reported the Indians paid them with large gold nuggets found somewhere
in the canyon, but they would never reveal the source.
After
the Civil War ended, Wolfe re-emerged in the Fall of 1866 along the
Little Colorado River again near Rio Puerco, and by the Spring of 1867
had successfully acquired many furs despite roving bands of marauding
Paiute and Apache Indians. It was then that he built his
first small crude cabin on the north side of the river along the old
sand-swept emigrant trail lined with cottonwood trees and steep pink
and gray cliffs in about 1867 which was nicknamed Beaver Hogan or Chi
Bogan by the nearby Navajo (translates to Beaver House) as there were
always Beaver plews (pelts or skins) leaning against the walls around
the entire outside of the house drying. They also referred to
Wolfe as "Hostiin Chaa" which means Mr. Beaver.
The
cabin was located about 2 miles north of the now-dilapidated river ford
that crossed the deep sandstone gorge and came to be known as Wolf
Crossing near the modern-day Indian mission ghost town of Tolchaco
(established 1900) on the Navajo reservation (which is Navajo for
"River Ford" - on modern maps Tolchico), previously referred to as Hopi
Ford as it led to Hopi land in the eastern desert, and Wagon Wheel
Crossing by the Mormons who later traversed it.. The Little Colorado
River has also had many names, including being in the past called the
Flax River, the Salt River (where the Hopi came to their sacred mines
to get salt), and the Colorado Chiquito.
Wolf's
Crossing has often been confused with Volz's Crossing which was located
further north, and Volz also ran a trading post near his crossing and
near present-day Leupp in Canon Diablo, although later from 1886 to
1910, so its possible there was confusion because of the similarities
between these two men.
According
to "In and Around the Grand Canyon," by George Wharton James, "We
passed on the west side of Volz's Crossing where once I had a party
delayed for nearly two days, owing to a ten-feet rise in the river
during the night, and on to Wolf's Crossing..."
All
that remains of Tolchico/Tolchaco, which burned in 1918 necessitating
that the community be moved 10 miles south to Old Leupp, are two
stone-walled ruins of a building and a well, and for many miles along
the west bank of the river scattered remnants of ancient adobe ruins
also can be found dating from around the year 600 to 1400.
Old Leupp still has remnants of an old Indian boarding school today and
is located about 2 miles southwest of present-day Leupp.
In
the Spring of 1868, the
Apaches caught up with Wolfe and surrounded
him in Tucker Flat between Winslow and the river, but Wolfe fought his
way through them to the north side of the river, shooting and killing
four of the Indians and miraculously escaping with his pack animals and
furs intact.
After
leaving the region briefly in the early summer of 1868 and returning
with three Mexican workers and a herd of mules and horses, Wolfe
proceeded to move further south down the Little Colorado River to erect
his post. This may have been partly to improve his business
position and partly for safety reasons, as a military post had been
constructed near his old cabin about the same time. On an
island in the middle of the river a fort was constructed under General
Fremont in 1868 between Black Falls and Grand Falls (taller than
Niagara Falls, but dry except in the Spring) with 3-foot thick walls
containing defensive gunholes spaced four feet apart, and troops
stationed there were charged with maintaining peace and order among the
Navajos after they were recently released from captivity at Fort Sumner
at the end of the war.
The
"Beaver House" nickname carried over to Wolfe's large stockade picket
trading post, the first in the region, built on a high bluff on the
opposite south side of the river about "12 miles below the Hopi Ford"
(now Wolf Crossing) near the California-Santa Fe Trail that headed west
at the northern end of Canon Diablo and near present-day
Leupp. His trading post was also often referred to simply as
Wolf Post.
It
was built from willow and cottonwood logs which were plentiful at the
time in the area before the region dried up set vertically into
trenches. It had one comparatively large open room measuring
about 20' x 40', a flat roof made from poles covered with red clay, and
there were no windows -- just a door, with the only other openings
being several narrow slits just wide enough to fire a rifle through to
defend the post from bandits or hostile renegade Indians.
The
first Indians who traded at Wolfe's post were from the Hopi villages 50
miles to the north, and the Havasupais and Paiutes followed suit. The
freed Navajos that returned to Canon Diablo after the war carried on
trade with Wolfe and provided Indian guards to accompany him for
protection on his trips eastward when more goods were
needed.
Once
the Apaches learned of his permanent trading post they began throwing
raiding parties against it which lasted from the late 1860's well into
the 1870s, repelled by Santa Fe workers and increasing numbers of
Navajos who rallied together to help drive the enemy away.
Needless
to say, Wolfe ran a profitable trading post for 30 years, did good
business, had protection from his Navajo allies, and accumulated great
wealth, much of which has never been found. There
has been controversy as to whether or not treasure was buried at his
original cabin site and the crossing near Tolchaco or near the site of
his trading post near Leupp, which the latter seems more likely.
