When I was remodeling old churches in Baltimore in the 70's, I found where some tradesmen had hidden their names on woodwork and other places, as they built or repaired the structures and a few guys even left a date. Of course, being before the internet I never found out anything about the craftsmen from locals, because over a century had gone by. But, I decided right then to sign my own work in a hidden place, just like these guys did. But, I took it a little further adding my current address along with the date and my name. It's been over 50 years and no one has tried to contact me, so I guess my work is still holding up! I dug up lots of old bottles from old privies and found lots of coins under the base boards on the walls. I even found a plastered over hiding place that had a rocking chair, a dome top radio and an old double barrel shotgun. The locals said it was probably used during prohibition days to hide bootleggers or contraband. Unfortunately, I didn't buy my first metal detector until the 80's.
Im no craftsman but I used to work on submarine cable we always signed and dated the splice cases on the near shore and in the cable terminating buildings. Ive seen lots of signatures in old manholes and mines, which is what prompted me to do it, kinda cool thanks for sharing your story.
Nice, for over 2 decades I've signed $1 bills and stapled or taped them into my roofing work, when completing the jobs. Under copper chimney counter flashings, soffits, and ridge capping courses . They all say: "ANOTHER GREAT JOB JOYFULLY DONE BY 'KING OF THE ROOF'!"
I've been in the trades for 20 years. I always leave a drawing, note, or coins inside walls, etc. I've worked in several buildings dating from the early 1800s and love seeing the "fingerprints" of my historical brethren
My parents house was built in late 1800s. We have found 1 name written in wood in a few places. Oddly... It's our family name. But don't think it's related to our family
I remodeled the old train station in Tallahassee FL in 84 while jacking up and leveling floor beams (cross ties) I found old Indian head Penny from 1850.
I had an old house in Oregon that was built in 1892; not nearly this old but there were lots of bottles and things under the house. It had a good sized crawl space so I went under there from time to time and got things to bring up, including the old newspapers from 1910-1920s. The local museum was glad to have the newspapers. I kept some bottles and a piece of jade.
What an incredible home! Love that the owner is so into the history and had so much information to share! Some great coins and buttons and everything that he has pulled from that floor is incredible!
This was an incredible video. SO much stuff they found! This is the kind of thing I would have loved to have done when I was younger. I love history and this was such a blast to watch!
What a beautiful place. I was a typical kid that hated History as a subject in school. I didn't care much for what Ben said to George and why. But there was that one day... A friend of mine and I cut school ( history class of course) we went out on our dirt bikes and we both wiped out in the same spot. Long story short, we stumbled on an old revolutionary forge. We looked around and found 6 cannon balls. We grabbed 1 each a fit back in our bikes, broke every rule in the book and did 60-70 mph on side roads to race back to our history teacher who in fact, we forgot that we were currently cutting his class. Well, we ran in and showed him what we had. He promptly forgot we cut too. Lol This was in the early 80s. We brought him back to where we found them and within a year the did this big archeological dig. They found bayonets, balls, everything. It was in the "frontier" back then and the Britts had no idea it existed. This forge and many others were partly responsible for winning the revolution. I've been hooked ever since. I know archeologists hate metal detectors, however, if used correctly they can add so much to a dig. Not to mention if they should even dig there.
Hats off to the young guy, endeavouring to keep the history alive. As a resident of Nottingham, UK, my ears pricked up with the store name. Never ceases to amaze me the number of UK place names in the USA, even down to what are here small villages.
