🥇 BANNER KILLER CIRCA 1850S MILITIA BELT PLATE!!

Steve in PA

Gold Member
Jul 5, 2010
9,600
14,217
Pittsburgh, PA
🥇 Banner finds
4
Detector(s) used
Fisher F75, XP Deus, Equinox 600, Fisher 1270
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Saturday I wanted to get out for a while, but my options are limited this time of year. I drove down to a circa 1790-1815 house site hoping that the farmer had cut the hay. He had cut it, but he hadn’t bailed it yet, so that field was unhuntable. So I drove over to another of his farms that has a standing, but abandoned, house on it that looks like it could date to the 1830s. I call this place the buckle graveyard because all I ever find here is horse tack buckles. I have dug about two dozen horse tack buckles here, but I have never found anything good, not even an Indian Head penny.

I had only been detecting a few minutes when I got a sweet signal on the Deus, dug down about 6 inches, and pulled out a modern bullet. I thought this can’t be what I was hearing, so I checked the hole again and the sweet signal was still there. I dug a little deeper and still could not pick anything up with the pinpointer. Finally down about 13 inches, the pinpointer started going off. When I got to the target I thought it was probably a piece of junk as it was laying straight up and down and all I could see was an edge sticking up, When I pulled it out I was shocked to see a mid 19[SUP]th[/SUP] century militia plate. I had always wanted to dig one of these. This plate now ranks pretty high on my all-time favorite finds list.

Further research shows this property on the 1856 County Atlas as belonging to W. Allen. A search of militias from the county shows William Allen as a private in Company A of the Sixth Pennsylvania Militia, which mustered in on September 13[SUP]th[/SUP] 1862 for the defense of the State of Pennsylvania during the Antietam campaign. They marched as far east as Chambersburg, PA, encamped and awaited orders to move against the Confederates. They were mustered out on September 29[SUP]th[/SUP] 1862. William Allen died in 1881 and the names of other local residents appear on his will as executor and witnesses. Considering these facts, and the time frame when these buckles were popular, this is almost certainly William Allen’s militia uniform belt buckle.

Plate Dirt-1.jpg Plate in Hand Dirty.jpg

Plate in Hand.jpg Plate in Hand Dirty Back.jpg

Plate Front.JPG Plate Back.JPG

Here is the plate in Michael J. O'Donnell's "American Military Belt Plates"
Plate in Book.JPG

And here it is in it's new home :icon_thumright:
Plate in Case.jpg

Thanks for looking and good luck out there!
 

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Upvote 113
Steve you absolutely killed it with this buckle find, at 13 inches no less! It deserves a special place in your collection and I'm pulling the banner trigger for you buddy! Congrats on getting in some good research to make the plate even more special.
Keith
 

What a sweet looking military buckle.
What a great banner find.
Congrats
 

Looks like another addition to the upcoming banner lineup. Lots of good stuff coming out of the dirt. That's a good historical save!
 

Wow that is a great piece of history and awesome research to make this post even better! I vote banner as well.
 

THAT IS A WAAAY NICE FIND!! Great Research Too!

I'm Happy For You!

Kace
 

What an incredible find and to tie it to an individual is that much more awesome, definitely BANNER!!
 

Congrats on a truly awesome piece of history Steve!
 

That is nice find! Looks good in its new home.
 

I love the design on that, nice job. Excellent work with your research too! Pretty neat to know exactly where it came from and the man who wore it.
 

Didnt even know there were belt plates out there that didnt say US, CSA or had an eagle on them. Very nice find
 

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Don't know much about civil war relics being from up north, but when i see some of the top relic hunters from here giving a banner vote, it gets mine also. Congrats.
 

Steve you absolutely killed it with this buckle find, at 13 inches no less! It deserves a special place in your collection and I'm pulling the banner trigger for you buddy! Congrats on getting in some good research to make the plate even more special.
Keith
Thanks Keith I appreciate the vote! Maybe we will be side by side up top in a few days. It would be an honor to be next to your sundial.

What a sweet looking military buckle.
What a great banner find.
Congrats
Thanks Relicific. It does have a lot of eye appeal :laughing7:

Huge congrats on the militia plate Steve, definitely one that's one many of our bucket lists. Dry brushing turned out great
VMI thanks for the comment. Luckily it was lost in a spot that never saw a plow.

Looks like another addition to the upcoming banner lineup. Lots of good stuff coming out of the dirt. That's a good historical save!
Thanks I hope you're right :thumbsup:

Wow that is a great piece of history and awesome research to make this post even better! I vote banner as well.
Thanks for the vote Louis. Washington county gave up a few of it's treasures this weekend, eh?
THAT IS A WAAAY NICE FIND!! Great Research Too!
The research makes it even more special :icon_thumleft:

I'm Happy For You!

Kace

What an incredible find and to tie it to an individual is that much more awesome, definitely BANNER!!
Thanks BLK HOLE. I appreciate the comment and the vote!
 

Congratulations on an amazing find Steve and on achieving your 3rd BANNER! :occasion14:

It always amazes me the amount of detailed information you have access to from the Civil War. :thumbsup:

Dave
 

Beautiful plate, enhanced by your research and provenance. Banner vote.
 

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