🥇 BANNER I FOUND A RARE ONE - A PERFECT COLONIAL-PERIOD GOLD CUFFLINK!

Silver Tree Chaser

Bronze Member
Aug 12, 2012
1,371
2,992
🥇 Banner finds
8
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I found this exciting colonial-period gold cufflink in a farm field about two weeks ago!

PA020034.JPG

My research had indicated that a colonial-period house once stood somewhere nearby on the property. For several years, I had recovered occasional musket balls at the 100+ acre site but little else. Persistence finally paid back last year when I located the approximate house site along with three Spanish silver coins – a single two-reales coin and two of the smaller one reale coins (I covered that story in the 2013 issue of Silver & Gold by Western & Eastern Treasures).

This year’s follow-up hunt at the site is a long story, and I’ll hopefully write another magazine article for publication in the near future. I got a few pieces of worn and cut Spanish silver on the property this past spring, which I had posted earlier on T-Net. I only had time for a short dig late in the evening two weeks ago, and the gold cufflink was the very first target that I dug! I was amazed at the sight of gold at a colonial-period site. I spotted it in the dark soil immediately upon removing the plug. What a moment! I ran back to the car for my digital camera and took these pictures. I even shot some video, which I might post on T-Net (I’ve never worked with video online).

PA020026_01.JPG

I only had about one hour to continue searching the site, yet I pulled up a 1782 Spanish One Reale, a complete knee buckle (the tongue and chape still swivel), a toasted copper, and one ever-present musket ball. It was one crazy hour of detecting and digging.

PA020039_01.JPG

I found a beautiful silver Stuart Crystal cufflink in a nearby field back in June, which I posted up a few months ago. I figured that I could never improve upon that find in regards to cufflinks, but I was happily dead-wrong. I’ve been forwarding pictures of both cufflinks to some specialists – museum curator, etc. One curator of a well-known museum contacted me and described the recovered cufflinks and a dug silver bodkin as “pretty astonishing.” It felt good to receive such a compliment. The octagonal shape of the gold cufflink has a date range of 1750-1780.

PA020043_01.JPG

PA020047.JPG

Gold jewelry from this period was fashioned from the melting of gold coins. Another contact that I made (a consultant to the Smithsonian) informed me that gold items of personal adornment from the 18th Century could only be afforded by royalty and the very wealthy. I was also told that examples of 18th century gold cufflinks are exceedingly rare, as only a small number of pieces have survived to the present. All the rest was melted down over the years or simply lost. I soon learned of the scarcity of such cufflinks, as a search of the internet (Google images, etc.) only produced two or three images of 18th Century cufflinks made of gold. The rarity of the find does not necessarily translate to value, as I would need to find the matching cufflink for a complete set to add substantially to its worth. Its value has limited appeal for me. I’m motivated by the thrill of the hunt and the thrill of finding colonial-period gold. If I was seriously interested in its value, I would contact an appraiser from one of those ridiculous reality TV treasure hunting shows (yawn). As rusted cooking pots are valued at $200 on some of the programs, I figure that the gold cufflinks would easily go for $1,000,000! :icon_scratch: Do you think I can get that all in cash? :laughing7::laughing7::laughing7:

The museum curator was equally impressed with the Stuart Crystal cufflink, which dates to the mid-18th Century. The gold cufflink may have been made in England or the colonies, but the Crystal Stuart cufflink was undoubtedly made in England. This cufflink is made of silver with quartz over a delicate gold wire design. The curator kindly discussed both cufflinks by phone for 20 minutes or so. In exchange for her expertise, she only asked that I thoroughly document the recovery of the finds to establish a provenance for the future, and I assured her that it would be done. The curator also stated that the perfect condition of the Stuart Crystal cufflink was amazing for an object buried in the ground for 250+ years. She then explained that most examples of 18th Century Crystal Stuart cufflinks seen today are colored pink or red with a colored foil that the jeweler set below the stone. This was done for cufflinks with stones of glass or paste, as the color was used to hide the sight of any scratching of the glass that would eventually occur over time. The cufflink that I recovered has clear stones without a single scratch despite their long burial; accordingly, the curator stated that my dug example has true carved rock quartz crystals – certainly rarer than cut glass examples.

P6280007.JPG

P6280009.JPG

P6280046.JPG

P6280059.JPG

The condition of the gold cufflinks is excellent – completely intact. Treating/cleaning the cufflink when I got home was easy, as I just rinsed it under water. The curator described the engravings on the cufflink as “highly unusual.” Does anyone have any ideas on the engraved symbol? I’ve gotten one excellent suggestion that appears to be right on target, but I would like to get some more feedback to see if anyone else comes up with the same idea. In addition, does anyone also see a letter in the design for an initial? I would greatly appreciate any suggestions. The design and a possible letter for a last name initial may hint at who owned the cufflink from so long ago. My research on this person is what led to my long search of the site. This person was quite an interesting character, but that’s a whole other chapter to the narrative on this great find.

