The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald Ive been hunting all summer

crazyjarhead

Gold Member
Joined
Sep 10, 2007
Messages
10,318
Reaction score
44
Golden Thread
0
Location
N. San Diego County
Detector(s) used
Ace 250
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

Good evening fellow detectorists.Finally sent off for some old platt maps of the area I have been hunting. I really want to hunt pre-1900 areas that are mostly gone. Got the maps back and have been studying them with arial photos and map quest. It's amazing how unchanged most of the roads are in rural Ohio. Most of them were named after old timers long gone and were just gravel or dirt . I have already found 3 existing homes and more are where I know them to be as I grew up here as a kid from the 50's (not to reveal my age). I know where there are several that I knew about or played in that are gone. Can't wait for harvest time. Anyway, The most recent home belonged to J.A.McDonald, a prominent man in this area as the size of his house and other land that he owned on the 1875 platt maps. He was obviously wealthy. The property sat on 51 acres and he had another 324 acres near by. Thats a lot of land in those days.The most recent people were the Botkins and the Ingrams, which my father knew. What a priveledge for me to be able to hunt here as well as find photos of the place from the 1800's. It really must have been a special place back then. As I peek into the windows most of the place seems to be untouched from the wooden floors to the lightinging (which obviously came later on) and the old door knobs. The front door still retains the original door bell (although it was replace with a newer door they installed the old door ringer).The house is still vaccant as the owners cannot sell it and the land for 350K. I personally would like to buy it but it's too old of a house. I don't know the condition of the structure in general although it appears to be good. But to heat this place in Ohio in the winter would be costly.Unfortunaely, the reminants of hurricane Ike ravaged central Ohio too. I cannot hunt there as several very old trees fell and there was damage to the roof as well.I have included the picture of the house from today and an artist sketch of the house in 1870. The house is unchanged except for the front porch is gone and the side room is gone. The railing on top of the roof is gone. This must have been an early design to signify size and wealth. All of the old barns and smaller structures are gone except for the corn crib. Unfortunately it was half blown over.I also posted some of my earlier finds of this year from the McDonald place. They are just the significant finds as I found too much to repost everything. The last 2 pictures are places that are still there and are about 3 miles from town. The Lazy Mans Rest has extensive history in the library for the underground railroad. My Grandmother knows the owner so I just have to catch them at home and ask. That is about 1 full acre of old buildings and barns. The home is brick. I don't know about the other one yet. Enjoy, Ron Smith Sorry about the pics being out of sequence ;D

Picture758.jpg


Picture382-4.jpg


Picture394-2.jpg


Picture490.jpg


Picture760.jpg


Picture761.jpg


Picture406.jpg


Picture420-1.jpg


Picture515.jpg


Picture529-1.jpg


Picture516.jpg


Picture518.jpg


Picture516.jpg


Picture517.jpg


Picture390-1.jpg


Picture521.jpg


Picture483-1.jpg


Picture427-1.jpg


Picture557.jpg


Picture433.jpg


Picture501-1.jpg


Picture510.jpg


Picture508.jpg


Picture469.jpg


Picture526.jpg


Picture468.jpg


Picture763.jpg


Picture417.jpg


Picture523.jpg


Picture762.jpg


Picture413.jpg


Picture765.jpg


Picture766.jpg
 
Upvote 0
Re: History of the 1836 Farmhouse I've been hunting all summer

That's awesome, good job on research and stuff !!

Keep @ it and HH!!
 
Re: History of the 1836 Farmhouse I've been hunting all summer

Very nice job! The button looks like its almost brand new! Very good job on the indian head cents and the key! :)
 
Re: History of the 1836 Farmhouse I've been hunting all summer

WOW...Them are some really nice coins great shape! Congrats!
 
Re: History of the 1836 Farmhouse I've been hunting all summer

If this doesn't motivate a guy to go out and hunt nothing will. Wow Congrats on your research sites.

Burdie
 
Re: History of the 1836 Farmhouse I've been hunting all summer

:thumbsup: :thumbsup: OMG man!!! that is sweet digs!!
 
Re: History of the 1836 Farmhouse I've been hunting all summer

Impeccable research. Well done :thumbsup:
 
Re: History of the 1836 Farmhouse I've been hunting all summer

Burdie said:
If this doesn't motivate a guy to go out and hunt nothing will. Wow Congrats on your research sites.

