Last week we published an excerpt from a Paper Money article by Terry Bryan relating to a book about a bank robbery of the Jackson, Tennessee branch of the Union Bank in 1859. Terry put me in touch with author Tom Aud, who writes:
My publisher can be contacted at www.braybreepublishing.com and people can order it from Amazon.com or from me directly at tomaud@gmail.com. Prices vary from different sources but the book lists for $25.00. It has been well received and I believe that coin collectors especially would enjoy it
Below is the information form the publisher's web site.
-Editor
Gold is the Key:
Murder, Robbery, and the Gold Rush in Jackson, Tennessee
Author: Thomas L. Aud
ISBN-13: 978-0-9671251-3-8
Format: 6 x 9 Trade Paperback
Pages: 282
Price: $25.00
BrayBree Publishing Company LLC announces the release of Gold is the Key: Murder, Robbery, and
the Gold Rush in Jackson, Tennessee, a new book by Madison County Archivist Thomas L. Aud.
In 1985, the discovery of a mysterious cache of gold coins led to gold fever in Jackson, Tennessee.
City workers who had unearthed the 300 nearly-mint coins quickly cashed them in at local banks or
exchanged them for jewelry. One person even traded them for a used car. There was an investigation
by the Jackson Police Department to determine the rightful owners and a lawsuit by the City of
Jackson against those who had obtained the coins. But in the end, the mystery still remained: who
actually buried the gold coins and why?
At the time, Aud worked for the Jackson-Madison County Library. With the question of ownership of
the gold coins prevalent, he researched property records and discovered past owners of the place the
coins were found, but found no answers. The mystery led him to dig deeper over the next 25 years and
explore the possibility that they were linked to an unsolved robbery of the Jackson branch of the Union
Bank of Tennessee and the murder of its clerk, George E. Miller, in February 1859. The results of his
research are presented in Gold is the Key: Murder, Robbery, and the Gold Rush in Jackson, Tennessee.
The 28-year-old Miller lived in the bank building located on East Baltimore Street where the New
Southern Building stands today. There his body was discovered on the morning of February 4, 1859,
having been hit over the head with a canceling hammer he had used in banking business. Missing from the vault were $17,300 in paper notes and $5,700 in gold coins. Over the years, there were suspects
whose guilt could never be proven and individuals claiming to know the whereabouts of the gold coins
who offered their knowledge in exchange for a reward. But the murderer (or murderers) was never
found and the coins were never recovered.
Aud is confident the buried coins are linked to the robbery of the Union Bank and the murder of
George Miller. “All the coins found in 1985 predated the bank robbery and murder in 1859 and
many were in good or better condition, which indicated to coin collectors that they could have been
taken from a bank,” he said. “If the coins had been stashed away by a land owner in advance of or in
reaction to the occupation by Union soldiers during the Civil War or a national depression, logically
there would have been coins more recent than 1858 included.”
Gold is the Key: Murder, Robbery, and the Gold Rush in Jackson, Tennessee is available on BrayBree
Publishing’s website: braybreepublishing.com
For more information, or to order, see:
Gold is the Key:
Murder, Robbery, and the Gold Rush in Jackson, Tennessee
(braybreepublishing.com/books/goldisthekey/)
Wayne Homren, Editor
The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a non-profit organization
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