Had a Good Day...Need help IDing a Button

Tico14

Sr. Member
Jun 16, 2009
274
36
Texas
Detector(s) used
Fisher CZ-7, 1266X, Troy Shadow X-3, Tesoro Deleon, Silver Umax, Whites IDX-Pro (Mr. Bill's Mods), Silver Eagle, Modded Classic 1,
The weather was finally fall like in SE Texas and I had a great day in the field
Found an abandoned house, dug 9 Coins all older, No modern at all, Love those kinda houses.
Got 4 Wheaties 1909, 1911, 1913 & 1919
3 Buffs 2 No Date and 1925
1906 V Nickle
1917 P Merc
and a ladies small ornate rouge compact
Then after the yard played out I went to an old church where I had found a SLQ last week and dug this old Naval Button
Need help IDing the button
2 piece button with small square shank
Looks like 12 stars and 3 cannon balls stacked on bottom
I'm thinking late 1800's but not sure
Anyway it was a great day and I finally had a day where sweat wasn't pouring off me
friday.jpg

navybutton1.jpg
 

Upvote 0
By the face it looks like a blazer button made to look like a navy button. But Hardy's right a pic of the back would help.
 

Looks like it was a GREAT day!!!! :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup:
 

On the button, the back is corroded and just by the feel of it, I'm begining to believe it might be off a kids Blazer from somewhere around TOC.
Oh well Maybe next time.
 

ya something about the eagle and the anchor just dont look write. trying to find one i have to compare. nice find anyway. willy
 

Good Finds, I can't find a match to that one in Albert's Book. All the Anchors at the " T" ( don't know what else to call it) just below where the rope goes through are tilted, not straight up and down like yours. HH Bob
 

I agree Civilian coat button, But some very nice Finds.

Nova Treasure
 

I dug a button almost like the one posted here except for the T as bedfordbob calls it is touching the loop,and it only has six five pointed stars around it,me or none of my Md buddies can seem to find an Id on it anywhere we search if anyone could help with this I would appreciate it . Mine has no back left to get a back mark but the shank is still intact.

HH
 

Here is a "unknown" 2-piece convex button i found in a dried up creekbed in the Sierra Nevadas. It appears to be an eagle with a single indention for an eyeball. It is perched atop an (arrow "which faces to the right"). There are 3 cannonballs underneath it. Additionally there are 12 stars around the circumference. The backside has a square loophole. Does this match the button you found?
 

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For a good comparable, thow away the book and go to JoAnn's. You can get a card of 2 bright shiney ones for under $2. They are prettier that way. I can't see the photo real well, but this one pretty much fills the bill. They have made dozens of "varieties" over the 125 years they have made them, and the backs are usually iron, not brass. Like whoever said, civilian coat button. Rope does not go through the anchor eye, I'll bet.
 

High Plains Digger said:
For a good comparable, thow away the book and go to JoAnn's. You can get a card of 2 bright shiney ones for under $2. They are prettier that way. I can't see the photo real well, but this one pretty much fills the bill. They have made dozens of "varieties" over the 125 years they have made them, and the backs are usually iron, not brass. Like whoever said, civilian coat button. Rope does not go through the anchor eye, I'll bet.

Finding this in Sierra - Gold Country on a non-flowing, long ago dry streambed, may prove to be a button from mid-late 1800's or early 1900's. Save your rude replies for someone else...Joann's is a hoakie button store online, must be your shop?
 

USNavySquid said:
High Plains Digger said:
For a good comparable, thow away the book and go to JoAnn's. You can get a card of 2 bright shiney ones for under $2. They are prettier that way. I can't see the photo real well, but this one pretty much fills the bill. They have made dozens of "varieties" over the 125 years they have made them, and the backs are usually iron, not brass. Like whoever said, civilian coat button. Rope does not go through the anchor eye, I'll bet.

Finding this in Sierra - Gold Country on a non-flowing, long ago dry streambed, may prove to be a button from mid-late 1800's or early 1900's. Save your rude replies for someone else...Joann's is a hoakie button store online, must be your shop?
Maybe his way was not so welcoming, Hi from the UK :hello: However, I don't think it changes what it is, which by the back arrangement puts it post-1900. Without going through every type of blazer button, I'm pretty sure thats what it is. Someone on here may spend that time & find it for you :icon_thumright:
First rule, never use simple logic to explain how something 'may' have got there, or we can debate the arguement that the Romans were all over the US losing their coins. In the same way you have been to this remote place recently so could others in most periods for any number of unknown reasons. Thats the joy of detecting, most mystery's stay that way. 8)
 

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