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Thread: 1785 Sliver

  1. #1

    1785 Sliver

    Deep dirt hunting today! Might have found a cabin site. This coin was with colonial nails and four colonial flat buttons.
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    On Instagram- oxshoedrew

  2. #2
    Wow! Very nice, Drew! Way to rescue that great coin. Is it a half real or one real?

    I hope it is a cabin sit and that you unearth more treasures there!

    Lifetime totals:
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  3. #3
    Administrator del's Avatar
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    Congrats Drew , still with .71 or the new update?

    Quote Originally Posted by Tony Two-Cent View Post
    Is it a half real or one real?
    Its a half real Tony the lone "R" is for "reale" or half , any other would have a numeral before the "R" to designate denomination
    "Honesty is an expensive gift ,
    so don't expect it from cheap people"

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  4. #4
    Thanks, guys! Still .71 Dan, I thought I had the small headphone update cord but I don't, so I have to order one tomorrow.
    On Instagram- oxshoedrew

  5. #5
    Elite Member The Rebel's Avatar
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    WTG Drew, you're on a roll. Look at the schnozz on him, lol!
    Minelab Manticore / SPECTRA V3i, Pro-Pointer II. Lesche Digger.
    Oldest Copper: 1694 William & Mary Halfpenny. Oldest Silver: 1663 1-Reale
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  6. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by The Rebel View Post
    WTG Drew, you're on a roll. Look at the schnozz on him, lol!
    Thanks, Roger...my wife said the same thing. I love how off center the strike is.
    On Instagram- oxshoedrew

  7. #7
    Elite Member Bucknut's Avatar
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    That’s a great find!
    Detectors I use: Minelab Equinox 900 & Manticore
    Favorite finds I have made:
    1,000+ silver coins
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    Copper Culture Indian Artifacts
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    (probably should have started with that one)

  8. #8
    Thanks, Jared!
    I went back today and I'm convinced its a cabin site. Pictured was found within a ten yard radius around where I think the cabin was. Colonial drawer pull plate (Queen Ann?), couple of buckles (one looks newer but I don't know), two ox shoes, completely round piece of copper (bigger than a rosette), many old nails including floor nails are not pictured but all rose head, 1785 coin, hand full period buttons, and an ax head (date?)
    1-It's the highest point in the surrounding area
    2-There are a few cairns in the immediate area
    3-a small enclosed pen around the cabin can be seen but is almost entirely buried

    This is the second cabin I've found. Like the first one finds are not plentiful. In the other one I only found a French Rev War button (95) and a CT copper. Thanks for looking!
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  9. #9
    Nice one Drew! Yeah at this point you might as well wait for V1.01 to come out before you update.
    Oldest find: 5,000 year old copper spearhead
    Oldest coin: 1699 William III halfpenny
    Purdiest coin: 1832 Capped Bust quarter
    Coolest find: USA button with blue threads still on shank

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  10. #10
    Elite Member Digger_O'Dell's Avatar
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    Those are some great finds, and that Reale is in great shape! Certainly didn't see a lot of circulation before it was lost. Congrats!
    Equipment:
    Minelab: CTX 3030, GPX 4800, X-Terra 705. Whites TDI SL.

    2023 Silver: 1 Gold: 0

    Best finds: 28 silver dime spill, 1800s Dutch customs seal.
    Oldest/best coins: 1837 Upper Canada large cent, 1877 Seated Dime
    Oldest find: 1800 Sailors Luck token
    You Tube: Rediscovering America

  11. #11
    Thanks Jeff and Chris! I went back today and noticed more buried walls and more cairns surrounding the cabin site. The stuff on the left was around the cabin and on the right is from the later cellar hole lip. I called our dealer, Jeff to order the headphone update cord but they sold the business! New people don't answer the phone. I emailed and got a form reply that they're working on it. So I'm still v.71...I feel so plebeian . Did you know they sold?