Burdie

Thanks Burdie and other comments. I spent 5 bucks a piece for thoses maps and I found the same 1874 platt Atlas at our local library. Made copies for 15 cents. Librarys are a wealth of history for the taking. Ours has such a large area just on history of our county. With modern tech. GPS, and satelite photos you can too find these places. I just have to wait for the corn and beans to be cut. I have found three more places that I know exactly where they were as a kid and I have drove by checking them out. Can't wait. With all of the 7 townships in the county there are many old school houses, a few still standing and many homes, most gone. I already know of 3 still standing from at least 1875
 
Re: History of the 1836 Farmhouse I've been hunting all summer

Nick Pappagiorgio said:
Holy Cow jarhead ...

That is RIGHTEOUS ... :thumbsup:

A STELLAR assortment ...

However ~ That Button Rocks ...

Congratulations ~ Great Post ...

Thanks Nick. That button was about 4 inches down in front of the house about 10 feet out. That's the way it came out of the ground. As I have said in many of my post the soil here is gentle on coins and other metals

~ Nick ~
 
Re: History of the 1836 Farmhouse I've been hunting all summer

Great post. :thumbsup: I love the history behind the places we hunt. I wish the land could talk. I would sit around and listen to it all day long. :D

Congrats on the finds as well. Top notch in anyone's book. :thumbsup:
 
Re: History of the 1836 Farmhouse I've been hunting all summer

Evolution said:
Great post. :thumbsup: I love the history behind the places we hunt. I wish the land could talk. I would sit around and listen to it all day long. :D

Congrats on the finds as well. Top notch in anyone's book. :thumbsup:

Thanks for the comment. I've loved history all of my life. People only see whats in front of them. I see things that once were and dream about how we evolved over time. I found 3 lantern tops there. I just imagined Mr. McDonald sitting in there at night reading perhaps in front of a kerosene lantern.... no electricity, no cars, and no running water. An outhouse for the toilet. Those people were hardy people for sure. We have it so easy today.
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

Absolutly beautiful coinage. Way to go!!!!
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

Great Research! The first pic looks like it was done by Currier & Ives? Those are some great finds and in great condition. Congrats!

Brian
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

Sure are nice finds. Research really helps. Best of Luck.
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

baspinall said:
Great Research! The first pic looks like it was done by Currier & Ives? Those are some great finds and in great condition. Congrats!

Brian

Actually the sketch was done by Strobridge and Company, Cincinnati, Ohio.
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

THAT, is the perfect hunt!! :thumbsup:

It's really cool when research pays off :wink: As Nick would say, those Indians are STELLAR!

Nice!
watercolor
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

watercolor said:
THAT, is the perfect hunt!! :thumbsup:

It's really cool when research pays off :wink: As Nick would say, those Indians are STELLAR!

Nice!
watercolor

I didn't get all of that stuff in one day ;D There was some blood, sweat but no tears shed on those hot summer days. I've hunted a good acre there this summer. The surrounding beans will be out by next month and I have more to do. There wasn't beans there back in the 1800's. There was more land to his property which is now leased to a local farmer for 9000 a year.
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

holy smokes dude!!!!! ya killed em! keep it up! oh by the way did u find the largie close to the house or far away?
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

diggindeep said:
holy smokes dude!!!!! ya killed em! keep it up! oh by the way did u find the largie close to the house or far away?

Found it in the back yard. There used to be livestock barns back there. Thats where they probably kept there horses too. About 50 feet back. The coin was 6 inches down. I found another one there earlier but is was beside the old sidewalk. I just stood out back and imagined how people would walk from the front to the back and the path they were likely to take. Thats where I focused mosyt of my attention. I actually had gridded off the back with string in 100x10 foot boxes and swept the heck out of it. I had hunted back there but had missed it. This method is very affective for the serious detectorist. This old place had potential so I just didn't want to hunt it carelessly once and leave.
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

CJH AMAZING finds and research maps !!

I LOVE the finds, the key is killer nice but that '52 is dang near flawless ! She's Gorgeous !

Keep it going :thumbsup:

Derek
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top Bottom