PA180104.JPG

Sorry for the long post. I can’t write cliff notes when it comes to finding 18th Century gold!


Good Hunting to All!
 

Attachments

  • P6280014.JPG
    P6280014.JPG
    1.3 MB · Views: 540
  • PA020022_01.JPG
    PA020022_01.JPG
    72 KB · Views: 580
  • PA020029_01.JPG
    PA020029_01.JPG
    68.5 KB · Views: 503
Last edited:
Upvote 4

ctalmadg

Sr. Member
Jul 27, 2003
383
228
Honeoye Falls, NY (Fingerlakes Area)
Detector(s) used
White / Fisher / DJI Cellar Hole Detector
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Love the cufflinks, even more I love the hunt of the history of the item. Along with detecting I collect antiques, especially ephemera. My favorite part of it is researching the items I get to try and put a face to the object! Good research! Glad you were able to find out more about the cufflinks.
 

OP
OP
Silver Tree Chaser

Silver Tree Chaser

Bronze Member
Aug 12, 2012
1,371
2,992
🥇 Banner finds
8
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Further Research - More to Follow!

Love the cufflinks, even more I love the hunt of the history of the item. Along with detecting I collect antiques, especially ephemera. My favorite part of it is researching the items I get to try and put a face to the object! Good research! Glad you were able to find out more about the cufflinks.

Thanks for the compliment. I'm still researching the gold cufflink and the owner of the colonial-period estate where the cufflink was found. It's all making for a great story. I'll soon be submitting a draft for a magazine article on my search of property over the past year, but I hope to do something bigger that covers the history of the site, the people, and the events that took place around the time of the Revolutionary War.
 

MichiganMan

Sr. Member
Jun 13, 2008
452
203
Kalamazoo County, Michigan
Detector(s) used
A cheap one until I can decide on a very good brand-name one to buy.
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Absolutely stupendous finds. The spoons are very interesting as well.
 

Whydah

Bronze Member
Feb 24, 2010
1,079
1,914
New England
🥇 Banner finds
2
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
2
Detector(s) used
Minelab CTX 30-30 Minelab X Calibur 1000 MineLab Equinox 800 Garret Infinium Fisher CZ 21
Primary Interest:
Beach & Shallow Water Hunting
What a treat to see both pairs in the mud... Nice ones buddy ...see you at the meeting...
 

OP
OP
Silver Tree Chaser

Silver Tree Chaser

Bronze Member
Aug 12, 2012
1,371
2,992
🥇 Banner finds
8
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
What a treat to see both pairs in the mud... Nice ones buddy ...see you at the meeting...

Whydah:

I wrote a story on finding the links for Western & Eastern Treasures - their Silver & Gold Issue from earlier this year.

If you want a copy, send me a PM. I'll get it to you.

Scan0009.jpg
 

BigWaveDave

Gold Member
Nov 22, 2013
9,322
16,996
Mountain Maryland
🥇 Banner finds
2
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
4
Detector(s) used
Garrett AT Pro, AT Max, Minelab
Equinox 800
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
I don't know how I missed this...congrats to you!!!
 

Gene Mean

Bronze Member
Dec 22, 2016
1,838
3,964
Central NJ
Detector(s) used
Garrett ACE 350
Equinox 800
Eyeballs
Primary Interest:
Relic Hunting
Fantastic cufflinks! This was b4 my time on Tnet so resurrecting an old post.
 

Digger RJ

Gold Member
Aug 24, 2017
19,543
33,642
SW Missouri/Oklahoma
🥇 Banner finds
1
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
2
Detector(s) used
Minelab CTX 3030; Minelab Equinox 800;
XP Deus 2
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Very Very Nice!!! Congrats!!!
 

Digger RJ

Gold Member
Aug 24, 2017
19,543
33,642
SW Missouri/Oklahoma
🥇 Banner finds
1
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
2
Detector(s) used
Minelab CTX 3030; Minelab Equinox 800;
XP Deus 2
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I found this exciting colonial-period gold cufflink in a farm field about two weeks ago!

