✅ SOLVED Brass Object

wandrews

Jr. Member
May 30, 2011
28
45
Central Georgia, USA
Detector(s) used
White's Di Pro 5900

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eman1000

Hero Member
Feb 24, 2016
728
1,105
Elizabethtown, IN
Detector(s) used
XP Deus ORX, Etrac, F75, Simplex, MX5, V3i, Equinox, Tesoro Vaq, F22
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Looks like part of an Antique Garden Hoe or hand cultivator. A stick would have went through the large hole and the hoe attachment through the smaller hole.

Could also be a confederate Bayonet socket - which makes for a much cooler relic - I would get an expert opinion on that.
 

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releventchair

Gold Member
May 9, 2012
22,383
70,633
Primary Interest:
Other
Thank you! Perhaps I should have included that the object was found in central Georgia.
Not many accounts. But maples have been tapped in Georgia.
I doubt it is an actual spile if brass.
The design would make it easy to bend due to open areas.

A ramrod thimble is usually a flat fin where pinned. Screws were/are used on later designs unless emulating older arms..

What were they...Flag holders?
Had a spike on the bottom , and on top a wood dowel was fit inside to used to attach flag to. Graves and such.
IF yours was used for such the spike would go in the smaller hole. Pointed end of object to reduce wobble/play..
Like adding a spike to this one to stick in the ground.
 

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TheCannonballGuy

Gold Member
Feb 24, 2006
6,543
13,072
Occupied CSA (Richmond VA)
Detector(s) used
White's 6000, Nautilus DMC-1, Minelab
Primary Interest:
Relic Hunting
Wandrews, your brass find is DEFINITLY a musket/rifle's combination front barrel-band and ramrod-guide, most likely made in the first half of the 1800s. Although yours looks very similar to the one on a US Model-1841 Springfield rifle (also called the "Mississippi Rifle"), it's a little different from the M-1841. Check the photo here:
(You can click on the Wikipedia photo to see an enlarged version.)

I'll have to dig out my long-unused reference book on civil war era muskets/rifles to give you the specific ID for your find, if nobody saves me the trouble by providing it first.

Meanwhile:
Please add your Location to your T-Net profile info. It's helpful for us here in the What-Is-It? forum to know where an unknown object was dug often helps us figure out it correct identification.
 

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