🥇 BANNER 1700's Luckenbooth TRADE Silver!

Patriot Relics

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Location
Lowcountry, South Carolina / Richmond, Virginia
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Detector(s) used
CTX-3030, Deus XP II
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Relic Hunting
Hey guys,

Headed back out to an old colonial permission, turned honey hole recently with Stef45. Weather hasn't been great, but we did manage a get in a few hours before the rain ran us off. Every time I walk away from hunting here, I start researching new sites as we assuming it must be pounded out. Countless hours gridding with both the CTX and Deus have almost certainly cleared the good stuff...not quite. Instead of walking in grids, I decided to change the angle of the coil by walking in a concentric circle on the main iron patch. Today's weapon of choice was the mighty XP Deus and my first target was the mythical whisper signal. 99% of the time these top of the right horseshoe targets are deep iron (OutdoorAdv can probably speak better to this), but every now and then its a deep non-ferrous target. Dug the plug, but still no target...with all the iron there is no chance of a clean pin point so I widened the plug and dug a bit deeper. At the point were the sandy top soil met the hard clay (12-13 inches) my pin pointer finally rang out. Never thought I'd see one of these in person...1700s Luckenbooth trade silver brooch!

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A bit of history on these- A Luckenbooth brooch is a Scottish heart-shaped brooch. Luckenbooth is traditionally given to a bride by her groom on her wedding day as a symbol of love (heart) and loyalty (crown). They were also attached to either the bedclothes or the clothing of a newborn child as it was believed to ease child birth and insure good breast milk. These brooches often have a crown above one heart, or two intertwined hearts with Scottish motifs like the St. Andrew's Cross or the thistle. The crown is designed after that of Mary Queen of Scots. She gave a Luckenbooth brooch to her betroth decorated with her monogram and a thistle. The thistle is the national emblem of Scotland along with the Latin motto, Nemo me impune Laecessit ("No one provokes me with impunity"). Silver was the usual material, although gold heart brooches were made for wealthy people. Some brooches were engraved with initials, dates or mottoes. Inexpensive glass paste "gems" or stones (described in ancient advertisements as Cairngorm stones) were sometimes used on silver brooches. Its name is believed to have come from the "Locked Booths" where these brooches were sold on The Royal Mile in Edinburgh. Locked booths were shops in Edinburgh from St Giles to Canon gate which became the city's first Jewellery shops in the 16th century (luckenbooth was a Scots word for a lockable stall or workshop). They were demolished in 1817.

By the mid 18th century luckenbooth tokens also featured heavily as trade silver items to the indigenous peoples of North America, particularly the Six Nations and Iroquois Indians. As a result, Iroquois created their own "Iroquois brooch" and luckenbooth became a common decorative symbol in 18th and early 19th century native clothing.


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This silver brooch is without a doubt my favorite civilian relic recovered to date.

Not far from the brooch, I got another whisper target- at about the same depth at the clay layer. 1781 1/2 Real Spanish (this time with the CTX)

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As if these 2 silver weren't enough I also checked the 1857 flying eagle cent off the bucket list

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Also pulled a crusty 1873 IHP

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As far as other relics go, recovered a few nice flat buttons- 1 with silver wash and another with a flower design

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Few other unmarked flats

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Also dug a pewter spoon

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Pair of 18th century leather bosses

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Along the perimeter of the property I started digging a ton of camp lead- also these tent rivets (one still has the leather intact)

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This one is a bit of a mystery- maybe early stained glass fragment (green class with lead in back)

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Also a nice iron buckle destined for the electrolysis tank

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Suspect this button is turn of the century- cloth covered with iron back

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All in all another hunt for the record books for me- trade silver brooch, Spanish, and a Flying Eagle cent has set the bar high for the rest of 2017. As always thanks for looking and good luck out there

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Upvote 94
A super hunt! Thanks for posting a bunch of photos....love seeing your finds.--JB
 

Congrats on the great finds! I'm so glad you posted the info about that Luckenbooth brooch. I recently found one here in MA and thought nothing of it...had no idea what it was or if it was old. It was in a field where I had found other Colonial relics...a spectacle buckle, Draped Bust LC's, etc. This is what I love about this hobby....and of course TNET!!!! Thanks for sharing.

Still researching myself, but these are certainly amazing pieces of history. Your fortunate to have dug one as well
 

I love it!
A winner for sure !!
the club is growing

Thanks Iron horse, crazy to see 3 of these come out of the dirt in the last 3 months... similar to 3 slave tags in the first 3 months of 2016. Suspect I'll never see another in a plug
 

Huge pile of keepers there! :notworthy:
 

What a find Jon! That Luckenbooth brooch is amazing. It sounds like the iron patch at this place would be worth the effort to remove the soil in sections, down to the clay layer and use the magnet to sterilize the soil. I bet there is so much masked there still... and it looks like they had money. Banner vote going in now. :occasion14:
 

Nice finds for both you and Stef. With the way the rain has been coming down yesterday and today I was really surprised to see both of your posts....and finds. Nice going!
 

Awesome finds. Don't forget those mid tones... betcha there's some gold coins in there!
 

All I can say is WOW !!! Great find, that kind of stuff is what keeps me looking. Thanks for posting !
 

What a find Jon! That Luckenbooth brooch is amazing. It sounds like the iron patch at this place would be worth the effort to remove the soil in sections, down to the clay layer and use the magnet to sterilize the soil. I bet there is so much masked there still... and it looks like they had money. Banner vote going in now. :occasion14:

Thanks Brad, I'm going through the site and consolidating the digs from the last year to one display...pair of Spanish, silver spoons, and gilt dandy buttons certainly point to more below the iron
 

Nice finds for both you and Stef. With the way the rain has been coming down yesterday and today I was really surprised to see both of your posts....and finds. Nice going!

We got a short break in the weather from 1300-1600, overcast and breezy before the skies opened up
 

Outstanding relic and jewelry hunt! :notworthy:
 

Thanks for adding the history of the brooch.... congrats on a terrific find!
 

Awesome finds. Don't forget those mid tones... betcha there's some gold coins in there!

Still waiting to dig my first gold coin, but if one comes from the dirt it wouldn't surprise me. Definitely a dig it all kind of site
 

All I can say is WOW !!! Great find, that kind of stuff is what keeps me looking. Thanks for posting !

Happy to keep the content coming, as long we keep saving history I'll keep sharing it
 

Happy to keep the content coming, as long we keep saving history I'll keep sharing it

You rock Jon, I hope this very worthy find makes banner.
 

Are you kidding me........ Phenomenal hunt........
That brooch is beautiful.
This one should definitely be up top
 

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Thanks for adding the history of the brooch.... congrats on a terrific find!

No problem, I thought I recognized the shape and form out of the ground, but never realized these were used heavily to trade with the Iroquois
 

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