View attachment 883905

My research had indicated that a colonial-period house once stood somewhere nearby on the property. For several years, I had recovered occasional musket balls at the 100+ acre site but little else. Persistence finally paid back last year when I located the approximate house site along with three Spanish silver coins – a single two-reales coin and two of the smaller one reale coins (I covered that story in the 2013 issue of Silver & Gold by Western & Eastern Treasures).

This year’s follow-up hunt at the site is a long story, and I’ll hopefully write another magazine article for publication in the near future. I got a few pieces of worn and cut Spanish silver on the property this past spring, which I had posted earlier on T-Net. I only had time for a short dig late in the evening two weeks ago, and the gold cufflink was the very first target that I dug! I was amazed at the sight of gold at a colonial-period site. I spotted it in the dark soil immediately upon removing the plug. What a moment! I ran back to the car for my digital camera and took these pictures. I even shot some video, which I might post on T-Net (I’ve never worked with video online).

View attachment 883907

I only had about one hour to continue searching the site, yet I pulled up a 1782 Spanish One Reale, a complete knee buckle (the tongue and chape still swivel), a toasted copper, and one ever-present musket ball. It was one crazy hour of detecting and digging.

View attachment 883904

I found a beautiful silver Stuart Crystal cufflink in a nearby field back in June, which I posted up a few months ago. I figured that I could never improve upon that find in regards to cufflinks, but I was happily dead-wrong. I’ve been forwarding pictures of both cufflinks to some specialists – museum curator, etc. One curator of a well-known museum contacted me and described the recovered cufflinks and a dug silver bodkin as “pretty astonishing.” It felt good to receive such a compliment. The octagonal shape of the gold cufflink has a date range of 1750-1780.

View attachment 883911

View attachment 883910

Gold jewelry from this period was fashioned from the melting of gold coins. Another contact that I made (a consultant to the Smithsonian) informed me that gold items of personal adornment from the 18th Century could only be afforded by royalty and the very wealthy. I was also told that examples of 18th century gold cufflinks are exceedingly rare, as only a small number of pieces have survived to the present. All the rest was melted down over the years or simply lost. I soon learned of the scarcity of such cufflinks, as a search of the internet (Google images, etc.) only produced two or three images of 18th Century cufflinks made of gold. The rarity of the find does not necessarily translate to value, as I would need to find the matching cufflink for a complete set to add substantially to its worth. Its value has limited appeal for me. I’m motivated by the thrill of the hunt and the thrill of finding colonial-period gold. If I was seriously interested in its value, I would contact an appraiser from one of those ridiculous reality TV treasure hunting shows (yawn). As rusted cooking pots are valued at $200 on some of the programs, I figure that the gold cufflinks would easily go for $1,000,000! :icon_scratch: Do you think I can get that all in cash? :laughing7::laughing7::laughing7:

The museum curator was equally impressed with the Stuart Crystal cufflink, which dates to the mid-18th Century. The gold cufflink may have been made in England or the colonies, but the Crystal Stuart cufflink was undoubtedly made in England. This cufflink is made of silver with quartz over a delicate gold wire design. The curator kindly discussed both cufflinks by phone for 20 minutes or so. In exchange for her expertise, she only asked that I thoroughly document the recovery of the finds to establish a provenance for the future, and I assured her that it would be done. The curator also stated that the perfect condition of the Stuart Crystal cufflink was amazing for an object buried in the ground for 250+ years. She then explained that most examples of 18th Century Crystal Stuart cufflinks seen today are colored pink or red with a colored foil that the jeweler set below the stone. This was done for cufflinks with stones of glass or paste, as the color was used to hide the sight of any scratching of the glass that would eventually occur over time. The cufflink that I recovered has clear stones without a single scratch despite their long burial; accordingly, the curator stated that my dug example has true carved rock quartz crystals – certainly rarer than cut glass examples.

View attachment 883900

View attachment 883899

View attachment 883897

View attachment 883896

The condition of the gold cufflinks is excellent – completely intact. Treating/cleaning the cufflink when I got home was easy, as I just rinsed it under water. The curator described the engravings on the cufflink as “highly unusual.” Does anyone have any ideas on the engraved symbol? I’ve gotten one excellent suggestion that appears to be right on target, but I would like to get some more feedback to see if anyone else comes up with the same idea. In addition, does anyone also see a letter in the design for an initial? I would greatly appreciate any suggestions. The design and a possible letter for a last name initial may hint at who owned the cufflink from so long ago. My research on this person is what led to my long search of the site. This person was quite an interesting character, but that’s a whole other chapter to the narrative on this great find.

View attachment 883909

Sorry for the long post. I can’t write cliff notes when it comes to finding 18th Century gold!


Good Hunting to All!
Very Nice!!! Congrats!!!
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top