Category: Hidden History
- The Mormon Vaults in the Mountains
This theory claimed that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints built secure mountain vaults not only to preserve genealogical records, but to conceal politically sensitive historical material, including the alleged “real history” of the American Civil War. In the strongest version, the vaults were portrayed as doomsday shelters for documents that would overturn accepted national history if broadly released. The documented foundation beneath the theory is real: the Church did build the Granite Mountain Records Vault in 1965 inside a mountain near Salt Lake City, and the facility holds a vast collection of genealogical and historical microfilms, including many Civil War-related records preserved through FamilySearch catalog holdings. The conspiracy claim extends that real archival mission into a hidden-history program.
- The Iron Mountain Vaults
This theory claimed that governments and allied institutions were removing authentic historical records from public circulation and storing them in underground vaults, where the real past could be selectively controlled. In its modern form, the story attached itself to the existence of subterranean archival and records-storage complexes, especially those associated with Iron Mountain and later underground federal records centers. The theory did not rest on a fictional setting; underground storage sites genuinely existed and were advertised as safer, more secure environments for preservation. The conspiratorial leap was to recast preservation as concealment, and records management as a program for burying inconvenient history.
- The "Grand Canyon" Egyptian Colony
This theory claimed that the Grand Canyon concealed evidence of an ancient Egyptian or otherwise Old World colony, discovered in 1909 and then covered up by the Smithsonian or federal authorities. It originated in a front-page Arizona Gazette story about a supposed underground complex containing mummies, hieroglyphs, and “Oriental” artifacts. Although later research found no evidence that the expedition, discoverers, or excavation were real, the story became one of the most durable American hidden-archaeology legends of the twentieth century.
- The "Hidden" Island of California
This theory revived the much older belief that California was an island, combining it with modern earthquake and plate-tectonic fears to claim that the state was drifting away from the continent and that officials were secretly “bolting” it down. It fused two separate historical traditions: the early modern cartographic myth of California as an island, and the modern misconception that California could simply break off and fall into the Pacific. In conspiracy form, the state’s geology becomes a concealed engineering problem rather than a matter of tectonic science.
- The "Global" Library Fire
This theory claimed that the Vatican was systematically destroying ancient books, archives, and libraries around the world in order to erase the true record of human history before the arrival of 1900. It belongs to a broader anti-Vatican and anti-clerical tradition that portrayed Rome as both the keeper and destroyer of dangerous knowledge. By the late nineteenth century, the secrecy surrounding the Vatican archives and library made it possible to imagine that the institution was not preserving history but eliminating it.
- The "Cardiff Giant" as a Real Human
This theory claimed that the Cardiff Giant hoax was only a decoy, and that a genuine giant human body had in fact been discovered and then concealed by scientific authorities, often identified in later retellings as the Smithsonian. It emerged after the giant was exposed as a carved gypsum fraud in 1869–1870. In this revised form, the exposure did not end belief; instead, it was reinterpreted as a cover story hiding a real giant from the public.
- The "Great Wall of China" as a Hoax
This theory claims that the Great Wall did not exist as a real historical structure and that its reputation was created or exaggerated by travelers, illustrators, and publishers who profited from exotic descriptions of China. The idea often draws on the fact that some early travelers, especially Marco Polo, did not describe the Wall in the way later European readers expected. In later retellings, that silence was transformed into a claim that the Wall itself was a literary fabrication designed to sell books and shape Western ideas about China.
- The "Buried" City of New York
This theory claims that modern New York sits atop a buried earlier version of the city, with streets, buildings, and whole urban layers hidden beneath the present surface. In current conspiracy culture it is often linked to the Mud Flood or Tartaria narrative, but it also draws plausibility from real features of New York history: landfilling, changing street grades, buried wells and foundations, erased shorelines, and deep archaeological deposits in Manhattan and the outer boroughs. The theory expands those real layers into a total lost-city narrative.
- The Illuminati-Haitian Connection
This theory holds that the Haitian Revolution was not primarily the result of slavery, colonial violence, and the Age of Revolution, but a covert extension of the same secret-society forces that counterrevolutionaries claimed had engineered the French Revolution. In its strongest form, the theory says French Illuminati, Jacobin networks, or Masonic radicals deliberately fomented revolt in Saint-Domingue in order to destroy plantation wealth, collapse the colonial order, and spread revolutionary chaos across the Atlantic world. The documented record clearly shows that anti-Illuminati explanations of the French Revolution became widespread after the 1790s and that the Haitian Revolution destroyed one of the richest slave colonies in the world. What remains unproven is the claim of an operational Illuminati hand behind the Haitian uprising itself.
