The Dollop with Dave Anthony and Gareth Reynolds - 190 - Fort Moore Hill
Episode Date: July 14, 2016Comedians Dave and Gareth discuss the history of Fort Moore Hill in Los Angeles. And what's inside it. Or who. SOURCESTOUR DATES REDBUBBLE MERCH...
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Yeah do you know what that's from? Do it again. It's a comedy. Something someone
strange brew that's it. You're listening to the dollop. It's an American
History podcast. Each week I comedian Dave Anthony read a story from American
history to my friend. Gareth Reynolds who has no idea what the topic is going to
be about. He's already on probation. Jose? Yeah. Bad cat. Do you want to look who to do?
I'll do one bottle. People say this is funny. Not Gary Gareth. Dave okay. Someone or something is tickling people. Is it for fun? And this is not going to become a tickly quad cat. Okay. You are Queen Fakie of made-up town. All hail Queen Shit of Liesville. A bunch of religious virgins go to Mingle and do a pray. Hi Gary. No. Is he done my friend? No. No.
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on Patreon, we thank each and every one of you. You guys are nice. We love you. We're going to
kiss your faces. Sweet people. Sweet, sweet people. Check out Jose. It's all out. Oh gosh,
he really is presenting. Jose, company's over. Come on. Oh, I can see it all. Make him buy you
dinner first, baby. Oh boy. Okay, so first of all, I love you guys. Huh? Is this a suicide? Can
we get into it? May 1848. May 1848. Yeah. Okay. The Mexican American War officially ended with
the signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hildago. Mexico ceded the Southwest, which included what
is now the state of California. Oh, I know you probably didn't know that because you're from
northern Midwest stock. Sure. Very aggressive early during the war. The US army built a fort
on a hill overlooking Los Angeles. Now a fort, this is before forts were things kids made out
of pillows. Right. This isn't an actual fort like you would see. These were good. These weren't
just like the movie Braveheart. Right. This wasn't just sheets and Ottomans. No. Right.
Okay. This was actually sheets and Ottomans. We're pretending.
It was built by the US first dragoons and New York volunteers and the Mormon Battalion.
Okay. Yep. I bet they all got along great. Sure. I mean, yeah, no differences there. Nope.
The war had done its damage to Los Angeles. The US had taken the city,
been driven away and retaken it again in 1847. Okay. Most of the well off had abandoned their
homes in the area of the fort. Soldiers now rode around on horseback. The local, the locals
yield insults at them. Okay. So we're just riding through Los Angeles and I was like, fuck you,
I like that. Right. Okay. Yeah. Raiders. Right. Raiders. The still raider nation is still out.
This land belongs to the raiders, bro. Fuck you. Try to come here.
A local man was given a military escort and sent into the San Bernardino mountains to find timber
for a flagpole. Okay. Dolores at studio and her mother and sisters made a flag. Okay. And on July
4th, cannons were fired and a proclamation announced that the fort would now be called Fort
Moore. Fort Moore. Okay. Raise the flag. Blow off some cannons. Sure. Fort Moore now. And that's
the Americans who did the fort that made Fort Moore. Yep. Right. Okay. That was named after
Benjamin D. Moore, a soldier who died in the Battle of San Pasquale. Isn't Benjamin Moore
paint too? Sure. Yeah. He's also, yeah, he also turned into paint. Oh my God. Yeah. This man was
made of yellow. He's a magical man. He'd look great in my kitchen. After he died in the Battle
of San Pasquale, he just turned into a liquid form of paint. I want my ashes to be put in a can with
a lid and shaken and put on a wall and then painted on a wall. Maybe a nursery. Whoa. Someone in your
building slammed their door. Yep. You can hear it coming. Angry. All right. Relax.
It's, I mean, it is. It's actually my Mexican neighbor. So it is sort of now like we're living
the dollop a little bit in real life. Maybe in the middle of the Battle of San Pasquale.
It feels like it. The Declaration of Independence was read that day in English and Spanish.
Did you have to press four to get it read in Spanish? I don't know, but it would be amazing
if some guy was in it back on. Hey, English only. It's America. Come on. I forgot what country this
is. What is this? Oh, wait. Right. Oh, we just took this. It is that. Oh, right. Okay. Never mind.