I live in Connecticut, USA. Here in New England, you'll find many UK names in each of the 6 states . We have a large , former Whaling City, named change by the puritans from the Mashantuckett Pequots tribe they battled with often, to New London. The wide river that divides it and empties into Long Island Sound is the Thames river. It's not pronounced as you would. It should though . The UK names are too numerous to count. Norwich, Glastonbury (?). Windsor, South Windsor, Grosvenor, Worcester, Leominster, Gloucester. I barely scratched the surface. The majority of all our roads here were the original native foot trails. Eventually widened by horses then wagons, then carriages, stage coaches, little by little. A few are now the main highways and Interstates. We have larger cities, then rural paved roads from town to town, then village to village . Very narrow, very curvy, very hilly terrain . Many are about a small car and a half wide with massive stone walls or large trees or a barn right up to the edge of the narrow roads. At night, as you know , are pitch black. Making going off the road pretty dangerous. We have white tailed deer that get quite large. It's pretty hazardous during the rutting season . If you've ever seen any pictures or advertisements of any of the New England states, I can say, it looks just like any picture you've ever seen . I'm from Detroit, Michigan. I find New England very picturesque. Many Victorian homes that are highly detailed and cared for.
Our founders came from your home. They brought customs and names with them. It bothers me that it took me so many years to realize where so much of my heritage came from, especially considering that I grew up in New YORK! 😂
Jason, amazing permission!! All I can say is, don't forget to crawl under that front porch!!!!! They used to spend a lot of time on the porch back in the good ol' days!!!😊
I am a long time coin dealer and one thing you should never do is rub or brush a coin. Condition and originality is everything. Better to use water to wash off dirt etc. Just a recommendation to help preserve the value of your awesome finds.
Very awesome you guys helped him find coins and relics for his museum but even more awesome that he wants to preserve and display that stuff as well as the house. Another awesome video!
Nah I don't like the guy 😅 he's TOO eager to WANT to KEEP every item, the way he gawks at the finds like gih me gih me gih me 😂 amazing find though guys!🎉🎉🎉🎉
Jason vary cool finds and property owner. He needs to find the location of the refuge dump and the privey so they can be excavated. Perhaps pass on to pod caster "Under the Plains" or give owner his info. Surely there is a ton of artifacts to be found much deeper than you cover. Keep it up we all dig it! 😆
Great one today. Love watching my most favorite on UA-cam. Jason if I close my eyes your voice reminds me off nemos dad you have a great voice for voice over s. Watching from UK. Love how pashonate you are with your history
One of the best hunts/guided tours I've ever been on- that place was simply awesome- well done all! BTW, the finds were great, especially that 1872 Indian!
Awesome video. Awesome finds, I would love to be there. I guess I will follow the restoration on Facebook instead. I'm watching you from my hospital bed after my hip replacement.
Hiya Guys, I subscribed to your channel yesterday (10/07/24), I've only watched one vlog, this one and I've enjoyed it greatly, I'm glad there's no foul language, that I'm aware of, its a nice family channel, keep up the good work, this is Choppy, Whitehaven, Cumberland, England
Alright. Where's Doug? This is 2 weeks in a row. We need our Doug fix. Great video anyway. Love the old historic houses. This place is a treasure in itself. You're gonna have to make sure Doug gets to see the place also Jason. Thanks fellas and Lynn.
VERY interesting n Cool finds in this video!!! My Grandparents had a plethora of antiques throughout their entire 110 yr old house we grew up vacationing n going to for EVERY holiday n family picnic from the time I was 8 yrs old in 1965'(born in 1957 n visited there from being a baby onward. We would get to go stay for 2 weeks in this iconic home in groups of 2 - my sister, 2 yrs younger than myself, would go with me n we lived in this antique paradise with all the trimmings, paintings clothing, jewelry, vanities, quilts to sleep under, dishes to eat off of n pick berries in right outside the house, vegetable n flower baskets, garden tools, bicycles, lawn mowers, canned fruit n jam n veggies!! You name it we used it just as if we lived back in the Early Colonial Days!!! Since I spent my youth involved with these things, I am STILL enamoured with all these finds, so therefore, I TOTALLY enjoyed your digs under this old cabin!!! The fact that it was also a General Store for a while, increases the likelihood of discovery of lots of daily household items to be found!!! Wish I could see it in person!;; Wonderful video!!! Thank you for presenting it for my perusal!!!
