Post by eastcoaster on Jun 15, 2021 12:06:45 GMT -5
Last year I gave a solution for a new park in Milwaukee to all the forums and groups. Asked to review it privately for a while where it is a new park and prefer it not get dug up unnecessarily if possible. Not heading south anytime soon and thought the larger groups may have more luck moving something that looks promising. Using different pairings based on information given in Japanese print. Using that I paired P10 to V2 and found St Charles Hotel connection in Milwaukee city history.
Its a simple solution and I think it will prove out correct, the immediate park area appears unchanged since 1980 with the "X" marks still identifiable.
I have a simple clue map and some images of St Charles Hotel in city square I didn't provide but can if interested in reviewing.
I provided openly with hopes someone working with King Park Community Centre and/or local agencies could get it checked with some care, they don't deserve to have their sports field dug up where its a lower income neighborhood. Too many more important things happening in that city right now, no coastal erosion to worry about so it'll still be there in 2025.
Painting has very few clues and same for verse, no path where it is a defined spot, all making this very simple puzzle and solution just like everyone thought it should be!
Milwaukee, King Park P10 V2
Painting Clues
- Juggler has 7 items, 4 make up the month indicators and 3 items are puzzle for city name.
- Prior discovery puzzle is city name: Millstone(MIL) + Walking stick/cane(WAU) + Key(KEE).
- Prior discovery of Milwaukee City Hall outline in painting.
- Painting portrays city hall like a CASTLE on a high mountain top to help make connection to “King Park”.
- Juggler would be part of a kings court also clue to “King Park”.
Verse #2 Clues
There is no treasure path where explicit location is defined on the third line and path start and end are same spot, exact middle/center of the football field.
At the place where jewels abound (Location Clue)
Fifteen rows down to the ground (Location Clue)
- “place where jewels abound” is clue to King Park, time period Kings were the ones who had the rooms full of jewels/gold/etc.
- “15 rows” is clue to the pair of unique round towers (now demolished) across street (west) very visible from middle of football field.
In the middle of twenty-one (Final Treasure Site)
From end to end (Location Clue)
Only three stand watch (Location Clue)
- “middle of twenty-one” is the middle of US football field, 21 lines make up field.
- “From end to end” is another simple clue to football field end zones.
- “three stand watch” is another football clue where youth leagues/middle school would typically only use 3 officials to “watch”/officiate the game.
As the sound of friends (Location Clue)
Fills the afternoon hours (Location Clue)
- Clue to the baseball stadium nearby, afternoon ballgames at open stadium would have made it loud on game days.
- Stadium is also next to the “namesakes” clue described below.
Here is a sovereign people (Identified Quote)
Who build palaces to shelter (Identified Quote)
Their heads for a night (Identified Quote)
- Prior discovered quote from Domingo Faustino Sarmiento where he was describing the Saint Charles Hotel in New Orleans during a visit touring North America.
- It’s a misdirection, I found another historic/notorious St Charles Hotel in Milwaukee (almost next to city hall) that is directly connected to the one in New Orleans.
onmilwaukee.com/history/articles/stcharleshotel.html
Captain Diedrich Upman, a Water Street tavern owner from Hanover, Germany. In 1859, he purchased the bankrupt Hotel Wettstein on Milwaukee's Market Square with plans to build the finest hotel in Milwaukee. His goal was to recreate the majestic St. Charles Hotel in New Orleans, after spending many happy hours there after the war. Its all in the article and is the research that noone else has discovered.
Gnomes admire (Filler)
Fays delight (Filler)
- Simply prose filler.
The namesakes meeting (Location Clue)
Near this site. (Location Clue)
- Milwaukee was originally three communities that merged. S. Juneau, B. Kilbourn and G. Walker considered founding fathers or city’s namesakes.
- Next to baseball stadium Juneau Avenue, Kilbourn Circle and Walker Road meet.