Sorry, MB. The flag was raised and then a dance was held with locals and soldiers getting along
nicely. Okay. Great. Nothing to see here. Yeah, it's all going good. Sure. At least that was the
report. Another said the American commander warned locals that he would cut their heads off if they
touched the flag. So that's different. Those are, there's, there's a difference between them. Yeah,
it seems like just a slight difference. One says it's fine and the other is full of threats of
decapitation. Yeah. Right. So, so it could go either way. Either way, it's one of those
six on that sand, no head on the other. Yeah.
Things slowly normalized and Fortmore was decommissioned and abandoned in 1853.
People had already started building homes on the hill by then because it had a very nice view.
Sure. Since Protestants weren't allowed to be buried in the local Catholic cemeteries,
they built an unofficial cemetery on the hill. Okay. Unofficial cemeteries are a weird thing.
Yeah, they're kind of strange. They're just throwing people in the ground. It is kind of
like a mass grave, probably. Yep. In 1853, Andrew, I love you spell check. It can be,
it's pages, right? No, no, no, I thought I caught them all, but now I got to find this guy's name.
Oh, I did a bunch. Okay. What does it say his name is? Well, I know what his name is,
his name is Sefelt. Sefelt. So I got, I just got to remember that as I read through and it changes.
Although this could not, this could be a different name. Oh boy. This is like flu. I thought I found
all these, but you know, it's hard to be as great as I am. In 1853, Andrew Summit was the first person
buried in the cemetery. What? Okay. Stuff. He was a hunter who was killed by a bear in Malibu
Canyon. Well, not a great hunter. The struggle also ended. I forgot the killing part. The struggle
also. I had him in my sights. Ended with the bear being killed. Ooh. A fucking man. A double
suicide. A lover's tryst. A lover's, a small man. I'll shoot you at the same time.
So it's a wash. That's a wash. That's a wash. That's yeah. The bear was not buried in the cemetery.
Interesting. Where was he buried? That's speciesism. That is.
A sublet's dog named Old Buck was said to have died of grief at the, right at the grave three
days after the burial. Yeah. It does sound a little bit like, that's, what's that? I never
by the dog died by the grave story. Well, you've seen the dogs go chill by the graves of the owners.
Yeah, but not die. Die is weird. They hang there for a couple of days and they're like,
all right, this is over. Yeah. I really think he's gone now. I think I might find a new guy
to give me food. Yeah. Or the dog said, maybe the dog's really stupid. He's like, you're gonna feed me?
Are you gonna feed? You're gonna feed me? They probably just want to eat the owner for their
last meal. Wouldn't that be great? That's a dora. That's how I want to go. So they eat me judging
by the size of a midtake, maybe two sittings. Soon the cemetery was packed with the dead.
There weren't any cemetery regulations and a lot of people were being put in the ground.
The city finally took over the area in 1869. At this point,
headstones were broken and plots were completely unmarked. The city then banned burials.
Wait, so it was just like a terrible cemetery? Yeah, it was basically like a bunch of people
like it was like a mass grave. So you're a Protestant so you can't get buried in any
Catholic cemetery. So at that point, California is all Catholic. Right. So they had to just go
build. They had to go through. They basically made a landfill for humans. Well, they had a heart,
they were like Protestants, so they would have a hard time getting an official cemetery in California.
Yeah. So they made a human field. So they just started down with people in a hill up on the.
It's great. Yep. That's perfect. But he's under here somewhere, Miss. We'll find him.
You'll get the rose to him. Is it is him? Was he Asian? Yeah. Oh, no. He wasn't. Okay. No,
this is, these are all, here's some whites. Here's some whites. There's a bunch of whites over here.
Here we are. Yeah. He was a regular man or this boy, like this size.
Are you holding that up? That arm? No, it's a boy. That's a whole boy. That's a boy. Yeah.
A baby boy. This is the worst cemetery ever. You come back. You come back. That's how we
should do this. I'll pull some options. I'll pull some options and I'll lay them out for
when you come back. I'm going to take off very much. Okay. Don't tell anybody about this. Yep.
