Oh my looky what I found in the woods

williedigit

Sr. Member
Oct 24, 2015
463
1,335
Wilmington NC
Detector(s) used
AT PRO and WHITES SILVER EAGLE also MINELAB 305
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
ImageUploadedByTreasureNet.com1454502769.591189.jpgImageUploadedByTreasureNet.com1454502782.310986.jpgImageUploadedByTreasureNet.com1454502802.320978.jpg must be rooms from a rice plantation site will let you know later if I find something!
 

Upvote 14
that looks exciting
 

Looks kinda like a grave yard
 

Very interesting. Sure does look like an above ground burial plot. Dig down 6' to find out lol!
 

Kinda looks like very small rooms for any kind offer Plantation to me. It looks like many private family cemeteries that I've seen out in the middle of nowhere. Would be a house nearby though at onetime.
 

That looks like an epic hunt just waiting to be had. Keep us posted!!
 

Gotta ask........:tongue3: What the heck ya doin sittin here postin on TNET?:icon_scratch: Why aren't you still there swingin????? I'd have been runnin home to grab a couple sandwiches & soda and right back to it!
 

I'm kind of leaning towards a grave plot also. I live in south Louisiana and many grave plots are above ground or fairly shallow because of our shallow water table. I see country plots like that often, your brick wall seems to have a "finished" top and probably was never taller than it is now. Remote farming families would create their own family plots and often didn't have access to marble, so headstones were often made of less durable material or not used at all. In other parts of the country sometimes a shallower than normal grave was dug because a tough sub-surface material(rock) made it practically impossible to dig deeper with simple farm implements and a top layer of filler dirt or gravel was used within the wall for more protection.

Pretty cool...I love finding unexpected structures in the woods.

Here's a similar example -

plot_1.jpg
 

Gotta ask........:tongue3: What the heck ya doin sittin here postin on TNET?:icon_scratch: Why aren't you still there swingin????? I'd have been runnin home to grab a couple sandwiches & soda and right back to it!

Niece car broke had to fix and today was honey do list
 

I concur on it possibly being graves, even if it is, that means there is a homestead nearby that is worth looking for. Good Luck either way!
 

with more investigation found out these are the possible rooms they stored winter food supplies in and salted meats a little away from the main house butt still look for the goodies in the ground did find this a 1895 O barber quarter in same area but across the street from another old house location but gone that was there after the plantation house was built look for" ooh my found silver" keep you informed on more later time early 1700s action took place there!
 

yeah good luck. Early brick work. Let us watch
 

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