Cleaned out the scrap bucket ~ found a nice eagle surprise!

Diggincoinz

Bronze Member
Dec 19, 2004
1,581
212
Wayne County, NY
Detector(s) used
Minelab X-Terra 70 / Tesoro TigerShark / Fisher F70
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I've had two scrap buckets in the garage for a few years, finally dumped them out and sorted thru it before giving the scrap to my local club to cash in on (around 80 lbs). Near the bottom of the second 5 gallon bucket came out this nice NY Civil War Button ~ Sweet! Plus a couple other keepers is a Cucible Steel Co pin/badge#8592 from Syracuse c.1900, a thimble, another small button and a Turkish telephone token (TELEFON JETONU - PTT) I think is c.1930's. Nice junk huh? :D
 

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Just proves that knee pads, gloves and a shovel are not always required to find cool stuff. Well done!
 

Seems odd you would throw any button in the scrap bucket.
Nice one :thumbsup:
 

HILL BILLY said:
Seems odd you would throw any button in the scrap bucket.
Nice one :thumbsup:

Agreed. Doesnt make much sense to me either. Unless your one of those old CW diggers that threw away eagle breast plates after digging 20 or 30 of them.
 

HILL BILLY said:
Seems odd you would throw any button in the scrap bucket.
Nice one :thumbsup:

Ha! It wasn't intentional that's for sure. I never put any keepers in my digging pouch, only the crap and scrap. Maybe it was in a clump of dirt with foil or something and I never seen it? :BangHead:
 

It is great that you went back through the trash to double check. I am certain that there are many desirable and valuable items tossed out by detectorists every year because they don't recognize them immediately. The items you retrieved are obviously keepers...but things like tent rope tighteners, tompions, gun tools, shell fragments, artillery fuses and friction primers, and musket pieces and parts from side plates to trigger enclosures and barrel rings...these are just a few of the Civil War items that are highly desirable that probably get tossed out by some.

The list gets much larger when we add Housesite finds, Colonial stuff, Rev War, etc.

That's why I always promote folks posting photos of everything they dug--even the bits--on the forum. Several sets of eyes are always better than one pair when it comes to that stuff, and there are lots of folks on here with vast knowledge to share.


Congrats on saving those keepers from the bin, and Happy Hunting,


Buckles
 

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