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E 1 PEI Series Mystery Cache

This cache has been archived.

Olewaif: It is certainly with a heavy heart that I archive the caches of this series..my personal favorites of all my hides ! Still, no one was interested in adopting ( can't blame em ) , and they all must go so there is now a very nice road area not far from town clear of geocaches . Life goes on. All cache containers were retrieved .

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Hidden : 8/23/2011
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:

Cache containers in this series are all camoed pill bottles hanging on hooks on back of trees. Height is from 3- 6' up.
None of the coordinates shown are in any ways correct for finding the caches. They simply make the pattern I wanted in the water.

This puzzle cache series takes us on a tour of the 37 premiers of PEI ( plus a couple other people ) . You need to access the information page on the PEI provincial government site for each premier to obtain the numbers you need to fit in the formula to get the correct coordinates for each cache.

E 1 : Alexander Bannerman Warburton

ALEXANDER BANNERMAN WARBURTON WAS BORN in Summerside on April 5, 1852 and by the time death ended his career in 1929, he had served as Premier of PEI, as a member of the Federal Parliament and twice as a Judge.
He received his early education in Summerside prior to attending St. Dunstan's University, King's College and Scotland's Edinburgh University. After studying law in England and PEI, he was admitted to the Island bar in 1ABC.
Hoping to follow his father's footsteps (the senior Warburton had served as a member of the PEI Cabinet before Confederation), he ran for public office in 1890 but suffered defeat in his first attempt. However, he won election on two subsequent attempts, in 1893 and again in 1897. Following the resignation of Frederick Peters in 1897, Mr. Warburton became Premier, a post held until he accepted a position as a Judge of the PEI Supreme Court one year later.
Under pressure from the Liberal Party, he eventually resigned his Judgeship and offered for election to the Federal House of Commons in 1DEF. He was defeated but was successful in his second bid four years later. He was defeated in the election of 1911. He dropped into relative obscurity until he was named Judge of the Probate Court in 1920, a position he held to his death on January 14, 1929.
Premier Warburton maintained a keen interest in education, serving as a member of the Charlottetown School Board for a number of years. In 1905, he filled an important gap in the history of the Island with publication of the book Prince Edward Island, Past and Present - a text still used by people interested in history. This was followed by a further publication in 1923, A History of Prince Edward Island.
Another interesting note about Premier Warburton was his sense of esthetic beauty. In 1884, he and Judge Fitzgerald started the movement which resulted in tree planting in Charlottetown and within a few years, more than 800 trees had been planted along main thoroughfares and in Queen and Rochford Squares. Many of these trees are still standing today, a silent memorial to these men of foresight whole sense of perspective helped shape the heritage of the Island.
Warburton is buried in the People's Protestant Cemetery in Charlottetown.

Coords: N 46 21.(ABC+90) W 062 55.(DEF-690)

Checksum: N = 36 W = 25

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

uggc://jjj.tbi.cr.pn/cerzvreftnyyrel/vaqrk.cuc3

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)