
Road Trip 2023
For the last few years, these three detecting buddies have met up for a weekend of metal detecting, despite the distances between them. This year’s locations in Wisconsin and Illinois did not disappoint.
By Tim Blank, Jeff Kjorlien, & Dave Rose
SNAKES!
Some folks like them, some folks hate them, and some folks don’t care one way or the other. But whether you like these reptiles or not, finding a fake snake in a Civil War camp is pretty satisfying.
By Dale Breezy Ellis
SAVING A SLAVE TAG
Slave hire badges, commonly called slave tags, are a reminder of a shameful but historical period of the world gone by. Although often counterfeited because of their cash value, this one is the real thing.
By Randy Riddle.
Coscojos
Very little is known about the “jingles” sometimes found in the footsteps of the Spanish Conquistadors of Florida. This author shares what he has learned from the ones he recovered there.
By Keith Woodward
A Revolutionary Relic at Liberty Hall
An experienced digger participated in an organized relic hunt, hoping to find some good Civil War relics. He instead unearthed an artifact from the Revolutionary War likely carried home after the war by a Virginia patriot.
By Patrick Conners
The Birth of a Detectorist: My Story
A chance encounter between a photographer and a Boy Scout at some old fort ruins in Texas, followed soon thereafter by a cleanup day at the same fort, inspired a young man to take up a life of metal detecting.
By Harold Decuir
Discovering an Early Kentucky Trading Post
A Kentucky relic hunter and his friends secure permission to hunt property near where a historic event had taken place. They discover the site of a 1700-1800s trading post, and uncover a large number of artifacts.
By Ed Morris
Looking Back: June 4, 1901
The Gettysburg Compiler of June 4, 1901 had some interesting news concerning the fate of some Civil War relics. Read about what became of numerous cannon and artillery projectiles just after the turn of the century.
Compiled by Bob Roach