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

crazyjarhead

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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

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

BomberJohn said:
crazyjarhead said:
BomberJohn said:
Awesome job CJH. Looks like the research has worked again. Awesome pictures, history, and finds. The soil is kind there.

What's with the string in the one picture? Mapping out sections to detect? How do you normally do that? Looks like you are working radially out from a center point (in a fan section)?

John

Thanks BomberJ. I hunt in a box 100x10. I don't know what I did there. I think I was getting ready to move it over one end at a time. I had no help so I would go to one end and pull the pin and walk it over another 10 feet. I don't hunt that way. Thanks for the comments and being obserative.
Thought there was a new technique I hadn't heard about or something. LOL Thanks.
I don't think that it is new as I have heard other people talking about it before, But if you think about it, when you just randomly search an area, you miss a lot of ground. Thats how I missed that large cent. By griding an area off, you can thoroughly search an area very well and not miss anything..... well, maybe not.
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

Jar - great story, great pics, INCREDIBLE DIGS!!! All those coins look to be in excellent condition (the '10 &'11 Wheats are amazingly sharp). Congrats and thanks for sharing! Looking forward to seeing what else you pull out of there... :thumbsup: :thumbsup:
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

DD-777 said:
Jar - great story, great pics, INCREDIBLE DIGS!!! All those coins look to be in excellent condition (the '10 &'11 Wheats are amazingly sharp). Congrats and thanks for sharing! Looking forward to seeing what else you pull out of there... :thumbsup: :thumbsup:

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

Nice finds Good luck in the future.
Dman
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

Fifty one acres and a beautiful historic home for $350K...and they can't sell it?! :icon_scratch: Wow!

Thanks for the great pictures and history on the place, CJ! Your finds are fantastic!!!

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

Nana40 said:
Fifty one acres and a beautiful historic home for $350K...and they can't sell it?! :icon_scratch: Wow!

Thanks for the great pictures and history on the place, CJ! Your finds are fantastic!!!

Nana :)

Thats right. Most of it is farm land being leased to a local farmer for 9k a year, I was told by owners daughter. I don't know why its not selling. I'm guessing because its so big and old. The town is what you would call a "Hick Town", excuse me for saying that but there is nothing there. One old store which doesn't sell much at all. The nearest town is 15 miles away. No job or industry there either.
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

You've got some beautiful coins there! You always post a lot of RCOS - really cool old stuff!! :thumbsup:

Keep it coming!!! :wink:
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all sum

Very cool. It's great that you have some history with the property. Also - sweet finds. LC is spectacular. :icon_sunny:

Are you keeping all the finds from the house separate? I would. I think it is so cool when you put together a hobby chest of finds from a property, label them and have the history as part of the display. It always goes over big when people visit. Plus, there might be a time when you the stuff might be given to a historical society, owner, etc....


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

hi looks like u had a great time detecting love the button and the key :thumbsup:
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

How did I miss this post? :icon_scratch:

Wow, CrazyJarHead. Awesome finds and pics of the old homesite. :thumbsup: :thumbsup: I wish I could be swinging my SE over that ground.

You did very well!!

Congrats!
CAPTN SE
Dan
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

Captn_SE said:
How did I miss this post? :icon_scratch:

Wow, CrazyJarHead. Awesome finds and pics of the old homesite. :thumbsup: :thumbsup: I wish I could be swinging my SE over that ground.

You did very well!!

Congrats!
CAPTN SE
Dan
Probably because you are always at the parks slamming the silver ;D
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all sum

Mirage said:
Very cool. It's great that you have some history with the property. Also - sweet finds. LC is spectacular. :icon_sunny:

Are you keeping all the finds from the house separate? I would. I think it is so cool when you put together a hobby chest of finds from a property, label them and have the history as part of the display. It always goes over big when people visit. Plus, there might be a time when you the stuff might be given to a historical society, owner, etc....


Bob

Thanks Bob. I keep all of my finds seperate and never even consider the thought of money. That old corn crib got blown over by Ike. Glad I have pictures of the place. Too bad for the owner. Now they have property damage right when they don't need it.
 
Re: The History of the 1836 Farmhouse of J.A. McDonald I've been hunting all summer

What a great place to Hunt Craz and great results. Those IHs look in very good shap. Sorry about the Large cent.

We need to find a place between us like this one...

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

SoreKneesDayton said:
What a great place to Hunt Craz and great results. Those IHs look in very good shap. Sorry about the Large cent.

We need to find a place between us like this one...

SKD

Far and few in between since it was constructed in 1836. I haven't been there because the storm tore up a lot of old maples
 

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