- Dec 12, 2009
- 2,817
- 3,356
- Detector(s) used
- Garrett AT Pro, Tesoro Vaquero, Bounty Hunter Land Star, Teknetics Delta 4000, Minelab Equinox 600, Garrett Carrot
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
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I am sure you are correct. They did that a lot it seems, and from the dark green glass beer bottles found in some of the camps, drinking was popular too.
A lot of these flattened buttons could have possibly been captured. The only flattened general service Eagle Button I have was found years ago about 8 inches down in the very end of a Confederate Trench line. That's my take on it anyway. I agree with you that the soldiers most likely wouldn't use parts of their own uniforms, although these could have been removed from old uniform jackets that were deemed unserviceable and no longer suited for wear.Yeah my opinion is the game pieces is a stretch....reason being the last thing I would do is destroy the only warm cloths I have sleeping out in tents in fields in the 1860's......using rocks vs acorns for checkers makes more sense to me.
Playing Devil's Advocate.....even if they did remove them off of unusable jackets, i would think they'd save them for lost buttons during battle.....its not like after a skirmish or battle Private John Doe can run to the 7-11 and grab 3 new buttons....im going to stick with the buttons falling off and being flattened by foot, horses, human or deer, wagon or artillery wheels.A lot of these flattened buttons could have possibly been captured. The only flattened general service Eagle Button I have was found years ago about 8 inches down in the very end of a Confederate Trench line. That's my take on it anyway. I agree with you that the soldiers most likely wouldn't use parts of their own uniforms, although these could have been removed from old uniform jackets that were deemed unserviceable and no longer suited for wear.
Yeah my opinion is the game pieces is a stretch....reason being the last thing I would do is destroy the only warm cloths I have sleeping out in tents in fields in the 1860's......using rocks vs acorns for checkers makes more sense to me.
In your pictures i do not see general service buttons that were smashed...the two pieces that have the indentations look like generic flat buttons? Pictures of the backs would help. Who knows why they are bent..could be one of a million reasons they look like that. Who knows....nice finds for sure!The area I'm detecting is not a known skirmish site and all my finds are pre-civil war. It was probably a training area or small fort that saw little or no action.
I believe boredom was a factor at many of these sites and that some buttons were turned into game pieces.
These two buttons were flattened intentionally using the same tool/method.
Do you, (or anyone) have an explanation as to why they were flattened if not for use as game pieces?
Admittedly I'm not an expert so I welcome any theories.
In your pictures i do not see general service buttons that were smashed...the two pieces that have the indentations look like generic flat buttons? Pictures of the backs would help. Who knows why they are bent..could be one of a million reasons they look like that. Who knows....nice finds for sure!
Nice.....Devils Advocate again.....so it was perfectly smashed by a soldier that had 2 pieces of flat steel and a hammer or smashed by wagon or artillery wheel rolling over it during battle or marching? Who knows.....could be from boredom....could be gaming chips....i just believe a soldier wouldn't ruin a somewhat important piece of clothing purposely.I have seen others dig them, if memory serves, none of my Union buttons were deliberately flattened. A few weeks ago I dug my first block "I" Confederate button from an actual battlefield and it was perfectly flattened.
Playing Devil's Advocate.....even if they did remove them off of unusable jackets, i would think they'd save them for lost buttons during battle.....its not like after a skirmish or battle Private John Doe can run to the 7-11 and grab 3 new buttons....im going to stick with the buttons falling off and being flattened by foot, horses, human or deer, wagon or artillery wheels.