- The "High Hat" Gangs
This theory holds that New York street thieves used hollowed-out top hats or specially prepared “high hats” to carry bricks, stolen goods, or compact contraband while maintaining the outward appearance of respectability. In some versions, the hats were said to be part of a coordinated urban theft ring in which apparently well-dressed men could strike, store, and disappear before police recognized what they were carrying. The historical trail for this theory is much thinner than for better-known Gilded Age gang conspiracies, and the exact phrase “High Hat” gangs appears to belong more to rumor and anecdotal urban folklore than to a clearly documented criminal organization. What is better documented is the broader New York culture of street gangs, gentlemanly disguise, hat-snatching violence, and costume-based criminal deception.
- The Spring-heeled Jack "Super-Soldier"
This theory holds that Spring-heeled Jack was not a demon, ghost, or pure urban legend, but a human figure using advanced equipment or experimental bodily enhancement. In its most common Victorian form, the explanation centered on spring-loaded boots, hidden armor, clawed gloves, and chemical devices that allowed the attacker to leap over walls and terrify women in the streets. In stronger versions, the figure was said to be either a failed military experiment, a costumed aristocratic sadist, or a prototype “super-soldier” before such a term existed. The documented record clearly shows that Spring-heeled Jack became a major panic in late-1830s Britain and that witnesses described a figure with extraordinary jumping ability and sometimes metallic or armored features. What remains unproven is the identity behind the legend.
- The Shaker "Brainwashing"
This theory held that the Shakers did not win converts through spiritual conviction alone, but through psychological domination, trance, or “animal magnetism,” which critics likened to mesmerism or hypnosis. In its strongest form, detractors claimed Shaker leaders were able to break family bonds, detach members from inherited property, and hold communities together through manipulated states of mind rather than sincere faith. The documented record clearly shows that critics accused the Shakers of unnatural influence, family destruction, and coercive communal discipline. What is far less secure is the specific claim that Shaker communities systematically used animal magnetism or hypnotic control as an intentional recruitment technology.
- The Blood Libel Resurgence
This theory concerns the modern revival of the medieval blood libel through the 1840 Damascus Affair, when Jews in Ottoman Syria were accused of ritual murder after the disappearance of a Catholic friar and his servant. The affair revived one of Europe’s oldest conspiracy theories in a new age of diplomacy, journalism, and imperial rivalry. In later retellings, the Damascus case became proof that secret Jewish rituals were not a dead medieval myth but a hidden transnational reality. The documented record clearly shows that the accusation was real, that it triggered arrests and torture, and that it became an international scandal. What remains false is the underlying ritual-murder claim itself.
- The Jefferson Davis "Gold Train"
This theory held that as the Confederacy collapsed, Jefferson Davis fled south with a hidden treasure train carrying vast sums in gold and silver, then concealed part of it in Georgia to finance a renewed Confederate struggle or “Second Revolution.” The historical record clearly shows that a Confederate treasury train did leave with Davis’s government in April 1865 and that real specie, bullion, and valuables were involved. It also shows that portions of the treasure were dispersed, stolen, recovered, or lost amid chaos in Georgia. What remains unproven is the stronger legend that Davis personally hid a great reserve in the woods for a future insurgent return.
- The Mormons "Danite" Assassins
This theory held that Joseph Smith and later Mormon leaders maintained a secret brotherhood of “Danites” or “Destroying Angels” who enforced obedience, intimidated dissenters, and murdered apostates, enemies, or hostile officials. The historical record clearly shows that an oath-bound Danite organization did exist among Latter-day Saints in Missouri in 1838 during a period of acute violence and siege mentality. What is far less secure is the larger legend that this organization survived as a permanent secret assassination corps under Church command. The resulting theory became one of the most durable anti-Mormon narratives of the nineteenth century.
- The "Yellow Peril"
This theory held that Asian migrants, merchants, and rising Asian states were not simply entering Western societies through ordinary migration or trade, but were part of a larger civilizational threat aimed at overwhelming white nations from within and without. In late nineteenth-century Europe, North America, and the Pacific world, the idea fused labor anxiety, racial pseudoscience, imperial rivalry, and fears of demographic replacement into a single conspiracy framework. The historical record clearly shows that “Yellow Peril” language became a widespread political myth in the late 1800s and helped justify exclusion laws, anti-immigrant violence, and alarmist invasion fantasies. What remains unproven is the central conspiratorial claim that Asian immigrants were part of any coordinated campaign to dismantle Western civilization.
- The Napoleon Body Double
This theory holds that the man who died on Saint Helena in May 1821 was not Napoleon Bonaparte himself, but a substitute or body double left behind while the real emperor escaped and vanished across the Atlantic. In the strongest American version of the story, Napoleon is said to have reached the United States, where members of the Bonaparte family were already established, and hoped to lay the foundations for a future political return or even a new imperial project. The documented record confirms that Napoleon truly wanted to flee to America in 1815, that several Bonapartes did settle in the United States, and that body-substitution rumors later became a durable part of Napoleonic legend. What remains unproven is the central claim that Napoleon escaped Saint Helena and that a double died in his place.
