saftgeek
Full Member
- Mar 2, 2007
- 111
- 355
- 🥇 Banner finds
- 1
- Detector(s) used
- Minelab Equinox 800, CTX, GPX 4500, and another Nox 800 for my friends...
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
During a detecting trip to South Carolina recently, I thought I had stumbled upon a runaway slave camp. I found multiple lengths of chains and what I thought was the clasp that held the restraint and a ball. I knew there was a lot of history where I was detecting but my mind wouldn't process anything past the civil war. If you look at the before picture, it looks as if the ball had a spire or something protruding - add to that the chains and the connecting link and I'm afraid my imagination got the best of me...
I was really surprised after electrolysis... I discovered the object appeared to be a cannonball. I measured the diameter and weight - it seems to be a 3lb cannonball from the Revolutionary War - and it cleaned up beautifully. Thank goodness it was a solid shot - I was beating on it with a welding hammer when the entire portion I thought was the spire just flaked off, revealing a smooth surface below. Here is a shot in the tank, just after removing the rust, and a final shot once I applied Rustoleum Rust Remover and Renaissance Wax.
I also found a gun barrel in the immediate are where the cannonball was. It was in the late stages of decomposition and super, super rusted. My main goal was to remove as much of the larger rust as possible then to try to stop the gun from further deterioration. I applied electrolysis and removed as much as I dared with light chipping and a lot of wire brushing. I accidentally broke a piece off of the tang and called it quits. This appears to be a flintlock due to the absence of a nipple and the ignition hole being located on the side of the barrel. I dug the end of the barrel of a blunderbuss looking gun and a hinge - pics of before and after follow...
Hand forged hinge - nothing came easy to folks in that era...
Lastly - the blunderbuss barrel cleaned up...
The cannonball measures 2.825" and is just at 3lbs. I'm thinking I knocked some of the surface off with the rust after electrolysis. The book said it should be 2.84". Either way, the evidence points solidly to a very nice relic from the Revolutionary War era and I couldn't be happier. I'm making plans for a follow up trip and hope to find the lock for the flintlock when I return. There were a lot of iron targets there - I was worn out and couldn't dig in the roots any longer.
Saftgeek-
I was really surprised after electrolysis... I discovered the object appeared to be a cannonball. I measured the diameter and weight - it seems to be a 3lb cannonball from the Revolutionary War - and it cleaned up beautifully. Thank goodness it was a solid shot - I was beating on it with a welding hammer when the entire portion I thought was the spire just flaked off, revealing a smooth surface below. Here is a shot in the tank, just after removing the rust, and a final shot once I applied Rustoleum Rust Remover and Renaissance Wax.
I also found a gun barrel in the immediate are where the cannonball was. It was in the late stages of decomposition and super, super rusted. My main goal was to remove as much of the larger rust as possible then to try to stop the gun from further deterioration. I applied electrolysis and removed as much as I dared with light chipping and a lot of wire brushing. I accidentally broke a piece off of the tang and called it quits. This appears to be a flintlock due to the absence of a nipple and the ignition hole being located on the side of the barrel. I dug the end of the barrel of a blunderbuss looking gun and a hinge - pics of before and after follow...
Hand forged hinge - nothing came easy to folks in that era...
Lastly - the blunderbuss barrel cleaned up...
The cannonball measures 2.825" and is just at 3lbs. I'm thinking I knocked some of the surface off with the rust after electrolysis. The book said it should be 2.84". Either way, the evidence points solidly to a very nice relic from the Revolutionary War era and I couldn't be happier. I'm making plans for a follow up trip and hope to find the lock for the flintlock when I return. There were a lot of iron targets there - I was worn out and couldn't dig in the roots any longer.
Saftgeek-