The
Newark Holy Stones are a set of artifacts
purportedly discovered near Newark, Ohio
by David Wyrick in 1860. These objects were
claimed to have been discovered within a cluster of mounds and
other earthworks just south of Newark, which is now regarded as
belonging to the
Hopewellian
culture. The first of these stones was excavated in June 1860
by Wyrick with the help of his teenage son, and was named "
The Newark Keystone," due to its shape
resembling a
keystone. Unlike the plethora
of artifacts found in this region, the keystone was inscribed with
Hebrew lettering containing one phrase on
each side:
- Holy of Holies
- King of the Earth
- The Law of God
- The Word of God
Wyrick presented this as evidence proving his theory that "The Lost
Tribes of Israel" were the true moundbuilders, not the indigenous
peoples of the region. The second holy stone, called the Newark
Decalogue Stone, was discovered by Wyrick in November of the same
year was found ten miles south of Newark at the Great Stone Mound.
Wyrick, accompanied with a small group of men, came across a stone
with a condensed Hebrew inscription of the
Ten Commandments which surrounded a picture
of a human figure described by Wyrick as none other than
Moses. This became known as the Decalogue Stone due to
its inscription of the Ten Commandments and was used to further
prove his theory of the presence of The Lost Tribes.
Holy stones, or Hoax?
These artifacts seemed to verify Wyrick's theory of the origins of
the Moundbuilders, but many questions arose concerning their
validity upon closer inspection. After the Keystone was deemed a
genuine find by local authority, more knowledgeable experts found
the inscriptions consistent of a modern style of Hebrew writing
which is conflicting with its alleged date of 431 B.C. The "Lost
Tribes of Israel" would have used the pre-Exilic "Old Hebrew"
alphabet, rather than the post-Exilic or "Square Hebrew" alphabet
adopted in the time of Ezra by the Jews. Due to arising
speculation, outside experts wished to view the object first hand.
Wyrick made the trip to Cincinnati on July 17 where the allegations
were further verified, in addition to the inscription issues the
keystone was said to be much too fresh and was not stained in
accordance to its alleged dating. By fall 1860 the keystone was
defined a crude hoax.
Who made them?
There is some speculation as to who made the stones, one would
assume Wyrick created them in order to prove his theory, yet some
feel otherwise. In 1861 Wyrick published a pamphlet which describes
his account of the discoveries; it included woodcuts of the
inscriptions found on the stones. When comparing Wyrick's woodcuts
of the Decalogue to the actual inscription found on the stone
Wyrick made 38 or more errors out of the 256 Hebrew letters, in
which he either made a legible letter illegible, even omitting some
letters. Some believe that whoever created the stone had an
imperfect knowledge of the language, and given that Wyrick made
this many errors in addition, proves he had a far worse
understanding, and therefore could not be the author.In addition to
that, his woodcut of Moses presented similar inconsistencies.
Wyrick's Moses is wearing a beret instead of a turban and is also
in a 19th century dress, not a flowering robe as shown on the
stone. Beverley H. Moseley, Jr., former art director of the Ohio
Historical Society, has compared the carving of Moses on the stone
to Wyrick's woodcut copy. It is his opinion as a professional
artist that the same person could not have made these two images.
Whether or not these inconsistencies were intentionally done by
Wyrick to disprove his involvement is unknown, yet after his death
Colonel Charles Whittlesey published a paper in which he discovered
personal items such as a Hebrew Bible, engraving tools, and some
black rock were found suggesting his involvement in the hoax.
The Newark Decalogue Stone
The
Newark Decalogue Stone, or “Holy Stone”, is an
artifact that measures 6-7/8" (17.5 cm) long, 2-7/8"
(7.3 cm) wide, and 1-3/4" (4.2 cm) thick, and inscribed
with
Hebrew letters.
It was found in the
Newark,
Ohio
earthworks
by David Wyrick in 1860. Along with the
stone, a smooth
sandstone box that had
been hollowed out to encase the stone was also discovered. The
post-Exilic Hebrew
letters are carved into a dark
limestone
rock (the type of rock was identified by geologists Dave Hawkins
and Ken Bork of
Denison
University), and arc around the outer rim of the stone face and
back, encapsulating a carved figure in robes. The name
Decalogue Stone, comes from the translation of the
Hebrew letters that outline the religious and
moral codes described in
Exodus
20:2-17 and
Deuteronomy 5:6-21, which
refer to the
Decalogue or
Ten Commandments. As for the figure, he has
been identified as
Moses through the
translation of the letters that crown his head.
The
Decalogue Stone, along with the
Keystone, were
discovered in the context of a Hopewell earthen
mound. This would suggest, if the stones were true
artifacts, a connection with the
Hopewell Indian
culture, which thrived from 100 BC to 500 AD.
However, the stone is generally considered to be fraudulent, an
example of
pseudoarchaeology.
Why the stone is considered a hoax
The
Decalogue Stone is viewed with a healthy
amount of skepticism, because the idea of Jews in the Americas
before Columbus falls under the pseudoarchaeological belief that
the
Lost Tribes of Israel
colonized America at sometime in the past. This is further followed
by the now falsified theory of a
Moundbuilder culture, which states
that the great American earthworks were not built by the ancestors
of the
Native
Americans but by a mysterious race of white settlers, such as
the
Lost Tribes or Norse
Vikings.
Further speculation is added by the
prevalence of hoaxes and false testimony in this area of study,
such as the Cardiff Giant, the
Los Lunas
Decalogue Stone
and Beringer's Stones.
