Another Fancy Colonial Buckle, LC, and Crazy Huge Scythe

paleomaxx

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Aug 14, 2016
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I went back to the site I was at Friday and really canvassed the spots that are normally covered in brambles.

http://www.treasurenet.com/forums/today-s-finds/529510-buckle-i-need-some-help-1817-lc.html

The results were pretty solid. I found another fancy colonial buckle, but this time the hammered silver surface is intact! Although not the buckle itself.

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Once again it's a variety I've never seen before. Thanks to the help of several members here on Tnet, the last one was identified as an Artois shoe buckle likely from around the 1770's. This one is very different though so any guidance in the right direction will be appreciated!

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The LC is 1831 and in the best condition of any that I've found so far. I didn't do any field cleaning and only lightly rinsed before the peroxide bath. The results were excellent so I think that will be my method with all coppers from now on. I lost a little bit of patina on the raised parts even using just a qtip, but I think that's because the patina was so thin to begin with. The iron buckle is also extraordinarily well preserved. The iron tongue still moves freely!

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This scythe is just enormous. I started digging at the tip and for a second I thought I had found a sword. I just kept digging further and further down the strip until I finally reached the hook at the end which was pinned under a couple of rocks. I can't imagine how anyone lost this back in the day :laughing7:
 

Upvote 11
Great finds! If I had to lug that scythe around all day I would "lose" it also, under two feet of soil and rocks.
 

If I had to lug that scythe around all day I would "lose" it also, under two feet of soil and rocks.

Precisely! :laughing7: I can't imagine carrying this up and down a field for an entire day, much less swinging it. Wouldn't it be great if the farmer got so fed up he finally buys a smaller scythe and "retires" this one in the backyard so he never has to look at it again!
 

Great digs! The buckle reminds me of something I dug several years ago, I always figured it was a buckle fragment. Was found in a farm field in an area that saw activity as far back as the mid 17th century.

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Because of the oddly placed crossbar I'm thinking "maybe" is not a shoe buckle ?
I just looked through buckles 1250 to 1800 and did not see one like it. It's definitely different.
 

Because of the oddly placed crossbar I'm thinking "maybe" is not a shoe buckle ?
I just looked through buckles 1250 to 1800 and did not see one like it. It's definitely different.

I don't know it this is helpful, but it actually looks like it had a second much finer crossbar that's now missing. It's not terribly clear, but you can sort of see in the third photo that it has a drilled hole and the break in the buckle is along the hole on the opposite side.
 

nice finds! man I can see why you thought you had a sword.
 

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