
Nothing gets the imagination flowing like rumors of buried treasure. Many of us grew up hearing such stories on film and television. Children of the 1980s like me remember watching “The Goonies” with awe and wonder, hoping that we, too, might stumble across a treasure map in our attic. This map leads to a surprisingly intact pirate ship full of priceless treasures hidden deep in a cave underground.
But as an adult, I must be more pragmatic when daydreaming about finding priceless buried treasure. Nowadays, the search for treasure must start with a simple Google search.
Because of Google, I first stumbled across an obscure website called The Hoot Owl Tree, which told an intriguing tale of buried treasure just up the road in Arkansas. What makes this tale so intriguing are the specifics – pinpointable locations on a map and names from first-hand accounts.
After reading it, I took the liberty of labeling this story “The Legend of Smoke Rock Creek.” This story takes place deep in the scenic Ouachita Mountains of West Central Arkansas, a mere three-hour drive from Shreveport. (“Ouachita” is pronounced “Wash-uh-taw.”) The source for this story is a man named Bob Brewer.
Bob, a renowned treasure hunter from Arkansas, was a consultant on the Nicholas Cage movie “National Treasure: Book of Secrets.” The main reason this story is believable is that Bob Brewer has an actual track record of finding gold. Bob once uncovered a jar of gold coins on one of his treasure hunts. If anything would solidify your resume as a treasure hunter, finding a pot full of gold coins surely would. And if that wasn’t enough, famed treasure hunter Mel Fisher also spent time in the Ouachita Mountains about 20 years ago. The reason, any sane person would surmise, was that he, too, was looking for treasure.
It seems “The Legend of Smoke Rock Creek” could be more than just a legend.
According to Bob, this story was first told to him by an Arkansas old timer named Isom Avants. In my experiences growing up surrounded by old timers in Texas, there is typically a smidge of truth buried somewhere in their
stories. Now, we all know that fact and lore are two different things,
so there’s a slight possibility that this story is embellished. But it
is fun to think about it. According to Bob, this story was recounted by
Avants around a campfire and involved whiskey. (Another exciting facet
of old timers is how often their stories involve whiskey.)
Back
in 1882, a stranger showed up in the Brushy community deep in the
Ouachita Mountains. He stuck out like a sore thumb. He was well over six
feet tall and wore a six-shooter on his hip. “The Mexican,” as locals
immediately labeled him, announced he was on the search for a lost gold
mine. This was not an unheard-of endeavor in this part of Arkansas. In
1541, Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto led an expedition traversing
western Arkansas. The exact route of de Soto’s expedition is unknown,
leaving wild speculation about the subject. And anytime Spanish
explorers were involved, discussion of treasures immediately followed.
So,
locals took note when the curious stranger showed up in Brushy. The
Mexican had in his possession a weathered leather map whose markings
were burned with a hot brand. The few clues he had were supposedly that
the treasure was marked with carvings in trees and hidden within a
buried cave or sealed mine. He hired locals to help him in his search.
The man, Osborn Vanatta, said he was, in fact, from Mexico. (Some
sources have his name spelled “Vanetta.”) Where he obtained the map is
unknown.
After
two years of futile effort, Vanatta finally narrowed his search to a
deep hollow with steep sides and a clear creek running through it. The
creek was called Smoke Rock Creek. The creek (and a nearby mountain) is
so named because of a rock formation covered in a strange, dark,
soot-like color. Vanatta concentrated his efforts, tunneling into the
hill near the
mouth of Smoke Rock Creek. (Today, this is roughly near the intersection
of Polk County Road 633 and Polk County Road 402.)
One
day while tunneling, Vanatta’s search paid off. He uncovered the sealed
mine supposedly left by the Spanish. Inside, Vanatta found 17th century
Spanish mining tools. There was no doubting the veracity of these
claims because the discovered tools were later stolen from the man
Vanatta had hired to identify them. There’s even a newspaper report
about a deputy sheriff being sent to Texarkana to recover the stolen
tools. After uncovering the lost mine, Vanatta relieved his hired help
of their duties and continued working alone.
Here,
“The Legend of Smoke Rock Creek” takes a sinister turn. According to
news reports, Vanatta had a feud with a family called Hatfield that
lived near Vanatta’s operation. It began when one of the Hatfields
witnessed Vanatta on the trail with his saddle bags heavily loaded,
supposedly with gold. The story is too long and convoluted to share
here, but the result was that Vanatta was killed by a man named Tandy
Hatfield, not far from where Vanatta was digging. Hatfield claimed
self-defense, but others thought Hatfield was out for the gold. Vanatta
was buried near where he was killed.
