This is why I Metal Detect

BioProfessor

Silver Member
Apr 6, 2007
2,917
84
Mankato, MN
Detector(s) used
Minelab e-Trac, White E-Series DFX
I am spending this winter - almost over :-( - on Edisto Island, SC about 40 miles southeast of Charleston, SC. There are LOTS of plantations on Edisto Island and the entire island was abandoned when the Union troops moved in to begin the siege on Charleston in 1861. So there is Union stuff all over the Island as well as British military artifacts from both the war of 1812 and the Revolutionary War. So most people go after that. I tend to be a bit more interested in the history of the Plantations that began with King's Land Grants in the 1700's and particularly the ones that are still owned by the family.

I have been lucky enough to get permission to hunt a handful of these very historic plantations and help the landowner better understand the who, what, when, and where of their family land. The Civil War occupation was just a small slice of the history of these family plantations.

I was hunting today on the largest family owned plantation on the Island. I have found musket balls, 3-ringers, flat buttons, a US arrow hook Buckle, an 1832 seated Liberty dime, etc. The find today was different.

I was detecting a small road they use for their Gators when they hunt deer and coons. It is in the middle of planted pines and the compacted dirt is nice to detect. Much better than the 8" of pine straw in the planted pines. I had traveled about 100 yards down the road and had dug a musket ball made into a sinker or seine weight, a Tombac button, a flat trouser button, and then I dug a somewhat "iffy" signal down about 10". The "iffy" signal turned out to be not so "iffy" and I cleaned it off an put it in my pocket - not my pouch.

I hunted my way to the Plantation house where I was to meet the owner so he could show me where some old buildings used to be and where the slave cabins were. He actually met me in his Gator on the road leading to the main house. I asked him when his Grandfather was born. He said right at the turn of the century. I asked him when his Great Grandfather was born. He said he was born right after the Civil war. I asked him if he farmed the plantation. He said he did farm the land with his father. I asked him if they grew Sea Island Cotton. He said they grew that particular kind of cotton from when the family returned to the island in 1865 until the bowl weevil did all the cotton crops in.

I knew where the story was going so I kept at it.

I said that it makes sense that his Great Great Grandfather may have been farming Sea Island Cotton with his son towards the end of the 1800's. He said that they were and that his Great Great Grandfather had traveled to Atlanta and entered some of the Plantation's Sea Island Cotton in the 1895 Cotton States and International Exposition held there and had won an award for it.

I said I know. He looked at me and asked me how I knew.

I put the "Iffy" signal in his hand. He was speechless.

It was priceless.

This is why I metal detect.

Daryl
 

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Upvote 1
Congrats on your Banner Find :thumbsup:

The item means so much more to the family.
That IS the way to do it,
Thanks for sharing, and spreading the Positive aspects of our digs :hello2:
 

You find the most interesting things Daryl. Just to know someone held that in their hand from 1895 is a treat. Bet the family will enjoy showing it off.

It is 44 degrees here again today and snow gone. When are you heading home? I looked at a street level cam of my old house in Northfield and it made me homesick. I love that town.

SKD
SW Ohio
 

That is just the coolest relic! 8) GREAT story!!

Nana
 

This Is my third visit to this post I like this find so much yet I had not yet congradulated you on a great find and a good deed put together ! It looks great on the BANNER ! MaineRelic
 

The word awsome keeps being mentioned,Well they are right,
what an A W S O M E story.....Congratulations :read2: :thumbsup:
Short and sweet and awsome....................K.KID.

P.S. this the kind of story or gracious deed that keeps us in
the good books for future tres.hunting.
long life to all those med. detecs out there!
 

Congrats on the banner find & just absolutely wonderful story ... those precious memories of that families past & being able to hold something that thier family members held dear to them ........it's just priceless .....good on you .... :thumbsup:
 

Wow! Great history. When you said Sea Island is that the same as St.Simons? I used to stay there in the summers some. What a great story and find to share. It is important that things like that stay with the familys who have had the land for generations. I love it. You are a class dude.
Nice bannner find well done!
HH
TnMtns
 

Oh, Daryl, this story brought a tear to my eye! Fantastic find, Breezie
 

So......you are not from South Carolina?

It must have taken you a TON of research and you must have walked miles and miles and miles to find relics from a place you are not from.

It just goes to show, that your HARD research and LOTS of HARD LEG work to discover such a site paid off!!

It's nice to know virgin sites like yours are still out there if you work hard enough.......
REB
 

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Great Banner find!
This is the kind of stuff that belongs up there.
Newt
 

Missed this, as I was on holiday.

Big congrats on a cool find :hello2: :hello2: :hello2: :hello2:
 

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