    Edit-. I don't know what happened to that picture!
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  12. #12
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    Congrats on the great recovery. The post made me laugh as I found a Rosie yesterday and I was happy to find a silver finally in May and then I look at this coin that is 162 years older than the coin I found. WOW what a contrast. Different pleasures for different people. Thx for posting. PS I am always amazed at the great history you have. WD
    Total silver 3 - Goal 50 (2024 Finds) - 0 Washington - 0 Barber Dimes - 0 Mercury Dimes- - 3 Roosevelt Dimes - 0 V Nickels - 0 Buffalos - 0 War Nickels - 0 Indian - 10 Wheats - $ 3.44 in clad
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  13. #13
    Elite Member Digger_O'Dell's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by wisconsin digger View Post
    Congrats on the great recovery. The post made me laugh as I found a Rosie yesterday and I was happy to find a silver finally in May and then I look at this coin that is 162 years older than the coin I found. WOW what a contrast. Different pleasures for different people. Thx for posting. PS I am always amazed at the great history you have. WD
    I know your pain! I only found 1 silver in the past 2 year! Of course it's that beautiful 1877 seated dime, but not sure if I want to wait another 2 years for another silver. Yet, compared to that Reale, I'm certainly jealous!
    Equipment:
    Minelab: CTX 3030, GPX 4800, X-Terra 705. Whites TDI SL.

    2023 Silver: 1 Gold: 0

    Best finds: 28 silver dime spill, 1800s Dutch customs seal.
    Oldest/best coins: 1837 Upper Canada large cent, 1877 Seated Dime
    Oldest find: 1800 Sailors Luck token
    You Tube: Rediscovering America

  14. #14
    Thanks, fellas... I'm in the best place in the US. People came here in the 1600s, started leaving before the CW, kept leaving until after WW2. Never rebuilt on these sites.

    I went back to this cabin site and found a stone-lined well 100yrds away and some more buried walls. The 1920 wheat and tiny cow bell (goat bell?) was found near the more recent cellar hole. Everything else was near the cabin.
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  15. #15
    Administrator del's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by OxShoeDrew View Post
    Thanks, fellas... I'm in the best place in the US. People came here in the 1600s, started leaving before the CW, kept leaving until after WW2. Never rebuilt on these sites.

    I went back to this cabin site and found a stone-lined well 100yrds away and some more buried walls. The 1920 wheat and tiny cow bell (goat bell?) was found near the more recent cellar hole. Everything else was near the cabin.
    wells usually weren't a 100 yards away from the house (unless the home was on very high ground and they didn't want to dig a very deep one) so you either have the real location of the cabin or this well is close to the barn or you have another cabin site altogether , Drew.

    Dan
    "Honesty is an expensive gift ,
    so don't expect it from cheap people"

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  16. #16
    Elite Member Digger_O'Dell's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by OxShoeDrew View Post
    Thanks, fellas... I'm in the best place in the US. People came here in the 1600s, started leaving before the CW, kept leaving until after WW2. Never rebuilt on these sites.

    I went back to this cabin site and found a stone-lined well 100yrds away and some more buried walls. The 1920 wheat and tiny cow bell (goat bell?) was found near the more recent cellar hole. Everything else was near the cabin.

    More great finds! You're lucky to have sites like this. I have only run across one such site in my area, having a cellar hole lined with field stone and a stone lined well. Absolutely no finds in the area...go figure.
    Equipment:
    Minelab: CTX 3030, GPX 4800, X-Terra 705. Whites TDI SL.

    2023 Silver: 1 Gold: 0

    Best finds: 28 silver dime spill, 1800s Dutch customs seal.
    Oldest/best coins: 1837 Upper Canada large cent, 1877 Seated Dime
    Oldest find: 1800 Sailors Luck token
    You Tube: Rediscovering America

  17. #17
    Chris, we have some cellar holes that are very quiet. I always thought it had to do with the age of the hole, like very early ones have less coins because there was no on else around to trade with.