What a great find! Very good quarter hoarder I order quarters too from 1890s early 1890 to standing liberty and of course the washing quarters. I have most of them keep on collecting
What an amazing Historical Place. Thank you for sharing this video. Charlie man Congrats on all the Coppers. Rich love th 1872 IHP. The Buttons that were found Love them. And all the History the Kid is saving Right on. Take Care Everyone
Find the ash / trash pit or the outhouse area. Bet you will find bottles and other things. Depression areas is what you need to look for. They didn't have trash pickup, they buried everything.
So true. I live in a 1900’s house and I have found our trash heap. A tree is growing out of it and the roots are loose, so no excavation for me, sadly.
I work in crawl spaces all the time and I would be happy to go metal detecting under that old house. Last year I moved to VA. There's a lot of history around. Hopefully I'll find some old places to try with my detectors.
Beautiful old cabin with the beautiful old things/ sooooooooooo neat she was born there and she got to pass away there in her cabin just love that /will be watching on Facebook just hit follow to watch it be restored and the museum can’t wait/wow his antique shop has sooooooo many beautiful things
What you guys should be looking for is outhouse locations on this property. If you could find those you could find a bottle bonanza. Just be careful digging them. I've never dug one but have friends who did that and the finds were mind blowing.
Sounds potentially hazardous to your health digging into an old sewer hole. That stuff could be holding hepatitis or something else. Yuck. I'd wear a Tyvek suit and mask.
@@comfortablynumb9342 They would be holes that have been covered up for many, many years. You do want to wear gloves and protective clothing but mostly due to broken glass. It is a slow process because there are potentially very valuable bottles and other items in these things so you don't want to risk damaging them. I think it's a little digging and a lot of very careful scraping. Do some research on it and talk to others with experience if you can. I don't think there is anything to worry about as far as disease unless you cut yourself and don't clean it and it gets infected but that can happen digging in any soil. Keep your tetanus shots up to date.
What a great day of metal detecting you, Rich and Charley and Lynn plus the property owner had. I really like the history of the log cabin Especially the relics that Jeffery found under the floors.
I had to look up the Crotal Bell. I just can't fathom how stuff from all over the world got to our country back then. And this be came all the way from Aldbourne, Wiltshire, UK.
Hi! I'm from Gaithersburg, and went to college at University of Md. Baltimore County - majored in American Studies. I live now in Texas, and will have to put the cabin, antique shop & location on my bucket list. Beautiful finds, makes me homesick!!😂❤
Hi From Stockport Cheshire UK my Son and Daughter in law to dump diving old dump sites I have a few pieces that they have found over the years found your yt.. And shall be watching more of them 💜🙏💜
Its so interesting watching your old houses in the US. I know over the years youve lost alot of old properies with new development, its great to see young people that enthusiastic. My house is on the Thames Estuary in Kent England, built in 1646. I have a coffin hole in the wall (for getting coffins down the steep little stairs) and a mummified cat in the wall. They were put in to ward off evil spirits. I left her there 😂 I also find Roman artifacts all the time when im digging the garden. Coins etc they were here wherd i live in 70AD The collection of artifacts under that little store is amazing
When I was remodeling old churches in Baltimore in the 70's, I found where some tradesmen had hidden their names on woodwork and other places, as they built or repaired the structures and a few guys even left a date. Of course, being before the internet I never found out anything about the craftsmen from locals, because over a century had gone by. But, I decided right then to sign my own work in a hidden place, just like these guys did. But, I took it a little further adding my current address along with the date and my name. It's been over 50 years and no one has tried to contact me, so I guess my work is still holding up! I dug up lots of old bottles from old privies and found lots of coins under the base boards on the walls. I even found a plastered over hiding place that had a rocking chair, a dome top radio and an old double barrel shotgun. The locals said it was probably used during prohibition days to hide bootleggers or contraband. Unfortunately, I didn't buy my first metal detector until the 80's.
