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Des trésors cachés dans les vieilles maisons canadiennes

Juil 7, 2026

Old homes have a way of holding onto the past.

Sometimes it’s obvious, faded wallpaper, hand-carved banisters, or forgotten letters tucked into attics. But sometimes that past is hidden much deeper. Beneath floorboards. Behind loose bricks. Inside walls.

And every so often, what’s hidden isn’t just history.

It’s gold.

Across Canada and around the world, stories continue to emerge of homeowners discovering coins, jewellery, and family heirlooms tuckered away decades, sometimes centuries earlier. While these discoveries may seem like scenes from a movie, the reasons behind them are rooted in something deeply human: fear, survival, and the instinct to protect what matters most.

Why People Hid Gold in Their Homes

Today, most people trust banks to protect their money and valuables. But for much of history, that wasn’t always the case.

For many older generations, especially those who lived through the Great Depression, war, or economic collapse, trust in financial institutions could be fragile. Families often kept their wealth close, and hidden.

Gold was especially valuable because it was portable, durable, and held value no matter what happened to paper currency.

It wasn’t unusual for people to hide things like gold rings and necklaces, silverware, gold coins, cash and sometimes even family documents.

Common hiding spots included under floorboards, inside walls, behind fireplaces, in crawl spaces, and buried in gardens.

But life has a way of interrupting plans.

People passed away unexpectedly. Families moved. Memories faded. And in some cases, the only person who knew where the valuables were hidden never got the chance to retrieve them.

A Treasure Beneath the Floorboards

In 2022, homeowners in England made headlines when they discovered more than 260 gold coins hidden beneath the floorboards of their kitchen during renovations.

The coins dated back to the early 1600s and were estimated to be worth nearly $300,000. Experts believe the family who hid them likely intended to return, but never did.

It’s one of the most remarkable examples of how hidden wealth can survive for centuries, waiting quietly inside an ordinary home.

Stories like this aren’t as rare as you may think.

In 2024, another couple renovating a 400-year-old farmhouse uncovered more than 1,000 gold coins buried beneath their kitchen floor, likely hidden during the English Civil War. Historians believe the political chaos and violence of the time forces families to hide their savings for protection.

The Canadian Connection

Canada has its own deep history of hidden valuables.

For immigrant families arriving with very little, gold jewellery often represented generational wealth. It could be sold in emergencies, passed down to children, or hidden away for safekeeping.

In times of uncertainty, war, recession, rising inflation, gold became more than an investment. It became financial security.

This was especially true during the 20th century. Many Canadians who lived through the Depression developed habits of hiding cash and valuables at home, often in places no one else knew about.

Estate sales across Canada regularly uncover old coin collections, tucked-away jewellery boxes, silver cutlery, forgotten lockboxes and hidden envelopes of cash.

Sometimes family members know these items exist.

Sometimes they don’t.

More Than Money

Not every hidden treasure is about financial value.

Sometimes it’s a wedding band hidden in a wall.

A gold locket forgotten in an attic.

A watch tucked inside an old dresser.

These objects often carry stories far more valuable than the metal itself.

A ring might have belonged to a grandmother. A necklace could have crossed oceans with an immigrant family. A handful of coins might have been someone’s life savings, protected in secret through years of uncertainty.

Finding hidden gold in an old home isn’t just about luck.

It’s about uncovering someone’s history.

Could Your Home Be Hiding Something?

If you live in an older home, especially one built before modern banking became common, there’s always a chance something was left behind.

Some of the most common hiding places include:

  • Under loose floorboards
  • Behind fireplace bricks
  • Inside hollow furniture
  • Attic rafters
  • Basement walls
  • Old safes hidden behind panels

Of course, most people won’t discover a fortune.

But some do.
And even when the treasure isn’t worth much, the story behind it often is.

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