Fort Knox, thought to be military riches

Fort Knox, believed to be a gold depositary was named after Henry Knox whose parents reportedly were Ulster Scots. He is documented as testifying at a trial connected to the Boston massacres in which all but two soldiers were acquitted. He may have joined the military at the age of 18. Said to be pro-British. He married the daughter of Boston loyalists whose parents left with the British withdrawal from Boston in 1776, reportedly never to return.
Fort Knox, also called, ‘The Vault’ is presently documented to hold 147 million troy ounces of gold; a troy ounze being equivelent to just over 31 grams. Said to be protected by the as called Mint police, founded in 1792. Security is extensive.
The current depository was reportedly built in 1936 on forty two acres of military land in Kentucky, in a strategy to store gold reserves away from the threat of foreign military attack. Shipments in 1937 and 1941 were documented to amount to 417 million troy ounces. Thought to be military reserves, possibly of colonial extraction.