Hope you hear from one of your notes. I like that you left so much info for someone to fine.
Im no craftsman but I used to work on submarine cable we always signed and dated the splice cases on the near shore and in the cable terminating buildings. Ive seen lots of signatures in old manholes and mines, which is what prompted me to do it, kinda cool thanks for sharing your story.
Nice, for over 2 decades I've signed $1 bills and stapled or taped them into my roofing work, when completing the jobs. Under copper chimney counter flashings, soffits, and ridge capping courses . They all say: "ANOTHER GREAT JOB JOYFULLY DONE BY 'KING OF THE ROOF'!"
I've been in the trades for 20 years. I always leave a drawing, note, or coins inside walls, etc. I've worked in several buildings dating from the early 1800s and love seeing the "fingerprints" of my historical brethren
My parents house was built in late 1800s. We have found 1 name written in wood in a few places. Oddly... It's our family name. But don't think it's related to our family
I remodeled the old train station in Tallahassee FL in 84 while jacking up and leveling floor beams (cross ties) I found old Indian head Penny from 1850.
Cool!
Pretty cool that a young man like that is interested in all that history.
I had an old house in Oregon that was built in 1892; not nearly this old but there were lots of bottles and things under the house. It had a good sized crawl space so I went under there from time to time and got things to bring up, including the old newspapers from 1910-1920s. The local museum was glad to have the newspapers. I kept some bottles and a piece of jade.
What an incredible home! Love that the owner is so into the history and had so much information to share! Some great coins and buttons and everything that he has pulled from that floor is incredible!
This guy started really young😮 Respect.
That's gotta be one of the sweetest antique stores I've ever seen. Awesome video Q.H.C.!
This was an incredible video. SO much stuff they found! This is the kind of thing I would have loved to have done when I was younger. I love history and this was such a blast to watch!
Hey from Memphis. My great uncle’s house backed up to a small town’s cemetery. Uncle Richard and Aunt Nellie rest now right by their old home.
What a beautiful place.
I was a typical kid that hated History as a subject in school. I didn't care much for what Ben said to George and why. But there was that one day...
A friend of mine and I cut school ( history class of course) we went out on our dirt bikes and we both wiped out in the same spot. Long story short, we stumbled on an old revolutionary forge. We looked around and found 6 cannon balls.
We grabbed 1 each a fit back in our bikes, broke every rule in the book and did 60-70 mph on side roads to race back to our history teacher who in fact, we forgot that we were currently cutting his class. Well, we ran in and showed him what we had. He promptly forgot we cut too. Lol
This was in the early 80s.
We brought him back to where we found them and within a year the did this big archeological dig.
They found bayonets, balls, everything.
It was in the "frontier" back then and the Britts had no idea it existed. This forge and many others were partly responsible for winning the revolution.
I've been hooked ever since.
I know archeologists hate metal detectors, however, if used correctly they can add so much to a dig. Not to mention if they should even dig there.
I grew up going to an American military schools overseas. I loved history but we took a lot of field trips to see it. Still love history.
I have an 1840s cabin I need to scan. The cabin has fallen down, but occupied for almost 100 years should have some gems
Hats off to the young guy, endeavouring to keep the history alive. As a resident of Nottingham, UK, my ears pricked up with the store name. Never ceases to amaze me the number of UK place names in the USA, even down to what are here small villages.
Lots of UK influence. The founding fuckers were British.
I live in Connecticut, USA. Here in New England, you'll find many UK names in each of the 6 states . We have a large , former Whaling City, named change by the puritans from the Mashantuckett Pequots tribe they battled with often, to New London. The wide river that divides it and empties into Long Island Sound is the Thames river. It's not pronounced as you would. It should though .
The UK names are too numerous to count. Norwich, Glastonbury (?).
Windsor, South Windsor, Grosvenor, Worcester, Leominster, Gloucester.
