I also came across a rattlesnake while detecting, but it was protecting 13 stars!

Silver Tree Chaser

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Aug 12, 2012
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I went back to the new site that produced the key date 1877 Indian Head penny from two weeks ago. It was my first return trip. While the site again offered only a scarce number of finds, I recovered a wonderful patriotic rattlesnake and stars button only five minutes into a two hour search. :icon_thumleft:

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This site is perplexing, but it's all good! It has given up little in terms of volume over the past two hunts, but the results have been fantastic all the same. My only other finds from my search consisted of a plain flat button, a brass rivet, a dime, a brass harness buckle, and a assortment of mangled sheet brass, aluminum, lead, tin, etc. I must admit that my recent run of luck at least at this one site is similar to the story lines on some of those discreditable TV treasure hunting shows.

Research on the button indicates that it’s likely late-18th century, brass, and possibly of French manufacture. A. Alberts designates it as a PC 4 (patriotic and commemorative) button. The button is quite thin and delicate, so there’s some surface loss with clear delamination along the rim. The snake’s head with tail in mouth has little or no detail, but the overall button has a fairly good patina (the best substitute for a total absence of gilt). It has no unsightly corrosion, no gouges, and no scratches. The shank is fully intact. For being buried in the ground for 200+ years, it's held up fairly well. I read that the use of the snake as a symbol for the fledging United States of America goes back to 1754, when Benjamin Franklin used a snake for that exact purpose in the very first political cartoon to appear in the colonies.

Noticing the stars on the button, I counted them while in the field – “1, 2, 3, …13 – hmmm?” ??? I didn’t recognize the snake on the rim of the button while out in the field. Later in the day at home, I checked Albert’s book and dismissed the find, as I saw nothing recognizable. I had kept the button in a air-tight container of dirt from the field, and late at night I removed it for an overnight soak in mineral oil. That’s when I took a closer look and noticed the button’s uneven rim. It was not a rim; it was a rattlesnake! Upon recognizing the rattlesnake, I knew exactly what I had from seeing a few of the examples posted on T-Net. What a surprising end to the day! Hopefully, I'll find a GWI button one of the days (still on my wish list), but if it never happens, I'll at least have this button and be proud to have recovered it.


Good Hunting!
 

Upvote 24
That is one of my favorite buttons as evidenced by my tattoo (which I got after digging my second rattlesnake & stars button)
 

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That is one of my favorite buttons as evidenced by my tattoo (which I got after digging my second rattlesnake & stars button)

I was considering getting the one I found as a tattoo as well, although only a little larger than the button itself. Yours came out great.

SilverTreeChaser, as great as some of the GW and other rare button discoveries posted recently are, I am completely and unabashedly biased in my preference to the Rattlesnake motif. I hope many other T-Net members see the historical value and significance of your find.

P.S., let me know if you ever want to meet up for a hunt. Get SteelheadWill in on it and we'll strip the land bare of Mass Silver.
 

wow, nice button!!
 

That is one of my favorite buttons as evidenced by my tattoo (which I got after digging my second rattlesnake & stars button)

Two snake and stars buttons? That's awesome. I'll probably go get the same tattoo if I come across a second example. I'd have to go with a smaller tattoo. I don't have enough canvas in my arms for the amount of ink you're sporting. That's a real sharp tattoo. I'll try to hold out for a Massachusetts Silver - Willow Tree three-pence - oh, please one of these days! I could handle a three-pence tattoo!. :laughing9:
 

I was considering getting the one I found as a tattoo as well, although only a little larger than the button itself. Yours came out great.

SilverTreeChaser, as great as some of the GW and other rare button discoveries posted recently are, I am completely and unabashedly biased in my preference to the Rattlesnake motif. I hope many other T-Net members see the historical value and significance of your find.

P.S., let me know if you ever want to meet up for a hunt. Get SteelheadWill in on it and we'll strip the land bare of Mass Silver.

Oxbowbarefoot - Thanks for the compliments on the snake and stars button. The one you found back in 2012 is a superb find.

In regards to your suggestion for a group hunt - Put me down! Let me just say, if there's a possibility of my ever having the opportunity to search your field of dreams, the Mass Silver site, I'm not the type of hunter to ever jump a guy's site; nonetheless, I'm prepared to be blindfolded, sedated, :sleepy2: and stuffed in the trunk of a car in traveling to the destination. I'd like to meet up with SteelheadWill. I'm trying to work some water site (colonial-period ferry sites, etc.) in my area, and he's had a lot of success searching those types of sites.
 

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Two snake and stars buttons? That's awesome. I'll probably go get the same tattoo if I come across a second example. I'd have to go with a smaller tattoo. I don't have enough canvas in my arms for the amount of ink you're sporting. That's a real sharp tattoo. I'll try to hold out for a Massachusetts Silver - Willow Tree three-pence - oh, please one of these days! I could handle a three-pence tattoo!. :laughing9:

Here are my babies :hello:Yours still has the shank, mine don't Since these are such historical buttons, and yours is in such good shape, I am putting my Banner vote in. I hope you find the willow tree and get the tattoo!
 

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Wow, great find, great site!
 

Guess you were treading lightly getting that prize! Nice find!
 

Here are my babies :hello:Yours still has the shank, mine don't Since these are such historical buttons, and yours is in such good shape, I am putting my Banner vote in. I hope you find the willow tree and get the tattoo!

Steve - I came across your buttons on Google Images while researching the rattlesnake and stars variety. They have a lot of gilt still attached - very nice! May I ask if you recovered them from the same site, and if so, at what distance apart? Yes, I'm thinking that perhaps I could pull up another such button on my next trip to this new site that I'm working. Thanks for the banner vote. I know what you mean about the recovery an intact shank. An intact shank is kind of the whole package for the better button recoveries, though getting an intact button is really a crapshoot. At the end of the day, I'll gladly take a historical button find anyway that I can get it - with or without a shank.

If you want to see a really amazing dug snake and stars button, check out this link.

George Washington 1789 Inaugural Button

Thanks again for the words of support and the banner vote.
 

Now that's one Rattlesnake I would mind to stumble across! Huge Congrats! Banner Vote In!
 

Steve - I came across your buttons on Google Images while researching the rattlesnake and stars variety. They have a lot of gilt still attached - very nice! May I ask if you recovered them from the same site, and if so, at what distance apart? Yes, I'm thinking that perhaps I could pull up another such button on my next trip to this new site that I'm working. Thanks for the banner vote. I know what you mean about the recovery an intact shank. An intact shank is kind of the whole package for the better button recoveries, though getting an intact button is really a crapshoot. At the end of the day, I'll gladly take a historical button find anyway that I can get it - with or without a shank.

If you want to see a really amazing dug snake and stars button, check out this link.

George Washington 1789 Inaugural Button

Thanks again for the words of support and the banner vote.

STC, I did recover these from the same site - a very small blockhouse/cabin site. I made the recoveries within 10 feet of each other, but 10 years in between. When I got my Fisher F75 in 2008 I went back to many sites and found stuff that I had missed with other machines. I also found two Harrison campaign buttons, four one piece convex eagle A's, and a 1788 Vermont copper here. In total not much came from this site in Washington County, PA, but what I got was some nice quality finds. By the way, mine just have a black patina like yours, but I believe these buttons were originally silvered.
 

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