    Dan, this well is the same elevation of where I think the cabin is. Also, there is an opening in a wall associated with the newer hole right in front of the well, the opening is between the well and the newer cellar hole. Maybe it a second well for horses for the newer hole? The well, cabin, and newer hole make a triangle where the distances are well-cabin .08 mi (422ft), well-new hole .1mi (528 ft). I checked all around the well and didn't hear any metal but I'll go back today and recheck. The new hole still has it's own well next to it which looks like it got a stone-lined-in-concrete upgrade in the 20s or 30s.
    Let me know if you want to check out the site sometime.
    On Instagram- oxshoedrew

  18. #18
    Administrator del's Avatar
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    Drew , I would be interested to check it out . Wells were always near a barn or outbuilding or a homesite , I've seen some homes have a well near their home on a knoll or hill and then have another well down the hill near a run off because in the hot summer time the well on the hill might go dry but the lower one near a water run off would still be pretty full .
    "Honesty is an expensive gift ,
    so don't expect it from cheap people"

    XP Deus II , DFX ,TDI sl -

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  19. #19
    Elite Member Digger_O'Dell's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by OxShoeDrew View Post
    Chris, we have some cellar holes that are very quiet. I always thought it had to do with the age of the hole, like very early ones have less coins because there was no on else around to trade with.
    Drew,
    Thanks for the insight, I hadn't thought of that scenario. In a field not too far away, maybe 1/2 mile or so the old maps showed structures there during the 1870s, and I even pulled my only fatty IH find from there-but the finds were also pretty few and far between mostly later IHs and a crotal bell to name a few. But I suspect the cellar hole is probably far earlier than the field site and was likely abandoned before many people arrived. Records state the area was first settled around the 1850s, but there's also some mention of a lot of traders, trappers and explorers (missionaries?) that spent time in the area, possibly trading with the natives, as far back as the late 1600s or early 1700s.
    As a side note, the first European to set foot in Wisconsin is attributed to French explorer Jean Nicolet who arrived in 1634. Another unnamed French Jesuit explorer set up a stone altar and raised a cross dedicated to Mary atop a nearby peak in1676, only about 15 miles from where my cellar hole is located, and likely in line with a route people would traverse between that point and and Lake Michigan.
    Equipment:
    Minelab: CTX 3030, GPX 4800, X-Terra 705. Whites TDI SL.

    2023 Silver: 1 Gold: 0

    Best finds: 28 silver dime spill, 1800s Dutch customs seal.
    Oldest/best coins: 1837 Upper Canada large cent, 1877 Seated Dime
    Oldest find: 1800 Sailors Luck token
    You Tube: Rediscovering America

  20. #20
    Administrator del's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Digger_O'Dell View Post
    Drew,
    Thanks for the insight, I hadn't thought of that scenario. In a field not too far away, maybe 1/2 mile or so the old maps showed structures there during the 1870s, and I even pulled my only fatty IH find from there-but the finds were also pretty few and far between mostly later IHs and a crotal bell to name a few. But I suspect the cellar hole is probably far earlier than the field site and was likely abandoned before many people arrived. Records state the area was first settled around the 1850s, but there's also some mention of a lot of traders, trappers and explorers (missionaries?) that spent time in the area, possibly trading with the natives, as far back as the late 1600s or early 1700s.
    As a side note, the first European to set foot in Wisconsin is attributed to French explorer Jean Nicolet who arrived in 1634. Another unnamed French Jesuit explorer set up a stone altar and raised a cross dedicated to Mary atop a nearby peak in1676, only about 15 miles from where my cellar hole is located, and likely in line with a route people would traverse between that point and and Lake Michigan.
    take pictures next time your there or anywhere really you think some very old areas are or suppose to be , we might be able to spot something that is a bit subtle to what your use to .
    "Honesty is an expensive gift ,
    so don't expect it from cheap people"

    XP Deus II , DFX ,TDI sl -

    Click here to view my finds album


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