- The "Pinkerton" Shadow Government
This theory holds that the Pinkerton National Detective Agency functioned as more than a private detective service and instead operated as a quasi-private army for the industrial elite commonly labeled the Robber Barons. In its strongest form, the theory argues that the agency served as an unelected enforcement arm for railroad, steel, coal, and manufacturing interests, carrying out surveillance, union infiltration, strikebreaking, armed protection, and intimidation where local government either could not or would not act. The documented history strongly supports the view that Pinkertons were repeatedly hired by major corporations to combat organized labor and protect industrial property. What remains more speculative is the broader claim that the agency amounted to a true “shadow government” rather than a private force operating alongside sympathetic public officials.
- The "Gold Standard" as British Slavery
This theory argues that the American gold standard was not merely a domestic monetary policy but a foreign-imposed system that tied the United States back to British financial power. In its strongest form, the theory claims that demonetizing silver and fixing the dollar to gold made the United States a de facto financial colony of London, empowering bondholders, creditors, and Atlantic banking interests at the expense of farmers, workers, miners, and debtors. The theory grew out of the real late-nineteenth-century free silver struggle, when many American speakers and pamphleteers openly described the gold standard as a system of financial servitude engineered for foreign and creditor benefit.
- The "Mormon Corridor" Blockade
This theory claims that Brigham Young’s chain of Mormon settlements from Utah toward Southern California was not simply a migration and trade network, but part of a deliberate blockade plan meant to control the inland West and restrict non-Mormon movement toward California. In stronger versions, the theory says Young intended a fortified Mormon-controlled corridor, complete with stockades, canyon walls, and denied supplies for outsiders. The documented record shows real efforts to build and control a route to the Pacific, real concern about outside influence, and real military fortifications during the Utah War. What remains unproven is the claim that Young was building a literal wall or continuous barrier to stop all non-Mormons from reaching California.
- The "Astor" Fur Monopoly
This theory claims that John Jacob Astor, while building his fur empire, entered into private arrangements with British or British-Canadian interests that went beyond commerce and amounted to a hidden partition plan for North America. In the strongest version, Astor is said to have coordinated with British power brokers so that American and British elites would divide the continent between them, with the Pacific Northwest and interior fur country effectively forming the western half of a managed Anglo-American order. The documented history does show that Astor made private deals with British-Canadian fur traders, used commerce to advance territorial influence, and operated in the middle of real Anglo-American boundary disputes. What remains unproven is the specific claim that he personally negotiated a secret treaty to split the United States in half.
- The "Great Reset" of 1899
This theory holds that a hidden worldwide jubilee was expected to begin on January 1, 1900, wiping away debts and resetting the financial order. In most versions, the belief drew on biblical jubilee ideas, end-of-century religious expectation, and widespread anger over debt, deflation, and the gold-standard money system in the late 1890s. Supporters of the theory argue that ordinary people were led to expect a new age of cancellation and relief, while elites quietly preserved the old creditor order instead. The theory is best understood as a decentralized rumor-complex rather than a single documented movement, but it remains notable because it merges religious prophecy, monetary reform, and anti-banker suspicion at the dawn of the twentieth century.
- Tartaria
Tartaria, more commonly rendered in English-language history as Tartary, was an early modern European geographic label used for a broad and shifting expanse of Inner Asia, Siberia, and neighboring regions. In modern conspiracy culture, the same name has been reinterpreted as referring to a lost global empire said to have possessed advanced architecture, technology, and knowledge before being erased from history. The modern Tartaria theory combines historical map terminology, architecture-focused hidden-history claims, mud-flood narratives, and ideas of documentary suppression into one of the most prominent internet-era alternative-history systems.
- Jahova was a Space Alien
This theory argues that Jahova was not a supreme spiritual being, but an advanced non-human entity or group of entities who used aerial craft, overwhelming force, and religious deception to control the Hebrews and shape early monotheism. In this interpretation, biblical descriptions of smoke, thunder, fire, trumpet-like noise, and moving pillars in the sky are treated as observations of technology rather than miracles, while Jahova’s violent commands, territorial warfare, and manipulation of rival peoples are seen as the behavior of a powerful extraterrestrial ruler rather than a universal God.
- Yahweh Is an Anunnaki
This theory holds that Yahweh was not the singular infinite God later theology made him out to be, but one member of a larger ruling class of powerful beings known across civilizations by different names, including the Anunnaki in Mesopotamia and the Elohim in the Hebrew Bible. In this framework, the Old Testament preserves the history of a territorial covenant between one such being and a specific people, while later religious tradition universalized that local figure into the sole creator of the cosmos.