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Howard Hewitt

Howard Hewitt is a compact, bearded, muscular man, who, when the weather is right spends 40 or so hours a week hauling around metal detectors, shovels, and large vanilla ice coffees from Dunkin’ Donuts, looking for valuable little things that people don’t even realize they’ve lost.
 
He treasure hunts in places like old houses, parks, beaches, woods, school grounds, construction sites, country club grounds, and dumps. On this day, at a shady picnic spot around the former Hunt’s Mill, near Ten Mile River in East Providence's Rumford neighborhood, Hewitt has been pulling up a lot of bottle caps. He’s pretty sure the area has been cleared of good finds, and all that’s left are Pepsi cans. Still, when the metal detector makes promising noises, Hewitt gets down on the ground with his shovel. He digs a neat hole in the ground (it’s all this digging that makes him so muscular), runs his detector over the hole, and elicits a beep.
 
“I like this dirt,” he says excitedly, running it through his fingers. “Not too alkaline. Whatever this is, it’ll be in good shape.” Howard finally pulls out a tiny coin, penny-sized. He cleans it with his fingernail until we can see the date: 1898. It looks Russian, says Hewitt. He has ideas how it got here: immigrant mill workers having a lunch break; travelers who’d had a picnic near the Blackstone River. Anyway, it’s a lovely coin.
 
Hewitt grew up in rural Berkley, Massachusetts. He started treasure hunting when he was seven and dug up a glass bottle underneath a backyard apple tree. Now 44, Hewitt does odd jobs and works as church sexton (“glorified janitor,” he says) at St. Martin's Church in Providence. Mostly, he’s out poking around old houses and wandering through dump sites, digging up old bottles, diamond stick pins, gold spectacles, glass Indian trading beads, bone-handled lances, hand-carved ivory dice, Victorian-era engagement rings, a cast for molding musket balls, a silver pen, and many, many coins.
 
Hewitt shares his East Providence house with his girlfriend Shelby — who found him while she was out metal detecting. The house has shelves and shelves of history books (as well as detective novels and books on frugal living). Treasure hunters are into history; they have to know it to understand the value of their finding. These searchers see an Indian trading bead in that broken piece of glass; people who don’t know history just see trash.
 
Treasure hunters are independent people who want to figure history out and preserve it before development cements it over. Hewitt says there are around 300 of these folks in Rhode Island. There is a related club — Discoverin’ Rhode Island Treasures.
 
He believes that uncovering and preserving these broken fragments of the past is about self-preservation, too. Take the 1887 silver franc on a chain around Hewitt’s neck. He found the coin, on a farm in Rehoboth, Massachusetts. The hole was already in it. When Howard picked it up, he knew: it had been worn by a poor farmer who knew that his family would never starve so long as he had the coin, which would have bought two weeks’ worth of groceries in the late 1800s.
 
Then one day, after a hard week of work, the coin fell off the farmer’s neck. The coin was pushed into the ground over the next 100 years, undisturbed until Hewitt found it. Hewitt wears it now to remind himself that as long as he can find other people’s lost treasures, he’ll never starve.
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An independent man’s quest for lost treasure
If your interested in the hobby of metal detecting ,please contact us at www.buyametaldetector.com Thank you Bill Henderson Henderson Metal Detectors 1-508-821-1555
By Bill Henderson on 09/04/2007 at 10:16:43
An independent man’s quest for lost treasure
Is Oak Island’s treasure really on Birch Island? First Nations translator deciphers ancient stone as a treasure map By Angie Zinck- Lunenburg Progress Enterprise – October 18, 2006 WESTERN SHORE – You many have heard about the Da Vinci code, but the Ranville code could be what solves the longest running treasure hunt in recorded history. Keith Ranville, a First Nations man, has traveled from Winnipeg to Nova Scotia in hopes of unlocking the secret codes on Oak Island. He says he has done so by re-translating one of the stones found on the island over 200 years ago. The was first found in 1803 by the Onslow Company. Found 90 feet down the Money Pit, the stone was believed to be two feet long and 15 inches wide, weighing approximately 175 lb. Since that time, it has been said that the inscription on the stone read, “forty feet below two million pounds are buried,” as translated by James Leitchi, a professor of languages at Dalhousie University. Some researchers have questioned this translation, as Mr. Leitchi was involved in a treasure hunting company trying to sell stocks. Today, the actual stone is lost. It was used as a hearthstone in two homes on Oak Island, but it was moved to a Halifax store front where it went missing when the building was torn down. Its last known location was around the Centennial Pool area. Mr. Ranville used pictures of the stone to decipher its series of shapes, lines and dots to reveal a new translation that reads more like a map. “I’ve brought some new stuff to the table,” he says, adding that the stone’s etchings could be used to figure out the mystery of Oak Island. By his translation, much of the digging in the Money Pit area has been a waste of time and money. “I believe the pit wasn’t meant to go beyond 100 feet,” he says. “I believe it wasn’t meant to go beyond these symbols.” If one were to take Mr. Ranville’s code and follow it, it would lead you off Oak Island the site of all the treasure hunting for the past 211 years, under the water of the bay and onto the neighbouring Birch Island via man-made shafts. “The instructions at the bottom of the pit tell you about where and how to locate these shafts and I believe they’re in Mahone Bay,” he says. Mr. Ranville believes the two islands are connected by these shafts. He said that aerial shots of Birch Island prove the island has been touched by human hands. These aerial shots of the 16-acre Birch Island do show a large triangle which takes up a good portion of the island landscape. “What I want to do is investigate this island where I think these symbols lead to,” he says. Mr. Ranville has contacted the owner, Christopher Ondaatje, to inquire about doing some soil testing and exploring on the island. In addition to being the home of the famous treasure, Mr. Ranville believes Birch Island may also be an ancient burial site of those who were involved in the original treasure hiding scheme. “This is a significant Nova Scotia heritage discovery and that is Canada’s national treasure brought here for our guardianship long before Canada was established,” he says. “We should respect the civilization that is responsible for the makings of these structures. “They were a very unique culture and may hold the secret to many ancient structures.” Although he doesn’t know who actually buried the treasure, Mr. Ranville believes Oak Island and Birch Island need to be protected from further change to unlock their true history. At the time of this interview, Mr. Ranville had yet to hear from Mr. Ondaatje regarding the island. He says he will continue to research the island and its tales of mystery and treasure. Check out Google Earth on the World Wide Web to see satellite photos of Birch Island and its triangle. CANADIAN Native Treasure Hunter Keith Ranville http://www.canadaka.net/blog/oakster
By oakster on 09/19/2007 at 7:46:50

ARTICLES BY ARIN GREENWOOD
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  •   AN INDEPENDENT MAN’S QUEST FOR LOST TREASURE  |  August 29, 2007
    Howard Hewitt is a compact, bearded, muscular man, who, when the weather is right spends 40 or so hours a week looking for valuable little things that people don’t even realize they’ve lost.

 See all articles by: ARIN GREENWOOD

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