- The namesakes meeting and baseball stadium can be considered “Near” the actual treasure site inside King Park football field.
- This puts King Park, treasure site, smack in the middle of other clues with stadium & namesakes clue pair to the west and City Hall & St Charles Hotel clue pair to the east.
Its a simple solution and I think it will prove out correct, the immediate park area appears unchanged since 1980 with the "X" marks still identifiable.
I have a simple clue map and some images of St Charles Hotel in city square I didn't provide but can if interested in reviewing.
I provided openly with hopes someone working with King Park Community Centre and/or local agencies could get it checked with some care, they don't deserve to have their sports field dug up where its a lower income neighborhood. Too many more important things happening in that city right now, no coastal erosion to worry about so it'll still be there in 2025.
Painting has very few clues and same for verse, no path where it is a defined spot, all making this very simple puzzle and solution just like everyone thought it should be!
Milwaukee, King Park P10 V2
Painting Clues
- Juggler has 7 items, 4 make up the month indicators and 3 items are puzzle for city name.
- Prior discovery puzzle is city name: Millstone(MIL) + Walking stick/cane(WAU) + Key(KEE).
- Prior discovery of Milwaukee City Hall outline in painting.
- Painting portrays city hall like a CASTLE on a high mountain top to help make connection to “King Park”.
- Juggler would be part of a kings court also clue to “King Park”.
Verse #2 Clues
There is no treasure path where explicit location is defined on the third line and path start and end are same spot, exact middle/center of the football field.
At the place where jewels abound (Location Clue)
Fifteen rows down to the ground (Location Clue)
- “place where jewels abound” is clue to King Park, time period Kings were the ones who had the rooms full of jewels/gold/etc.
- “15 rows” is clue to the pair of unique round towers (now demolished) across street (west) very visible from middle of football field.
In the middle of twenty-one (Final Treasure Site)
From end to end (Location Clue)
Only three stand watch (Location Clue)
- “middle of twenty-one” is the middle of US football field, 21 lines make up field.
- “From end to end” is another simple clue to football field end zones.
- “three stand watch” is another football clue where youth leagues/middle school would typically only use 3 officials to “watch”/officiate the game.
As the sound of friends (Location Clue)
Fills the afternoon hours (Location Clue)
- Clue to the baseball stadium nearby, afternoon ballgames at open stadium would have made it loud on game days.
- Stadium is also next to the “namesakes” clue described below.
Here is a sovereign people (Identified Quote)
Who build palaces to shelter (Identified Quote)
Their heads for a night (Identified Quote)
- Prior discovered quote from Domingo Faustino Sarmiento where he was describing the Saint Charles Hotel in New Orleans during a visit touring North America.
- It’s a misdirection, I found another historic/notorious St Charles Hotel in Milwaukee (almost next to city hall) that is directly connected to the one in New Orleans.
onmilwaukee.com/history/articles/stcharleshotel.html
Captain Diedrich Upman, a Water Street tavern owner from Hanover, Germany. In 1859, he purchased the bankrupt Hotel Wettstein on Milwaukee's Market Square with plans to build the finest hotel in Milwaukee. His goal was to recreate the majestic St. Charles Hotel in New Orleans, after spending many happy hours there after the war. Its all in the article and is the research that noone else has discovered.
Gnomes admire (Filler)
Fays delight (Filler)
- Simply prose filler.
The namesakes meeting (Location Clue)
Near this site. (Location Clue)
- Milwaukee was originally three communities that merged. S. Juneau, B. Kilbourn and G. Walker considered founding fathers or city’s namesakes.
- Next to baseball stadium Juneau Avenue, Kilbourn Circle and Walker Road meet.
- The namesakes meeting and baseball stadium can be considered “Near” the actual treasure site inside King Park football field.
- This puts King Park, treasure site, smack in the middle of other clues with stadium & namesakes clue pair to the west and City Hall & St Charles Hotel clue pair to the east.