Okay. Don't worry. I won't. Okay. Just the police. Heard something. The hill was a delightful spot,
as we've said, with the beautiful view. Right. So parts of the cemetery were sold to the Los
Angeles City School District and other rich people who lived in the city. So some of plots.
There's, they're going to put a school on the Protestant mass grave? Yeah.
Did Stephen King write this dollop? In 1882, the first beer brewer of LA, Jacob Philippi,
opened a beer garden in Sloone on top of the hill. Everyone enjoyed going to the Sloone,
the rich and the poor. At the end of some drunken nights, some would roll down the hill.
It's weird, right? Yep. The whole thing's weird. Okay. From beginning to end.
Right. Yep. Because this isn't too far after. It's not too, not too far after. How is it fun
to roll down a hill? Well, that's, that's interesting what you're taking issue with.
You're taking issue with childlike behavior. Yes. I'm talking about building it on a cemetery.
Next came Mary Banning, who was the widow of the man who established LA's Port.
She turned the Sloone into a big, fancy house and held many a party. Okay. It became a posh
spot in town. Sure. Other first families of Los Angeles built huge homes. Parties were thrown
by social groups like the 15 Club. Right. Who were a group of 15 young men and women from the South.
And then, and they just were like, there can only be 15 of us. Yeah, basically, yeah.
It's awkward for one guy. Well, 14, not 16. Huh? Or are you saying that it's even men and women and
then the one guy? Yeah. But what if it's like 13 dudes and two, what it's like, what if it's like
the Smurfs? It's 14 guys and one girl. Utopia. At a party thrown by Miss Banning, a parrot was
killed by a guest after it revealed family secrets. Oh, wow. That is amazing. Someone was telling me
this story the other day of this parrot. Like she, like she went over to this dude's house
and she knew like the parents and she just heard from the kitchen,
and Jamie, Jamie. And she was like, your mom wants you. And he goes, no, it's the parrot.
And then the parrot goes, Jamie, get in here. And he, and she was like, your dad, he goes,
that's a parrot still. I forget what the name of the like the parrot that lives the longest,
but it can do like impressions. Yeah, African gray. Yeah. A high school was built on the hill in
1890 run right next to a bunch of gravestones. They're just asking for like thriller like consequences
from this. In 1897, a man who lived across the street from the cemetery heard some noise and
went out to investigate. Oh, God. There were three Latino men digging. Oh, God. They told them they
were looking for buried treasure. Oh, gosh. Which they believe had been buried by American soldiers
in 1847 and marked by an iron rod. This is someone's going to take issue with this. The next day,
he told everyone he came across the story and soon everyone was everyone was saying they had seen
the men leaving with the box filled with $20,000 for the gold. So it's one of those things where
one person sees it and then everyone's like, I saw it too. Yeah. Okay. Over time, as Los Angeles grew,
Fort Hill Moore turned out to be a shitty location. It was between downtown and the east side.
So it was also buried on bodies like built on bodies bodies on the top. It's not built on
bodies. It's a hill and then there's a cemetery up there. Okay. Running down. So in order the best
way to handle it was they built a tunnel under the hill in 1901, the Broadway tunnel. A tunnel
that goes under the hill, like through the hill. You've been in Broadway tunnel. I'm sure I have
been but there and so the bodies are above the tunnel. Oh, yeah. You're having a hard time with the
cemetery part. Yeah. A little weird. It still made me feel weird when I drive by it. As it was built,
the area was filled with carts and horses and pedestrians. The rich were suddenly not as into
living on the hill and many moved away to other areas of Los Angeles. Okay. And then boarding houses.
What's that? It's a wind chime, bro. Do you have a wind chime? No, it's out there. What do you mean
it's out there? It's not in here. It's out there. It's like someone else's wind chime that's outside.
Yeah. But you didn't hang a wind chime. Never. But if I did, I wouldn't expect this amount of guff.
I think a man... I have a... Let me just say, there's not a lot of things I judge people about.
Sure. But a man with a wind chime, fuck you. How about hummingbird feeder? That's fine.
All right. Got one of those. I do too. All right, partner.
I thought you looked familiar. So boarding houses then replaced the wealthy homes.