In
the October 16, 1894 issue of The Arizona Republican newspaper of
Phoenix an encounter with Wolfe, whom many had thought might not still
be alive after Wolfe's brother had inquired of him, was described by a
man who had been aided by Wolfe after becoming lost as a man
of "education and culture, which long years among the savages
had failed to corrode."
Some
stories say that Wolfe had intended in 1899 to go to town in Flagstaff
and deposit $100,000 of his money into the bank but never made it there
before he died, but that does not appear to be entirely true.
He did make it to Flagstaff, where he sometimes went to order
merchandise, and spent several days there in 1899 awaiting his
brother's arrival, as is explained below, dying shortly after he
returned home. Although he could have made a bank deposit then, it does
not appear he ever did based on his probate records.
Hermann
Wolfe died the evening of September 3, 1899 at his trading post after a
brief illness. His age was not known, but old pioneer settlers who knew
him for years claimed they believed him to be in his
90s. Shortly before he died, he had traveled in his
freight wagon to meet his brother in Flagstaff who had finally found
him and had not seen him in many years, a retired Major General in the
German Army named Franz Wolfe from Dresden, but his brother was
delayed. Wolfe was not feeling well, gave up waiting, and decided to
return home. His brother finally arrived but by the time he
reached the trading post accompanied by a Dr. Miller from town it was
one day too late and he missed seeing his brother who had passed away
the night before.
Herman
Wolfe's body was transported by the undertaker Edgar Whipple to the
Boot Hill Cemetery at the edge of Canon Diablo for burial, and a
tombstone was later placed there (although hard to read with the age
apparently incorrect provided by the doctor), the only one remaining
today. He was the 36th person buried in the cemetery, and the
35 who came before him had all died violent deaths. Although
a ghost town now in part of the Navajo Reservation, 50-mile-long Canon
Diablo, which was on the stage route from Flagstaff, had during the
1880s become a dangerous wild west camp with about 2,000 crew men
working for the Atlantic & Pacific railroad building a bridge
over the canyon full of tents and shacks selling merchandise, food, and
liquor, 14 saloons, 10 gambling halls, and 4 brothels.
Gunfights, robberies, and murders were not uncommon. There
were more men killed here in one year than in Tombstone, Abilene, and
Dodge City combined.
Wolfe's
probate records revealed he also had a sister named Frau Geheimrathin
Becker, and that his siblings were both originally from Kelbra am
Kyffhauser, Prussia. His estate consisted of Navajo
blankets, pelts, wool, hides, and other merchandise valued at that time
at $5,328, a far cry from the treasure he had amassed that still
remains lost today.
Although
there are directions to Wolf Crossing online, and Wolfe was early on
said to have a cabin in that area on the north side of the river across
from what would later become Tolchaco, the assumption has been that
this was his trading post, which I don't think is true. There
was another post in the area owned by someone else later, and there was
a military camp in the vicinity, which could explain the artillery
shells, but no one seems to have found the exact location of his actual
large stockade trading post near Leupp, and I have seen no indication
as to where the previous two finds were recovered specifically, whether
it was near Tolchaco or Leupp.
When
I mapped about 12 miles below Wolf Crossing and about 2 miles below
modern-day Leupp on the south side of the river per instruction in old
documents (and considering the river may have shifted), near two side
canyons that allow access to Canon Diablo coming from the east,
including Long Canyon, said to have been used by traders in the past,
the only thing I see of any apparent significance from an aerial view
at that location without being able to zoom in sufficiently are remains
that could be remnants of a stockade perimeter, which I've included a
photo and link to below. This may also be a more modern structure of
the Navajo Indian Reservation, remains of a fort, or ancient ruins, but
I believe it is in the correct general vicinity based on the directions.

http://terraserver-usa.com/tile.ashx?t=1&s=11&x=1264&y=9754&z=12
If
you would like to physically check out this site to see if the remnants
of the large old stockade trading post are at this location or, if not,
to see if other remains are in the vicinity, from Leupp Rd (Rt.
15/CR-505) north of Leupp, go south on Rt. 99 in the Navajo Indian
Reservation for about 3 miles (which takes you about 2 miles south of
Leupp), turn left onto Rt. 2/71 going east for about a mile, and then
on the left there appears to be a dirt road that leads to this
structure.
If
you would like to also explore Tolchico and Wolf Crossing they can be
reached by going back to Leupp Rd (Rt. 15/CR-505), turn left/west, turn
right at about the 4th street on your right (local unmarked? - see map)
going 0.3 mi, bear left onto BIA-6910 and follow it north 6.8 miles
into old Tolchico.
Happy
hunting for Hermann Wolfe's hoard of lost treasure!
Back
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Arizona Treasure Stories
IF YOU FIND THIS SITE
USEFUL AND
INTERESTING, PLEASE CONSIDER DONATING
BELOW TO
HELP FUND OUR CONTINUED TREASURE LEGENDS RESEARCH AND RISING WEB SITE MAINTENANCE AND
HOSTING COSTS. THANKS!
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