Found an untouched Union Camp

Thunderchild

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Joined
Sep 24, 2011
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Location
N. Carolina
Detector(s) used
Fisher F75LTD/ AT Pro / Whites TDI SL / Tesoro Compadre
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
On April 29, 1865, The Army of the Tennessee 17th Corps left its camps in Raleigh and marched toward Washington D.C. for the " Grand Review". After years of war, endless battles and marches they were headed north to be reviewed and mustered out of the Army. The men of the 17th Corps marched about 12 miles and camped for two nights before resuming the "Final March". I was fortunate after months of research to locate the campsite of some of these men. The site lay undisturbed for 146 years. After pouring over historic maps, reading soldiers diaries and other accounts in the " Official Records of The War of the Rebellion", The final clue fell into place when I met Doug AKA "Modern Miner" from whom I purchased a metal detector on Craigslist. "MM" was wildly enthusiastic about relic hunting and one of the nicest people I've ever met. Turns out he had been relic hunting with much success just up the road from my home and quite near this site. It was his info on the possible location of and old road that started me pinpoint the area of the camp.

The first day out after work with daylight running short, I fired up the AT PRO and started seaching. Very soon at the base of a huge Sycamore tree I located four .58 caliber three ringers and a General Service button. Darkness soon came and I was forced to leave. Returning the next day, I began to locate more Minnie balls, melted lead and various iron objects. Very exited I left and returned the next day around 3:00 pm. To my dismay I noticed freshly dug holes that had not been filled back in. It became apparent that someone had seen my truck parked beside the road and on the previous hunts and had now "discovered" the camp. Somewhat deflated, I continued to hunt and found more relics. I went home that night and told the wife that the spot had been discovered and soon would be overun by detectorist so I needed to hit the camp every chance I could in the coming days.

Thankfully I have a very understanding wife! I went back to the site the next morning early and sure enough came upon two uninvited "guests" detecting the camp. These were "veteran" reilic hunters using "high dollar" detectors. Undeterred I went about my business hunting relics. I pulled in many more bullets including three intact, unfired .44 Henry cartridges. After these fellows left, I moved over to where they had been detecting and starting swinging the coil. The first signal on that spot they had scoured with much more advanced machines, yeilded an very nice Eagle Breastplate. I was pumped to say the least. I lightly brushed the plate off, put it in the pouch and kept swinging. The very next signal not more than 50' away, was a real "head banger" and nearly knock my headphones off. The VDI read 88-90. I knelt and carefully dug away the soil. I nearly fell over backward when I pulled a very nice Eagle sword belt plate. The next day I was unable to hunt he site due to work obligations. I did notice however, that he other relic hunters were back on the site. At this point I remembered Doug and his kindness, so I called him and told him to get his butt over while the getting was still good. I met Doug at the site in the next day or so and we hunted along side a growing number of new hunters, Yep, word travels fast!

Check out the Pics below. Doug has already posted his finds earlier. My finds include: 200 Minnie Balls, Eagle Breast Plate, Eagle Sword Belt Plate, Eagle Button, 3 Knapsack Hooks, One 1838 Large Cent, Three 1859 IH Pennies, 3 intact Henry Cartidges, Large Flat Button ("Best Plated"), 2 knapsack Buckles, several "carved Bullets, Several Chewed Bullets (Critter Candy?), Sprinfield Rifle Nose Cap, tons of melted "Camp Lead", one Fork, several Hores Shoes.
 

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Upvote 0
Awesome finds Glenn...talk about a dream come true hunting spot ...I have a question tho on this pic what are the base pieces of these bullets for .....



HH Tank :icon_thumleft:
 

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Just some advice from a computer junkie, I hope you have a complicated password(preferrably 8-10 characters with numbers and symbols mixed in) on your computer. Your research is just another way to make you stand out from the crowd, and if they can hack your computer they know who to put a tail on. Facebook is another place that is very high risk as they usually ask for huge amounts of personal information in an effort to link you with likeminded individuals. I've even seen an app on Facebook that asks you for your address so you and your friends on Facebook can see where you live(they quite literrally show you and your friends locations on a world map with zoom, maybe to make it easier to hook up later?). If I were a discrete, but vile and wicked thieving detectorist, I would try to find common ground(such as a hobby) and ask a few "harmless" questions like what kind of relics do you hunt for..... Bottom line is a lot of the time we cannot be too careful when dealing with the internet as we do not know, unless we restrict ourselves to family and personal friends, who exactly we are idly chatting with. I could REALLY go on with this topic, but I think everyone gets my point.
 

Tank69 said:
Awesome finds Glenn...talk about a dream come true hunting spot ...I have a question tho on this pic what are the base pieces of these bullets for .....



HH Tank :icon_thumleft:
Bore cleaners :thumbsup:
 

those are willaims cleaner type bullets- due to bore fouling , it was recommended to shoot one every so many rounds (say 8 to 10 rounds) to cut the powder & lead fouling out of the barrel --if the barrel became too fouled it would become unloadible leaving you with a "club" instead of a gun" - not good

however due to their hard flat base , they could be a bit hard to load and push down the barrel , so in some cases they were thrown away by the troops --which is why they are often found as "intact drops"
 

Kuger an Ivan :icon_thumright: thanks guys awsome info
 

thunder child
contact owner and have him put up a no tresspass and then get written permission for you and your buds that will stop trash leavin no hole fillin punks in thier tracks devious but called for
 

olepossum said:
thunder child
contact owner and have him put up a no tresspass and then get written permission for you and your buds that will stop trash leavin no hole fillin punks in thier tracks devious but called for

If only that did work...that just creates unwanted work/headache for the owner.Scum tear down our No tres. signs as quick as we can put them up.What the end result is......NOBODY hunts
 

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