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

Silver Tree Chaser

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Aug 12, 2012
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I found this exciting colonial-period gold cufflink in a farm field about two weeks ago!

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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).

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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


Good Hunting to All!
 

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Upvote 4

Steve in PA

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Been meaning to respond to this post, just haven't had a chance. The gold cuff links are an amazing find! I can only recall seeing one other set of colonial gold cuff links posted - a linked set of octagonal cuff links with a tudor rose patten. They were found in South Carolina. You are definitely on a nice early site reaching back into the 1600s. Looking forward to more of the same from that site!
 

{Sentinel}

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Jesus Steve, you should've let me know you dug that bad boy, Congratulations!
 

yaxthri

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Nov 17, 2010
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Long post? I would have written a book with this kind of finds...
Fantastic finds! And they are gold, even better!
Congrats on the banner, too
 

yaxthri

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About the engraving now, did this person you mention have any affiliation to the French?
I kind of see a "fleur-de-lis" stub (no base leafs) in the pattern, with a lot of decorative stamen on top of it...
 

Steve in PA

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Jesus Steve, you should've let me know you dug that bad boy, Congratulations!

Haha Josh, all I can say is.... I WISH!!!

I didn't did these, SilverTreeChaser found them!
 

VOL1266-X

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Somehow, I missed this one the first time. Congrats on a well deserved BANNER. Very unique find. Congrats, Quindy.
 

I Dig Jesus

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Wow, what else can you say, serious finds for sure, well deserving of the banner all day long. Good Job.
 

OP
OP
Silver Tree Chaser

Silver Tree Chaser

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Thank's for that - I also wondered about the pattern below the crystal in the Stewart cufflink -it looks like a monogram - are you able to
confirm it as such ?

Argentium - The curator who looked at some super-macro images could not discern any type of cipher or monogram. I don't see anything but a random design.
 

OP
OP
Silver Tree Chaser

Silver Tree Chaser

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Coins are nice, but finding colonial jewelry is a unique treat. And gold jewelry is a superb feat that few have accomplished!

A few years back I recovered an intact silver colonial cuff-link, the last signal I dug in 2010. Then the storms came and it was nearly 3 months before I could return, but when I did, and less than 50 yards away, the very first signal I dug was another colonial silver cuff-link! There have been a few gold items found at the site as well, but the cuff-links are among my best finds to date! Super finds!

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Neil - I had a bit more than 50 yards between the silver & gold cufflinks. I got curious and measured the approximate distance on Google Earth. It came to 2300' or so. There are two long-vanished house sites at opposite ends of the property. One house site produced the Stuart Crystal cufflink, and the other house site produced the gold cufflink.
 

OP
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Silver Tree Chaser

Silver Tree Chaser

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About the engraving now, did this person you mention have any affiliation to the French?
I kind of see a "fleur-de-lis" stub (no base leafs) in the pattern, with a lot of decorative stamen on top of it...

Yaxthri - No, he was an Englishman. I'm very certain that the engraving portrays the tail of a whale breaking on the water. The cufflink was found at the site of a long vanished country estate. The owner of the estate also owned shipping in a port town with active whaling, but I don't know yet if he owned a whaling ship.
 

BuckleBoy

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You will be astonished to find out what is waiting in those trash pits. From a site where there was affluence like that, you will be amazed.

Great find on the cufflink. That's a beautiful and valuable find.

-Buck
 

AU Seeker

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Congratulations on getting Banner!!:headbang:

Beautiful cuff links!

While reading this topic it got my gold senses tingling so I was searching for other 18th century gold cuff links and came across a 1750s gold cuff link very similar to yours but the engraving is different, it was found in Statesville, N.C. at the site of Fort Dobbs and is in their artifacts collection.

Scroll down to the 7th picture at this page for the photo below.
Fort Dobbs, Statesville, NC - North Carolina State Historic Site representing French & Indian War

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The Rebel

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WTG on an AMAZING find as well as the journey!
 

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Silver Tree Chaser

Silver Tree Chaser

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RETURN TO GOLD CUFFLINK SITE = 1722 HIBERNIA COPPER & A PROMISING CLUE

Note - The following was already posted as a separate thread, but I decided to post it here as well to provide a continuous narrative on my search of a colonial-period site.

I returned to the gold cufflink site two weeks ago (I’ve had little time to post since then). My last search that produced the gold cufflink was very brief. This time I pounded the field for nearly 10 hours. The gold cufflink from the prior hunt was a tough act to follow, but I was happy with the results for the latest search, especially after closely examining my finds upon returning home. I recovered three coppers, two complete knee buckles (one tongue is actually missing a tooth), the end of a silver spoon handle, a button or two, etc.

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One of the coppers is superior to the others; moreover, it’s my third recovered copper out of nearly 200 that is mostly absent of the heavy corrosion found on dug coppers. It’s a 1722 Hibernia Halfpence with a left-side – seven string variety (in reference to the harp’s location and its number of strings).

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Cleaning the Hibernia side of the coin was a bit difficult. The dirt had really bonded to the coin.

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According to Q. David Bowers in his reference book on colonial-period coins, 200+ varieties of the Hibernia Halfpence were produced from 1722 to 1724. Bowers assigns a URS-6 (Universal Rarity Scale) to this left-side – seven string variety and estimates a range of 17-32 known specimens. I’m not nearly as knowledgeable as some of the other members to this forum. If I’m incorrect on this variety or any other information, I would appreciate any feedback. What’s the value? I have no idea. I don’t know if there is keen interest by collectors in Hibernia coppers, although I understand that a dug coin could never earn a full grade, especially this one. Any value is of secondary interest to me. Recovering a fine example of a dug copper nearly 300 years-old is its own reward.

The recovery of two more knee buckles was surprising. I’ve now recovered three such buckles in the last two trips, yet I’ve only managed to recover fragments of several different shoe buckles.

I was hoping for another early silver coin, but the silver spoon handle end is perhaps a better find because it supports my research regarding the original owner of a country estate that once stood on the property long ago. The initial for his last name is – B, and I speculated that the whale tail design on the gold cufflink might also incorporate the same initial as seen below.

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My research of several primary documents all point to the same original owner, a very wealthy merchant, but the letter design on the cufflink is more wishful thinking than anything. I prefer to withhold the name of the original owner out of consideration for the current property owner and for my own interest. I have a long way to go before the whole story can be told, and I will hopefully pursue some type of publication. Providing the last name of the original owner might also stir the interest of a site jumper. Unfortunately, there will always be a few individuals looking to take short cuts in finding a productive site. The original owner, his country estate, the time, and the people of the time would make for a fascinating story.

Recent finds on the property have been a huge motivator, especially that miniscule handle fragment from the silver spoon recovered on the last hunt. The letter – B design on the whale tail cufflink is very questionable, but if you look at the silver spoon fragment, a letter – B appears to be etched on this old piece of colonial-period silver.

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Good Hunting! :thumbsup:
 

63bkpkr

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STC, lovely finds on both half sets! Initials how about the obvious B with of course the two lines going off to the left. When righted I suppose it looks like a tree. Have fun with the sleuthing work as that can also be fun especially for an item like this. Thank you for sharing and yes it is worth being up there on the banner........................63bkpkr
 

swamp yankee

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Thanx for a great post on your fantastic finds! You have a couple of real historical pieces there! May you find the other gold piece before it's snowtime back there.HH......
 

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