Okay. But one thing remained the same. The belief that there was buried treasure in...
What? The hill? Yeah. It's just not good. In 1902, an old Mexican woman who lived near the hill was
dying. She asked a friend to come to her deathbed. She then drew a map for her friend and told her
it was a treasure map for the gold at Fort Hill Moor. Well, did she just draw one like you would?
Like... Yeah. Pretty much. Off the dome. The way you would draw... The way I remember it,
now you're going to have to bear with me. I'm old and dying. Lean your head forward.
20 paces or was it 40 paces? You go left. On your face. If you see a body, you're getting warm.
She said the treasure had been buried far before the Americans arrived.
Okay. Her friend then hired a man with a divining rod to help him find the treasure.
What? An ancient metal detector. What? It's just such a... If metal detector today, douchebag,
divinity rod. It's a legitimate scientific. Dear Lord, guide the rod.
I do love how we really do. Like, religion puts so much on God. God created so much,
and yet the idea that we can bother God with minutia. Like, now Lord, I know you're busy with
everything you're overlooking, but could you help me find this treasure? Lord, I gotta find some gold.
Give me five minutes, Lord. Give me five minutes of your time, Lordy. I've been praying for you.
Give me some cash. Come on, Lord. Hook it up. Just beep. So volunteers dug
all night by candlelight in the place the divining rod said the gold was,
but they ended up just finding an abandoned drain and finally stopped.
The gold fell in the drain. No treasure. So they moved on.
Moved on, meaning they moved on with their lives? Yeah, those people left. Okay. You know,
time passes, cars became the way to get around. And in 1930, the city started buying up land to
expand Spring Street. Some of the hill was to be removed, and to do that, they had to buy
a bunch of the old homes. In 1933, plans were made to remove even more of the hill to build a
civic center and use the dirt for landfill to construct Union Station. Okay. So now they're
just digging up the hill. Rumors of treasure persisted, though, and when word that more of the
hill will be moved, treasure hunters flocked to the dig site. LA Times columnist Ed Ainsworth
wrote, quote, isn't it funny how the early Spaniards seem to do nothing but traipse around
the country with jackloads of gold bullion? Yeah, just burying it. Just putting it wherever.
To bury it. That's what I did. They're like squirrels with nuts. That's what you do with treasure.
It doesn't become treasure till it's in the ground, really. I mean, buried treasure,
those are kind of synonymous. Yeah, I mean, it's a treasure, it seems like something you find.
You don't have, like you don't have it. Nobody's like, let me take you to the treasure room.
They're like, look at my gold. And no one gets paid in treasure. How much will I be making?
Half a treasure now? It depends on the treasure. Honestly, not sure what we're finding.
So it could be a lot of gold, could be nothing.
1930. Listen, a 62-year-old dead woman drew a map.
It's real. Now this guy with a stick is going to find it. Follow me.
Don't worry, the Lord's on top of it. Well, this is going to get a little weird.
At 1933 was the year geophysicist and mining engineer G. Warren Shuffelt came to City Hall.
He was with two other men, Rex McGarry, an attorney, and Roy Martin. They said they had a map.
I'm not going to make a McGareth joke. That's fine, you don't have to.
I don't, I feel like it wouldn't be right. No, it's fine, McGareth. Yeah.
They said they had a map that gave them the location of the Spanish gold.
Shuffelt also had something special. He had invented what he said was an X,
a radio X-ray machine that could locate gold. Okay, so the truth is around this time,
90% of things that people said were invented were crazy bullshit. Yeah.
So you can't... Wait, you don't believe in the radio X-ray machine? I don't.
Okay, I think that that's very close-minded. Yeah.
And I think that you need to open your mind and allow things in that could
be real. No. Okay. Newspapers said the Spanish gold was buried during colonial times and that
Shuffelt thought he could get it out after 28 feet of shaft was sunk. Well done. It was not that easy.
They were boulders blocking the way and lots of mud after the shaft went through the water table.
They dug down 50 feet, did not find anything. That wasn't part of the deal. And they were not
allowed to go further because of the city rules. Right, because, yeah, right. They'd already gone
double of what they said they would do. Only 50. Yeah, only 50 feet down. You know. Really giving
credit to these Spanish diggers, too, for their time. Really, really dug. Really dug.
