Downwindtracker 2
Well-known member
In the north it wasn't called a civil war ,merely a rebellion. To a Canuck, all Americans are yanks. I once called a southern a yank on a hunting forum. Boy did I stir up a hornets nest.chuckle.
Some of the other things we fine regularly there are huge 5/8" square headed bolts, odd lengths with crude threads, and flat plates of iron about 11" by 8" bent slightly in the middle length wise. They're roughly 5/8" thick. I collected about 40 of them so far further back in that woods.
I grew up on a small farm, I mentioned part of 2500 acres neighbor had. Grandad had a 2 acre lake built in 1954. Upstream (unfortunately not on our property) is a shallow pit, about 3ft deep, 20ft across. My brother collects Indian artefacts and finding quartz arrowheads a lot. This pit is full of quartz. Around edge are piles of quartz chips.
A few years ago I had an anthropologist look at it, then he spoke with my geologist brother and we believe that's where Native Americans made arrowheads.
The unfortunate thing about history is after a couple generations it's lost, land changes, gets bulldozed, etc.
That place ought to be preserved, but won't be.
Shame better records aren't kept about what was where.
To the OP...what part of New Jersey is this? You don't have to be too specific if you don't want to.
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That bridge rail could be what the sawmill carriage rode on, back and forth.
I figured I'd post this here.
Last fall a buddy had a huge old oak tree fall over in a storm. Being its was a huge tree for this area, and deep in his woods behind his farm, I wanted the wood. The base of the tree was roughly 39" across.
While cutting the tree clear of the root ball, I ran a metal detector over the areas where I was going to cut, and also around the roots and in the hole just out of curiosity. I found a rusty clump of dark brown dirt that was obviously iron. I've also found quite a few old horse shoes in the same area, they turn up all over the place both in the woods and in the fields.
I tossed all the bits in a bucket and forgot about them till the other day. I decided to see what the rusty clump was so I started picking at it till i realized it was a hatchet/hammer head. With no other real choice, I dropped it in a can of Evaporust for a few days.
After a good scrubbing I can see the thing is forged and the hole is parted with something sharp, the angle isn't perfect, its slightly canted to the left.
I see no markings, but a lot of surface metal has been rusted away over the years.
I am curious as to how old it may be.
The farm there now was built in the late 40's, the original home on the property, was from said to be from the turn of the last century, 1902 or so.
I have no history as to what the old foundation in the woods is, nor what was there before. This was found far back in the woods even beyond where the original house sat.
My guess is its just an old carpenters hatchet but I'm curious as to how old it could be since it was beneath the outer root ball of such an old tree.











yardiron; said:The blade on this hatchet isn't offset, its rotated or twisted about 5 degrees. As if the handle hole isn't straight through the middle. The hammer head is the same way but the way its forged, it looks intentional. While the handle hole isn't perfectly straight, the hammer head flats sort of turn a bit too. If you look at the hammer end straight on, its octagonal pattern is rotated 15 degrees to the right, the same direction the blade leans.
In other words, if I put this on a straight handle the head would lean to the right on the handle. I'm not sure it was just inattention to detail by whom ever made it or if it was done for a reason.