I barely scratched the surface. The majority of all our roads here were the original native foot trails. Eventually widened by horses then wagons, then carriages, stage coaches, little by little. A few are now the main highways and Interstates. We have larger cities, then rural paved roads from town to town, then village to village .
Very narrow, very curvy, very hilly terrain . Many are about a small car and a half wide with massive stone walls or large trees or a barn right up to the edge of the narrow roads.
At night, as you know , are pitch black. Making going off the road pretty dangerous. We have white tailed deer that get quite large. It's pretty hazardous during the rutting season .
If you've ever seen any pictures or advertisements of any of the New England states, I can say, it looks just like any picture you've ever seen .
I'm from Detroit, Michigan. I find New England very picturesque. Many Victorian homes that are highly detailed and cared for.
Our founders came from your home. They brought customs and names with them. It bothers me that it took me so many years to realize where so much of my heritage came from, especially considering that I grew up in New YORK! 😂
@@victoriasmith8570 New York was New Amsterdam and founded by the Dutch. The British came a few years later to buy it.
Jason, amazing permission!! All I can say is, don't forget to crawl under that front porch!!!!! They used to spend a lot of time on the porch back in the good ol' days!!!😊
The first thing that caught my eye was that front porch and what would be under it
People who have porches in small towns still spend time on them.
@@jeanponce2017 👍🏻
@@jacquelyns9709 that's right 👍🏻
I am a long time coin dealer and one thing you should never do is rub or brush a coin. Condition and originality is everything. Better to use water to wash off dirt etc. Just a recommendation to help preserve the value of your awesome finds.
Awesome episode, travelling back in time.Thank you all✌️👍
Being a detectorist from California I look at sites like this and just shake my head in disbelief. What a spot to detect.
i'm in arizona and it's so difficult to find good sites that aren't already cleaned out.
@@fadedexile If I was out there I'd look into hunting meteorites but that's just me.
Way to go guys some good finds.
Very awesome you guys helped him find coins and relics for his museum but even more awesome that he wants to preserve and display that stuff as well as the house. Another awesome video!
I thought it was pretty cool myself. He is an incredibly dedicated property owner preserving everything he can.
Nah I don't like the guy 😅 he's TOO eager to WANT to KEEP every item, the way he gawks at the finds like gih me gih me gih me 😂 amazing find though guys!🎉🎉🎉🎉
Thanks for the visit. Love the dedication you all have. Enjoy.
Very cool guys thanks for sharing this with us six stars
Good on him for taking on that monumental task at 23 he's got some time to see it though hope I can see it finished👍👊🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
What a great place to hunt, the owner found amazing historical artifacts. Looking forward to Stef
Jason vary cool finds and property owner. He needs to find the location of the refuge dump and the privey so they can be excavated. Perhaps pass on to pod caster "Under the Plains" or give owner his info. Surely there is a ton of artifacts to be found much deeper than you cover. Keep it up we all dig it! 😆
A treasure trove of history. Great video
Great one today. Love watching my most favorite on UA-cam. Jason if I close my eyes your voice reminds me off nemos dad you have a great voice for voice over s. Watching from UK. Love how pashonate you are with your history
Great video and finds gang. Charlie and Rich were on fire.
🔥 That was such a great property both inside and out.
One of the best hunts/guided tours I've ever been on- that place was simply awesome- well done all! BTW, the finds were great, especially that 1872 Indian!
Cool hunt guys thanks!!!!
Loved it! Liked and subscribed.
Awesome video. Awesome finds, I would love to be there. I guess I will follow the restoration on Facebook instead. I'm watching you from my hospital bed after my hip replacement.
Healing thoughts on your healthy hips...❤🎉
loved seeing all the stuff saved from the floors ! y’all were having a blast 🏴☠️🤙
Spendly legs lmbo Jason
Great job Charlie!!!
Wow, the 1872 Indian looks beautiful. Probably a $200+ coin. Congratulations Rich.
I found an 1887 Indian Head in a box of pennies last week. Doesn’t seem to be worth all that much
Wow,what a trip down memory lane.This is a great video.And what a neat idea finding all that stuff and preserving it.