Like, beat like, I mean, if you were on this dig, you were like, dude, we're good. No.
Keep going. It's till we hit lava. Hold on, I'm going to show you the X-ray machine. Oh, I'm excited
for this. Oh. Oh, good. So it was a camera with a tube. He looks like he's into it, too. I mean,
he, honestly, it looks like he's panhandling for money with that hat beside him, like a corner
for the X-ray machine. I mean, it looks like a can with a tube on the bottom. It looks like a man
full of bullshit. It does look like a man full of bullshit. So they found no gold. But Shuffelt
used his amazing radio X-ray machine to explore the area. Don't worry. Quote. I was over a pattern
of tunnels and I mapped out their course, the position of large rooms and the location of the
deposits of gold. But I couldn't understand the meaning of it. Great. Well, thank you for your
help. We're good on this guy, right, everybody? Feels like this guy doesn't know what he's doing,
right? The three men left after their permit had expired. That is when Shuffelt met little chief
Greenleaf, a Hopi Indian. Oh, God, I was hoping for a child from Arizona. Okay, little, little
little chief Greenleaf. I mean, it rhymes. Little chief Greenleaf. Come on down. Sometimes chief
Greenleaf would lecture under the name L Macklin. Okay. Armed with what he needed, Shuffelt returned
to Los Angeles with his two business partners. They told the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors
they had an ancient sheepskin treasure map that gave the location of the gold. They again wanted
permission to dig. Listen, I'm sure you're thinking we're crazy. A lot of people are. But now we have
the map for the treasure. It's on sheepskin. Yes, I've abandoned that crazy X-ray machine too.
Who would make a fake map on sheepskin? We met with the adorable little chief Greenleaf.
Naturally, the city was up for it. Of course. The Board of Supervisors agreed to let him dig
if he split the treasure with them 50-50. People are treasure crazy. Well, it's slight corruption.
I will say though, if someone came to me with like treasures, like if someone was like, listen,
get a little bit of action, just help me find the treasure. I do like a little stuff to be like,
all right, I'll get like a 5% of the treasure. All they have to do is go, yeah, go ahead and dig.
Yeah. Yeah. So why not? Yeah. Not good supervising really. Not everyone was on board.
A quote willow man named Burroughs. A willow man? Willow man. I don't know. I tried to find it out.
A bird man? Willow. I think he's a guy. I think he's another diviner. From the quote,
ancient order of willow switchers. Not helping. Said Sheffelt was wrong. To prove it, Burroughs walked
all around the hill with his willow wand. Oh, sweet God. He's got merch. On the top
of the willow wand, there was an old leather tobacco pouch. He said if the wand found gold,
the pouch would dip. But it did not dip. How does it not even dip? There's your proof. There's no
gold. We'll take it. There's no gold. Burroughs said there was no more than two dollars on the hill.
Okay. But that wasn't good enough for the board of supervisors who hoped the 50-50 split.
So you guys get a dollar. Cool. And they were swelled by Sheffelt's story. It was hard to deny
the story Sheffelt had learned from Chief Greenleaf. Turns out there used to be an
advanced race of people who built an underground city right in Los Angeles 5,000 years ago.
They were called the lizard people. They were intellectually and technologically advanced.
They used mysterious chemicals to dig a network of 285 tunnels. The lizard people. Yep. Okay.
Okay. There are huge chambers where thousands of lizard people families lived. Okay. So
this is, whose point is this? This is Sheffelt. Okay. Just want to make sure. This is the stuff
he learned from the chief. Right. There's lizard. The lizard people built an underground city and
lived in lizard families. They stored imperishable herbs for their food supply. Sure. Of course.
Of course. Like if you were, if you were. Can foods. Well, if you built like a bomb shelter.
Yeah. You would put like herbs like. Exactly. Paprika. Sure. Oh gosh. Thank God for all this
oregano. Yeah. Perfect. That's what you would eat. Basil leaves anyone? Or basil? That's right.