On
Aug. 28, 1884, Tandy Hatfield was charged with murder, but he was never
convicted of the crime due to some legal shenanigans. Vanatta’s gold
was never recovered, his map was lost, and the unsealed mine fell prey
to weather and erosion in time. “The Legend of Smoke Rock Creek” seemed
destined to become just another fabled tale of lost treasure.
Or
would it? In the spring of 1932 – almost 50 years later – a man named
William “Mr. Bill” Dobson turned up in Brushy, Ark. He was there, he
said, to file a mining claim. The real reason, it would turn out, was
Mr. Bill intended to pick up where the Mexican treasure hunter Osborn Vanatta
left off. Bill’s wife reportedly confided to a neighbor that Mr. Bill
had in his possession a map made of lambskin that indicated a sizeable
fortune of Spanish gold and silver was buried near Smoke Rock Creek. The
famed leather map belonging to Osborn Vanatta had seemingly resurfaced.
Multiple
witnesses report having seen the map with their own eyes. Later, the
map was stashed in a barn on a friend’s property. Mr. Bill stayed in a
cabin on his claim near Smoke Rock Creek, and during his subsequent
excavations, he found some enticing breadcrumbs.
He
uncovered a rusted metal helmet and a machete of some type. (These
items were housed for many years in a private museum in Hatfield, Ark..)
Bill Dobson spent time on and off over the next 14 years searching for
the buried treasure on Smoke Rock Creek but to no avail.
Then,
on June 7, 1946, an event occurred that had all the makings of a
Hollywood movie, complete with a twist that the best screenwriters
couldn’t have concocted. On that fateful day, Mr. Bill was again
prospecting for the buried treasure on Smoke Rock Creek, a few hundred
yards away from his cabin. A local man Bill had hired, David Stone, was
working nearby. Around lunchtime, Mr. Bill emerged from the nearby
woods, running and hollering with excitement. He was so frantic that he
tripped and fell into the water when he reached a small footbridge that
crossed the creek. As David Stone hurried to his side to help him from
the water, a stuttering, visibly shaken Dobson announced to Stone that
he had finally found something incredible buried at Smoke Rock Creek. He
said Mr. Bill had covered up the site, and he would first need to catch
his breath before returning to the dig site. What he found, he told
Stone, would “shock the hell” out of him.
But that would never happen. Mr. Dobson suddenly clutched his chest and collapsed in the waters of
Smoke Rock Creek, instantly dead from a massive heart attack. David
Stone fetched help to make sure Mr. Bill’s body was properly taken care
of in Mena, but while they were gone from Smoke Rock Creek, a sudden
Arkansas rainstorm dumped a deluge on the dig site, and a flash flood
washed away all evidence of where Mr. Bill had been digging. Whatever
Mr. Bill had seen – the cause of his excitement and subsequent heart
attack – was never determined. To this day, it remains an unsolved
mystery.
So,
there you have it. What makes “The Legend of Smoke Rock Creek” so
tantalizing and tempting for amateur treasure hunters and history
enthusiasts like yours truly is its accessibility. Smoke Rock Creek is
roughly 12 miles east of Hatfield, Ark. The creek is only a little over
two miles long, and much of it is accessible from Forest Service roads
in the Ouachita National Forest. From start to finish, the whole tale
takes place in a surprisingly small geographic area. Vanatta’s grave is
also there – as personally witnessed more than once by our storyteller,
Bob Brewer. The final and perhaps most titillating piece of information
is that the mysterious leather map that could guide adventurers to the
lost treasure on Smoke Rock Creek was last stashed in a barn somewhere
near Hatfield, Ark. For all we know, the map could still be there.
Tempting,
indeed. For Shreveport-Bossier weekend warriors who fancy a treasure
hunt, “The Legend of Smoke Rock Creek” could keep you busy for many
years. Just keep in mind, if you stumble across untold piles of Spanish
treasure on federal property, your first call will have to be to Uncle
Sam. To begin your own adventure story and read this tale in its
entirety (with considerably more detail), visit www.thehootowltree.com.
Author’s Disclaimer: Searching for buried treasure on private property without the landowner’s consent is illegal and dangerous. Also, mining and/or performing excavation in national forests without proper permits is strictly prohibited.