Sounds to me like any hidden fortune to be found already has.
Personally I would do a little research and verify that tale, through newspaper records for example, before expending any time or energy on a potentially disastrous wild goose chase.
And even assuming the story is true, is it not reasonable to assume that whoever owned the house at the time performed a thorough search and presumably recovered any additional “treasure” that was there to be found, if any?
I have an urban legend calendar on my desk, with one story for each day. About a fourth of them are actually true (the flip side of each day’s page verifies or refutes it).
And talk loudly when you come into the room, so you don’t catch any ghosts sleeping. They don’t like to be drilled into, so give them a chance to get out of the way.
I think I’d get one of those little glass fiber cameras and start drilling holes to look for things. I wouldn’t really expect to find anything, but it sounds like fun.
Is it possible one of the prior owners was a Nigerian prince? If so, the key isn’t drilling holes in the wall, you just need to wire me $50,000 to cover the bank’s processing fee, after which they’ll release the safe deposit box saying where in the house the money is.
May I suggest the OP drills as many holes as possible into the house, then paint it yellow and turn it into The Big Cheese amusement park? There’s a fortune to be made!
My father found $5000 in small bills plus a handwritten will buried in a mason jar underneath the kitchen floorboard in the old farmhouse he bought. He found the woman’s adult children and gave it to them. They hadn’t been associated with the house in more than 20 years and it had been sold several times before my dad bought it. In 1976 this was not a small amount.
The family gave each of us kids $100 to spend. My honest, benevolent dad promptly snatched it away from us and spent it on himself
sigh you know, it sucks because we sold the parts bug about 3 years ago. If you had mentioned this back then I could have accommodated you with an original stock one
I did that too. When we replaced the soffit & fascia in 2010, I took one of those small metal chocolate sample boxes and put $1 & some coins, a article about Mark Zuckerberg cut out of Time mag (The Social Network was all in the news), another article cut from the local paper, tiny plastic cat my daughter happened to have in her purse, and a note saying how we were happy in this house & wished the finder happiness too, and stuck it up between the joists.