Which one is it? No, it doesn't matter. It's the dollop. The advanced race were related to the
Mayans and had fled a catastrophic meteor shower, which created a great fire. They were relatives
of the human Mayans? Yep. The lizard people. Yeah. You would think that they would not be
direct ancestors of humans. I don't think they're actually lizard people. I think they're people
called the lizard people. Okay. Sure. After the great fire, they built three tunnel networks
along the Pacific coast. The tunnel labyrinths were built to escape future fires. One of those
city's tunnels lay quote within a chain of hills forming the frog of a horse's hoof.
That description obviously fit for more hill. Sure. Yeah. It looks just like a frog's hoof.
And within those tunnels were tons of riches and gold tablets. Oh boy. The tablets explain the
origins of human civilization. Sure. So obviously get your hands on those. Obviously. Yeah, worth
a lot of money. Yeah, you get the fucking the exploratory tablets. It's the instruction manual.
It is very much so. It's probably some troubleshooting great stuff.
Naturally, Shuffelt's x-ray radio machine could find the underground tunnels. Oh,
God, the eye rolling that must have been coming from those who knew what was going on. We were
just like Jesus, I'm in this fucking thing. I think it's a perfect opportunity to use the
x-ray machine again. Shuffelt. No, no, no. I think we can all agree we've had some ops. We've had
some downs, mainly downs. But I think another crack at it. This is a perfect opportunity
since we found out about these lizard people and their cities. Yeah. We fired up. Okay,
please don't let me pull the cord. Anyone got gas? Shuffelt quote. The legendary story must
remain speculative until proven by excavation. And people were super into it. The Los Angeles
Times and Associated Press closely followed Shuffelt's search for the lizard people's tunnels.
The underground tunnel city was, of course, shaped like a lizard. Right. It has to be.
It reached from Elysian Park? Sure. Elysian. Elysian? Yeah. That's right here. Yeah. Right
down the street. Right down the street. Right where the Dodgers play. Right where the Dodgers play
and ruin my life. And the lizard's head, which was all the way to the central library downtown.
Sure. Okay. So pretty, pretty big underground city. Big underground lizard that the lizard
people lived in. Yeah. Using his x-ray radio machine, Shuffelt said he had discovered the
exact locations of 1,900 square feet of tunnels, rooms with 9,000 feet of floor space, and 16
places where gold was stored. Great place for floor hockey. Right off the bat. He drew a map
of the tunnels below Fortmore Hill. The county board of supervisors at that point, of course,
gave him permission to dig. We might need a board of supervisors for our board of supervisors.
I don't know. I think they're doing the right thing. It's just the man invented something
only he can validate. I don't know if that's true. I think it is exactly true.
Crowds gathered to watch the Great Dig while the sheriff held them back
to find the lizard people tunnels they dug. McGrary quote. Now we're down to the real test
with picks and shovels. Our contract permits us to sink shafts of past the depths of 50 feet.
The main room was believed to be right below the second street in Broadway. So that is where
they dug and some experts said the dig would have to go down to at least a thousand feet.
Oh my god. Jesus. Experts. Yeah. Experts, right. Experts on where the lizard city is.
The agreement with the county expired after the three and the three men had to wait for the board
of supervisors to come to an agreement of taxing beer before they were given the green light to
dig again. What is happening? They were had other business. How hard did you get it together?
And the digging continued. The AP reported they were still digging in January 1934 and
had apparently gotten a permit to go deeper as they were now down to 250 feet. Okay.
The three men felt they were on target to hit quote the key room of the city of catacombs in
which were stored the city records which were written on tablets of gold. Really? They know a
lot of shit. Yeah. For people who've never been in there. Well, they have the thing that can see
down the. Yeah, they have the extra machine that doesn't work. That's yeah. Well, no, it clearly
works because they're seeing tablets and gold. Well, yeah, they found the gold for sure. But when
spring came, they stopped digging. The money funding is venture dried up. The newspapers
stopped covering the dig and moved on to other stories. Sheffelt said in Los Angeles, settled
in Los Angeles in North Hollywood. By May of right near the lizards belly. Right. Yeah. By May
of 1934, the Los Angeles Times reported that the authorities had quote fat flatly denied the
application of Alfred Scott old time prospector for permission to dig on Fort Hillmore. Scott
refused to state what he expected to find. Okay. Can't tell you cannot tell you. So I'll be digging.
