Trees and Treasure

December 2, 2012 by Charlie London

article by Richard Angelico
The photo above shows
Mr. Angelico with a cannonball
found deep in the
Louisiana woods.
I usually spend my Saturdays somewhere along the Mississippi River, swinging my metal detector and digging in cane fields or battle fields looking for War of 1812 or Civil War campsites and relics.

This first day of December I was working on my second cup of coffee and wondering where I should head to when my phone rang. It was an excited Charlie London calling to tell me the crews digging holes for the new oak trees were turning up bottles and pottery shards as they dug. That’s not surprising since decades ago the city used the area along the bayou as a dumping ground for trash to fill in marshy areas. Charlie suggested I take a quick look so I grabbed my metal detector and headed out. By the time I got there three trees had been planted but two were awaiting placement in their holes.

A quick look at the excavated dirt showed hundreds of pieces of broken glass, bottle necks and fragments, brick and pottery shards all clues the relic hunter looks for to indicate a good site.

The tree planting crew would be heading my way soon so I had only a few minutes to swing my detector over the dirt piles.

The first relic to pop up out of the ground was a brass Lion’s Paw, followed by half of a lady’s hem weight, a brass escutcheon, half a musket ball and an underwear button.

At first I thought the escutcheon may be a foreign coin with a hole in the center but it turned out to be a piece of Eastlake hardware, most likely for a drawer pull or knob. The lead hem-weight was used to hold ladies skirts down and men’s frock coats as well. The brass Lion’s Paw is found as “feet” on umbrella stands, cache pots and andirons. It is hollow brass and was filled with lead to give it weight. The underwear button is interesting it has the words “ Artistic Paris” on the face which suggest it may have adorned a lady’s undergarment long ago. And why one half of a musket ball? Well, these were often cut in half or flattened as were other lead bullets during the Civil War to be used as “game pieces” or “poker chips” by enterprising soldiers.

Back at home I cleaned them all up and now I have some nice relics to give to Charlie for display at the next neighborhood meeting.


Click here to view a PDF of the “Trees and Treasures” article by Richard Angelico.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: banks, bayou, bayou st john, best, eclectic, faubourg, faubourg st john, finds, louisiana, metal detector, neighborhood, New Orleans, relic hunters, relics, richard angelico, treasure, treasure trove, treasured trees, trees and treasure, unknown

Neighbor Hunts History

September 30, 2011 by Charlie London

Faubourg St. John neighbor Richard Angelico is better known for his dedicated decades of service as an investigative reporter. Before he retired, he was known for “digging up mud” about the history of others. Now he digs in the mud to locate historical artifacts. Just like his journalism career, his present interest requires perspicacity and perspiration.


Mr. Angelico is part of a group known as “relic hunters”. Some hunt relics for profit but not Mr. Angelico. He does not sell what he finds but prefers to carefully preserve any museum quality items he finds. He is most proud of his recent find and says it is “a rare Louisiana Pelican Button made by Charles Bellenot who operated a shop at Exchange place and Bienville from 1851 to 1862. It is among the rarest of Louisiana Civil War Buttons.”


As you can see in the photos and documents below, Charles Bellenot didn’t just make buttons!



Click here to see the list of patents for 1878.

Charles Bellenot’s sign is listed as patent number 210,983. Mr. Bellenot’s idea was patented the same year as the telephone.

Check out the patent list for 1878
to see some very interesting inventions
.

Filed Under: Featured, HISTORY Tagged With: angelico, bayou st john, bellenot, faubourg st john, fsjna, historic artifacts, New Orleans, pelican button, relic hunters

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