Check it out my finds today digging at my first hole in Minnesota. !!spoiler!! Did I find my first coin? Also UV green marble? Plus fine china

Imsolucky2day

Jr. Member
Dec 2, 2024
45
111
Y'all think that's a coin? Maybe a large cent? 1892 stone where lid I think? Fancy marble, 6th from this hole so far... Also almost got a fully intact china teacup with handles! They are impossible to pull with handles intact it seems :( advice on cleaning up that potential coin without destroying it? I wonder what that China piece would have been worse if it was intact good condition...
 

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Upvote 13
Cool finds.

The Laughlin Pottery Company was founded in 1871 by Homer Laughlin and his brother Shakespeare Laughlin in Newell, West Virginia.

“King Charles” was a design shape rather than a pattern, introduced in 1903 and advertised in 46 different decorative patterns. By 1905 there were 75 patterns, after which the number declined, and by 1908 it was no longer listed. “Patent Pending” is likely from the very early production period.

Semi-vitreous china is a medium-price material from selected clays but fired at a lower temperature than fine china.


The lid is indeed from a stoneware fruit or preserves jar, held closed by a cast iron cam clamp pivoting on a wire bail hooked into two depressions in jar’s side. Like this:

Weir Fruit Jar.jpg


The 1st March 1892 patent was originally filed by William Teamer of Evansville, Indiana but he died before it was granted and it passed posthumously to Rachel Teamer as administratrix of his estate.

Teamer Patent.jpg


Seemingly, she licensed it to the Weir Pottery Company of Monmouth, Illinois and William S. Weir subsequently applied for a patent on a very similar closure on 7 September 1900, which was granted on April 16, 1901.

Weir Patent.jpg
 

Cool finds.

The Laughlin Pottery Company was founded in 1871 by Homer Laughlin and his brother Shakespeare Laughlin in Newell, West Virginia.

“King Charles” was a design shape rather than a pattern, introduced in 1903 and advertised in 46 different decorative patterns. By 1905 there were 75 patterns, after which the number declined, and by 1908 it was no longer listed. “Patent Pending” is likely from the very early production period.

Semi-vitreous china is a medium-price material from selected clays but fired at a lower temperature than fine china.


The lid is indeed from a stoneware fruit or preserves jar, held closed by a cast iron cam clamp pivoting on a wire bail hooked into two depressions in jar’s side. Like this:

View attachment 2182897

The 1st March 1892 patent was originally filed by William Teamer of Evansville, Indiana but he died before it was granted and it passed posthumously to Rachel Teamer as administratrix of his estate.

View attachment 2182898

Seemingly, she licensed it to the Weir Pottery Company of Monmouth, Illinois and William S. Weir subsequently applied for a patent on a very similar closure on 7 September 1900, which was granted on April 16, 1901.

View attachment 2182899
Thanks for the info I have great news cuz I have the stoneware jar too. The middle isn't all intact though with the lever and everything but now I have the lid and the jar complete:) that's too bad these aren't super valuable but I can't seem to get any complete unbroken pieces anyway :/ I hope I look into something real valuable digging there soon. It seems to me though that the type of stuff I've been digging and the time period etc isn't necessarily going to be real valuable stuff it's just all worth like 5-10 bucks a bottle maybe and targeting bulk might be the route. Which is frustrating cuz some advice I got previously was too slow down, where is possibly speeding up could be the only way to make it worth the time?
 

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