coinman123
Silver Member
Update: After some cleaning I IDed it as a 1696 William III Halfpenny
I went to a place where I have found countless colonial era buttons, some large coppers, shoe buckles (including a silver monogramed shoe buckle), musket balls, and other various colonial relics. Today I went there and noticed some of the ground in the parking lot was frozen. Once I got into the woods I then noticed that the ground was perfect there, apparently the leaves insulated the ground which kept it from freezing. I started metal detecting and one of my first targets was a blank flat button. After that I ended up finding some shotgun shells, some pieces of iron that showed up really good on my metal detector and then faded away into iron as a dug (not shown in photos), at least one of the pieces of iron turned out to be an ox shoe. I than found a beautiful gilded flat button with an ornate design. I continued finding junk and shotguns (many shotgun shells not pictured) until I dug a large copper coin, I knew it was most likely colonial because I could not see a big wreath on the back which indicates it's a large cent. I continued metal detecting and ended up find more junk before I left. When I got home I was able to ID it as a King Charles II Halfpenny based on it's unique Britannia.
In the photos you can not see as much detail as you can in hand, such as the "BRI" in Britannia, and the OIVS in Carloivs.
New photos after cleaning in olive oil for only a few hours:
Thanks for Looking, Coinman123
I went to a place where I have found countless colonial era buttons, some large coppers, shoe buckles (including a silver monogramed shoe buckle), musket balls, and other various colonial relics. Today I went there and noticed some of the ground in the parking lot was frozen. Once I got into the woods I then noticed that the ground was perfect there, apparently the leaves insulated the ground which kept it from freezing. I started metal detecting and one of my first targets was a blank flat button. After that I ended up finding some shotgun shells, some pieces of iron that showed up really good on my metal detector and then faded away into iron as a dug (not shown in photos), at least one of the pieces of iron turned out to be an ox shoe. I than found a beautiful gilded flat button with an ornate design. I continued finding junk and shotguns (many shotgun shells not pictured) until I dug a large copper coin, I knew it was most likely colonial because I could not see a big wreath on the back which indicates it's a large cent. I continued metal detecting and ended up find more junk before I left. When I got home I was able to ID it as a King Charles II Halfpenny based on it's unique Britannia.
In the photos you can not see as much detail as you can in hand, such as the "BRI" in Britannia, and the OIVS in Carloivs.
New photos after cleaning in olive oil for only a few hours:
Thanks for Looking, Coinman123
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