What a great story, hunt, and journey! Gotta Love It!
Hiya Guys, I subscribed to your channel yesterday (10/07/24), I've only watched one vlog, this one and I've enjoyed it greatly, I'm glad there's no foul language, that I'm aware of, its a nice family channel, keep up the good work, this is Choppy, Whitehaven, Cumberland, England
Outstanding!!! This was a very fun video!!
What an amazing little cabin just full of treasures!
New subscriber... Really enjoyed! Thank you! 🤗
Jeffery!! He is a rock star among our antiques finding friends! Great young man to do business with!!
Charley is the Quality!!❤ what a cool adventure you all had at that property
Thanks KK… a fun day
Awesome finds and video thanks for sharing
What a great experience! Thanks.
THAT has to be my favorite spot watching you guys detect. Even more than I enjoy watching the Cobb Field. Awesome stuff!
I got through the whole video not realizing y’all are in the town I went to middle school and high school in! Super cool :)
Love the history ! Great video!
💥💥@12:12 Jason humming into Chariots of fire. Awesome! We are all watching.......very closely.
This video should be subtitled The Charley Show.....Great finds Charley and gang....👍
Thanks Kevin
I'm excited to see Stef on the live show. I found her channel from you a while back. She's great!
Lol
Alright. Where's Doug? This is 2 weeks in a row. We need our Doug fix. Great video anyway. Love the old historic houses. This place is a treasure in itself. You're gonna have to make sure Doug gets to see the place also Jason. Thanks fellas and Lynn.
VERY interesting n Cool finds in this video!!! My Grandparents had a plethora of antiques throughout their entire 110 yr old house we grew up vacationing n going to for EVERY holiday n family picnic from the time I was 8 yrs old in 1965'(born in 1957 n visited there from being a baby onward. We would get to go stay for 2 weeks in this iconic home in groups of 2 - my sister, 2 yrs younger than myself, would go with me n we lived in this antique paradise with all the trimmings, paintings clothing, jewelry, vanities, quilts to sleep under, dishes to eat off of n pick berries in right outside the house, vegetable n flower baskets, garden tools, bicycles, lawn mowers, canned fruit n jam n veggies!! You name it we used it just as if we lived back in the Early Colonial Days!!! Since I spent my youth involved with these things, I am STILL enamoured with all these finds, so therefore, I TOTALLY enjoyed your digs under this old cabin!!! The fact that it was also a General Store for a while, increases the likelihood of discovery of lots of daily household items to be found!!! Wish I could see it in person!;; Wonderful video!!! Thank you for presenting it for my perusal!!!
Wow, such a cool place! Keep on digging, fellas. ✌️😊
What a great find! Very good quarter hoarder I order quarters too from 1890s early 1890 to standing liberty and of course the washing quarters. I have most of them keep on collecting
Very interested video you guys found some cool stuff.
That's different, awesome and fun. Thanks for sharing!!!
Ty guys for doing the hard work for us loved this adventure
Neat place and unbelievable finds😊😊😊
This was so cool! I subscribed.
Wow that incredible finds.
Nice indeed, hello from Australia.
The lead or pewter piece 14:14 could be a handle to a old letter opener.
What an amazing Historical Place. Thank you for sharing this video. Charlie man Congrats on all the Coppers. Rich love th 1872 IHP. The Buttons that were found Love them. And all the History the Kid is saving Right on. Take Care Everyone
Great video Jason!!
Wow that's cool. Love that you are saving history
Looking forward to watching this evening!
Wow great hunt nice finds great story thanks for sharing.
Cool stuff. Thanks!
Hope to hear from your notes, great finds.
Find the ash / trash pit or the outhouse area. Bet you will find bottles and other things. Depression areas is what you need to look for. They didn't have trash pickup, they buried everything.
So true. I live in a 1900’s house and I have found our trash heap. A tree is growing out of it and the roots are loose, so no excavation for me, sadly.
