Passed down through more than 21 generations, the 19 journals of Prince Henry Sinclair and his descendants and a lambskin map were found in a dirty, musty basement in Greene County, Tennessee in 2005 by the author who was researching her own family; Weems of Greene County. Written in Latin, Old England and more modern English, she has carefully vetted the names, places, and events in the journals to make certain that they spoke the truth. We invite you to follow the story of Prince Henry Sinclair as he makes another trip to the Western Lands in 1398 to bring 1/2 of the Templar treasure, hidden in the Wemyss Caves and in the Abbey in Laon, France, to Nova Scotia. Contemplate the fate of those who stayed behind, marrying into the Native American tribes, and the role that they played in building a new, free, country. Learn where they deposited the treasure caches, and the fate of the ships who made the voyage, and the men who came with them. Look at the map created by "AZ" (Antonio Zeno), the lists of crew members, and the island maps where the treasure was deposited. In the next book; Volume 3, Books 14-19, it tells the fate of these treasure troves and another voyage in 1665 to bring the 2nd half of the treasure by the descendants of the original Covenant Families. As the fledgling nation faces a crisis, the Revolutionary War, learn how the treasure was retrieved to finance the creation of a new nation. Did the journals end there? Or did they move west with the Weems family who were Freemasons and who fought under Albert Pike during the Civil War? Did some of them become Knights of the Golden Circle and members of the Quantrill Raiders? And did they know where the rest of the treasure was?
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