IRON Brigade: A Belt Plate, Old Coins, Buttons, and the Road Runner

BuckleBoy

Gold Member
Jun 12, 2006
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Moonlight and Magnolias
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Fisher F75, Whites DualField PI, Fisher 1266-X and Tesoro Silver uMax
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All Treasure Hunting
Hello All,


I decided to take a few minutes to share stories and photos of my last two hunts with some members of my team. A few days ago, I went out with Hill Billy and got permission to hit a nice site in a cut corn field. It was a beautiful sight that I will hold dearly to in the coming six months when the fields are in crop and we are using a machete to tear through the tick-infested woods in search of a site to detect. I will miss this scenery:Acres and Acres of open space.



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We found our iron patch--and boy was it thick! I really think that this homestead was used as a barn after it was abandoned. Right away, HB found the one coin for the day--an 1873 "closed 3" variedy Indian Head Cent. :thumbsup:



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While HB stuck to the iron patch, flailing the junk iron at a pile we were making to haul away later, I wandered out away from the site, on the off chance that we were working a barn site rather than a house. There was no second iron patch anywhere close by, but as I came back towards where HB was, I snapped a good photo of him swinging away.



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He made some interesting finds at the site--including a nice 1830s decorative civilian button, a decorative ladies belt buckle, one of the infamous mystery "two-hole brass thingys," and an odd piece that is gilded, with several chains connecting two discs. :icon_scratch: My Buckleboy mojo was not working, and I ended up with two large decorative brass grates and a small ornamental Victorian brass ornament. :P Here are some photos of the finds on the tailgate of the truck:



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And some photos of the finds after cleaning. (What the heck is the thing in the first photo?)



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Oh ya... and we dug a little iron too:



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The story and photos of the second hunt appear in the next reply below:
 

Upvote 0
Dman said:
Great finds. That is a clipped edge militia plate. Looks to be pre- Civil War.
Dman


Thanks Dman--Quindy looked for it tonight, but it's the tongue on the back that seems like the wrong style--much too wide. I do agree about the holes on it being for a company letter or insignia to be attached to the front of the plate. If it weren't for the tongue, I would feel fairly confident that it was an 1820s or 1830s militia plate.

If you happen across any more information, please drop a line anytime. I'm sure Rodeo would be grateful for anything you could find out.


Best Wishes,



Buckles
 

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