That was way cool thanks for sharing
Great video and finds Congrats Guys
Find the numerous privy pits and dig some old glass!
Oh sorry I thought you meant ass, I'm sure we will get to the bottom of this.😁
I work in crawl spaces all the time and I would be happy to go metal detecting under that old house. Last year I moved to VA. There's a lot of history around. Hopefully I'll find some old places to try with my detectors.
Wow outstanding finds. So old. Surprised no bottles but still cool.
That is one museum I will visit . When we find out where it is and when it opens
Good show.
Wow what great finds😊
I just love what Americans find on their digs..so interesting ❤😊
Awesome guys. Congrats.
Beautiful old cabin with the beautiful old things/ sooooooooooo neat she was born there and she got to pass away there in her cabin just love that /will be watching on Facebook just hit follow to watch it be restored and the museum can’t wait/wow his antique shop has sooooooo many beautiful things
I took down an 1870's hay barn that had a plank first floor. we found a butt load of stuff under there. a large frame pocket watch was the best piece.
What you guys should be looking for is outhouse locations on this property. If you could find those you could find a bottle bonanza. Just be careful digging them. I've never dug one but have friends who did that and the finds were mind blowing.
Sounds potentially hazardous to your health digging into an old sewer hole. That stuff could be holding hepatitis or something else. Yuck. I'd wear a Tyvek suit and mask.
@@comfortablynumb9342 They would be holes that have been covered up for many, many years. You do want to wear gloves and protective clothing but mostly due to broken glass. It is a slow process because there are potentially very valuable bottles and other items in these things so you don't want to risk damaging them. I think it's a little digging and a lot of very careful scraping. Do some research on it and talk to others with experience if you can. I don't think there is anything to worry about as far as disease unless you cut yourself and don't clean it and it gets infected but that can happen digging in any soil. Keep your tetanus shots up to date.
Couple of guys I've worked with that's what they always looked for and they found amazing stuff 👍
After 100 years its soil again🙄
@@comfortablynumb9342 After all those years, it's composted... basically dirt.
Now that is one heck of a place to detect!!
What a great day of metal detecting you, Rich and Charley and Lynn plus the property owner had. I really like the history of the log cabin Especially the relics that Jeffery found under the floors.
That 1872 Indian may not be the Holy Grail, but it’s the second best date and worth several hundred bucks depending ! Nice find!
what a Great video love the history .
Fascinating.
I had to look up the Crotal Bell. I just can't fathom how stuff from all over the world got to our country back then. And this be came all the way from Aldbourne, Wiltshire, UK.
Hi! I'm from Gaithersburg, and went to college at University of Md. Baltimore County - majored in American Studies. I live now in Texas, and will have to put the cabin, antique shop & location on my bucket list. Beautiful finds, makes me homesick!!😂❤
But what about the outhouse??
Loved the artifacts and old stuff that was found. Great dig, great house!!
Hi From Stockport Cheshire UK my Son and Daughter in law to dump diving old dump sites I have a few pieces that they have found over the years found your yt.. And shall be watching more of them 💜🙏💜
The plastered wall year date looks to be 1889 not 1869.
Very interesting episode. Thanks.
Its so interesting watching your old houses in the US. I know over the years youve lost alot of old properies with new development, its great to see young people that enthusiastic. My house is on the Thames Estuary in Kent England, built in 1646. I have a coffin hole in the wall (for getting coffins down the steep little stairs) and a mummified cat in the wall. They were put in to ward off evil spirits. I left her there 😂
I also find Roman artifacts all the time when im digging the garden. Coins etc they were here wherd i live in 70AD
The collection of artifacts under that little store is amazing
Awesome place!!
I really enjoyed the cabin !!!
Dam good content
love this spot you are detecting
Love you guys permissions, you get the best on the East Coast
What a fun project.😊
I would LOVE to restore something like this and live in it.
that old cabin is very cool