Right. Yeah. Like a permit, please. I think we I think we should go for it. Yeah. I got another
good feeling about this guy. Yeah, let's get in there, mate. Yeah, mate. Yeah. That's fine. You
can say mate. Really? You're Irish. Do they say mate? For fuck. Yeah, mate. Absolutely. Just
ask Glenn Carlin. Yeah. But they did allow more work on the hill in the name of developments,
which continue to unearth bodies in the cemetery. And what's the plan with those over the years?
The one is them. They were all taken on a weekend trip. They were all just on a boat with like
ropes. Yeah. Over the years, they were reburied in nearby cemeteries. During rainstorms, pieces of
shale were known to drop down on cars heading into the Broadway tunnel. That's all coming together.
In 1949, the 101 freeway was built over the hill or through it or whatever you call. Sure.
LA USD moved their headquarters there. Most of what once was the most coveted place to live in
Los Angeles was now gone. In 2006, LA USD moved their headquarters elsewhere and a large high
school for the performing arts was built. During the building, more than 80 bodies were moved.
Many still in their caskets. Contractors have been told they, before they started digging,
that the cemetery had been completely relocated. That is so, like the idea that you potentially
will be, like it's not like someone being like, you'll hit bodies. It's like someone being like,
you might. I think they didn't think they would at all. From the sound of it, they were told that
all the bodies had been moved. And then they start digging and they're like, I hit a lary.
But it's got to be like, you got to be like, we found one. Oh, that's crazy. One was left over.
Madness. Oh, shit. Well, let's be careful. Let's respect it, guys. Get it out of here.
Hey, Ted. Yeah, I think I got one too. Two bodies. They left two. Hey, Ted. Yeah. I got one over here.
Ted. Yeah, Ted. Hey, Ted. Oh God. Hey, Teddy, if you got a second. Ted, can I just steal you
for a moment? Wait, what's going on? We've all found caskets. How many people are working at what
and what is the actual plan? It sounds like they're all just randomly digging. It's a mass dig.
So the way they're building this, this new structure is to just send a bunch of guys in
with shovels. There'll be no more questions from your end. Okay, sir. Shelfelt died in 1957 without
ever having found the treasure. Shocking. So that happened in Los Angeles. It's our, so what you're
saying is it's our time. You and me. That's exactly what we figure this out. We dig. We dig. They already
got the bodies out of there. We just got to find the Lizard City. Find the fucking treasure. Yeah.
Yeah. And the Lizard City and their Hall of Records, which it sounds like it's down there.
He had a map. I'm picturing like a Denny's Kids map, like a maze. It's pretty close to that.
Let's look it up. Sure. Oh, internet. I forgot where I am. I get good internet.
Oh, you really labeled shaft. Oh my God. And this is all, this is all out of just
intense dementia, right? I'm, you know, like I could draw you that right now and be like,
it's like this. It would be like that, right? I mean, it's pretty close to the drawings of a
crazy person. Yeah. Yeah, just, there's my favorite part. See? Oh, great. Gold and arrows pointing
in every direction. My, uh, my, a relative of mine, uh, who has some mental disorders stayed at
when I was like just starting college, like stayed at my house in Milwaukee with my mother for a
little while and was sort of going crazy while he was there. And I found his notebook and, uh,
treasure, uh, treasure. There was a bank robbery plan and it was a picture of a bank. Okay. And
it labeled the front entrance and then it labeled the back entrance and then all the arrows just
sort of indicated going through the back entrance. So sort of like the plan was just to sneak in
through the back. Yeah, it sounds good. Airtight. We didn't see it coming, sir. They came in through
the back. To be honest, I didn't even know we had one of those. Why do we? We're opening ourselves
up to these problems. Anyway, he got the vault open pretty quick. Again, he knew about the back.
Let's get, let's, we should put something in there besides a screen door. Yeah, I couldn't
agree more. And also, let's put up a sign that says employees only for God's sake. We really
got it. We got to attack this from a couple angles. Oh, all right. Okay. We tried. We did.
We sent cars. All right, let me, I'll say baby car. We sent cars.