Wyrick’s Hoax
Among some of the
hoax theories is that Wyrick,
the discoverer of the stone, planted it at the site. Because Wyrick
was an
archaeologist and had access to
the site, he could have easily placed the stone in an area of his
choosing and simply “discovered” it the next day. However, there
are other points that are highly contested.
It is asserted that Wyrick believed that the
Lost Tribes of Israel had crossed into
America and settled there (see
Mound builder ), and because he
believed this theory, it is asserted that he would be driven to
plant fake artifacts to verify it. This conjecture is postulated,
though not solely, by archaeologist Stephen Williams in his book
Fantastic Archaeology, though not necessarily supported.
However, others assert that since Wyrick did not mention his belief
in the
Lost Tribes theory in any of his
pamphlets or essays on the artifact, Wyrick did not hold such
beliefs.
The
inscriptions on the stone are
another point of contention. Though Wyrick was a man familiar with
Hebrew and various types of artifacts, it is unlikely that he wrote
the
symbols or the image of
Moses. In his pamphlets and woodcarvings of the
artifact, Wyrick made 38 errors when copying the inscription from
the Decalogue Stone. Also, though the language on the Stone is not
perfect post-Exilic Hebrew, the errors are at regular intervals, so
it could either be a dialect or the particular style of an
individual. However, the letters being in post-Exilic cannot be
right if the inscription is supposed to be from a Lost Tribe. To be
from a Lost Tribe of Israel, the letters should have been in
pre-Exilic. If Wyrick was going to bother
making a believable hoax, he would have used
pre-Exilic.Furthermore, there is his later discovery of the
Keystone, a wedge shaped
stone—like a large thick
arrowhead—made
from
novaculite and inscribed with fairly
Modern Hebrew letters. There is very little reason for Wyrick to
change the lettering from one artifact to another. Also, Modern
Hebrew has taken a millennium to develop from pre-Exilic and
post-Exilic. The idea that almost identical letters could develop
isolated from each other is highly unlikely. Finally, in regards to
the figure depicted on the artifact, when Beverley H.
Moseley, Jr., a former
art director from the Ohio Historical Society
, compared the images of Moses in Wyrick’s
woodcarvings (these woodcarvings were used to preserve 3D
representations of the Stone) and the artifact he found that the
stylistic aspects were too different for the artists to be the
same.
From this, many draw the conclusion that Wyrick is in fact innocent
of falsifying evidence, and that he is the subject of someone
else’s hoax. In fact, Wyrick himself, in 1863—a year before his
death—expressed in a
letter to Joseph Henry that he might have been a
victim of a hoax.
Rev. John W. McCarty’s and stonecutter Elijah Sutton’s
Hoax
Rev. John W. McCarty and Elijah Sutton were both residents of
Newark when the Decalogue Stone (and the Keystone) was found.
Elijah Sutton was a
stonecutter with no
other direct link to the event other than his part in carving
Wyrick’s
headstone when he died. However,
it is asserted that because the Decalogue Stone is made from
similar materials and is of the same width (thickness) as his
headstones, he must have cut the stone. As for Rev. John W.
McCarty, he played a more direct role in the artifact’s
discovery.
It was with the help of McCarty that the stone was translated. Upon
receiving the stone McCarty was able to translate it within hours.
It is also not egregiously wrong to say that many christian clergy
would support the idea of the
Lost
Tribes myth during the 1800s, for it not only validated the
Biblical tale of the
Lost Tribes but
also implied their religious right to continue colonize America and
their Christianization of the Native Americans. However, it is not
uncommon for a member of the clergy to be well versed in Hebrew and
thus be able to decipher an inscription with relative ease. Also,
McCarty did not get the translation right the first time. When
deciphering the letters above the figure’s head, McCarty first
believed that it read “
Messiah” and thus
thought the figure was
Jesus. Upon further
study, he realized it read “Moses” instead, and released a second
translation.
Related Discoveries
There were other stones found at the Newark site, like the
Keystone. Two other stones were also
found at Newark shortly after Wyrick’s death (they have since been
lost). However, they were quickly dismissed as fakes when the local
dentist, John H. Nicol, claimed that he had carved and introduced
the stones to the site. Finally, a fifth stone was found at the
same site as the
Decalogue stone two years
later by David M. Johnson, a banker, and Dr. Nathaniel Roe Bradner,
a physician. This fifth stone, named the
Johnson-Bradner Stone, was also
inscribed with
post-Exilic Hebrew. The Johnson-Bradner Stone has
since been lost.
Is the Decalogue Stone credible?
Through this evidence, it is easy to assert that all three men,
David Wyrick, Rev. John W. McCarty and stonecutter Elijah Sutton,
may not have created the stone. However, this does not mean that
the
Decalogue Stone is credible. The lack of a
perpetrator does not give way to plausibility. There is already
proof that several stones found at this site were in fact
forgeries, such as the two stones made by John H. Nicol. Also, the
archaeological contexts in which the Decalogue Stone and the
Keystone were found are still unknown. For all cultural and
physical evidence, as outlined above, little credibility is allowed
for these stones.
References
- Stephen Williams, Fantastic Archaeology. Univ. of Pennsylvania
Press, 1991, pp. 167-75.
- Charles Whittlesey. Archaeological Frauds: Inscriptions
Attributed to the Mound Builders. Three Remarkable Forgeries.
Western Reserve Historical Society Historical & Archaeological
Tract #9, 1872.
- The Newark, Ohio Decalogue Stone and
Keystone
- Wyrick's Letter to Joseph Henry
See also