Find's Treasure Forums

Welcome to Find's Treasure Forums, Guests!

You are viewing this forums as a guest which limits you to read only status.

Only registered members may post stories, questions, classifieds, reply to other posts, contact other members using built in messaging and use many other features found on these forums.

Why not register and join us today? It's free! (We don't share your email addresses with anyone.) We keep email addresses of our users to protect them and others from bad people posting things they shouldn't.

Click here to register!



Need Support Help?

Cannot log in?, click here to have new password emailed to you

Can you help me identify this Unusual find in a not so unusual place

tippyhound

New member
Not at sure this is the correct place to make this post (if not please move to the correct part of the forum), but I could use some help identifying this obviously old object.

My wife and I have been hunting this old golf course that closed down in 2009. It was named the Lincoln Trail Golf course. So named because a portion of this old trail used by Abraham Lincoln and other legal staff that followed a trail through out central Illinois practicing law. (The trail was used from 1839-1853)

It is one of the few areas that you can make out the old trail quite clearly. It passed through the old Lincoln Trail Golf Course for perhaps 300 yards. It is about 3-4 feet deep by 10-12 feet across. I have not hunted this to any real extent but plan on doing so when the weather cools down. The old golf course was sold to the city after it closed down in 2009.

To date no coins have come from the depression but I plan to hunt it a little closer latter on. The item I am going to show you was found on the upper edge of the depression and was only about 4 inch;'s deep. The depth doesn't mean much as the golf course was always making changes to the land scape over it's 93 year (1928-2009) it was in use. Many coins and pieces of jewelry has been found on these grounds and we are only beginning to scratch the surface, but this object intrigues me, and I could use some help figuring out what it is.

It is about 4 inch's long is made of either copper or bronze (I'm betting on bronze as it is quite heave and very ridged) It is all hand forged as though it was made by a Black Smith. There is no welds so it was cut and formed by hand.

My impression is it was used as a form of horse tack, possibly a bridle piece to hold a mouth bit, or maybe a harness piece. Any help would be greatly appreciated. It read 12-40 12-41 . I love coins but finding something like this really helps keep my interest up, and that's what makes this hobby keep going for me.

Thanks in advance. Rick IL
 
Looks like a piece of horse Snapple bit or bridal to me.

Dew
 
Found one very similiar just last month. It was identified as a rein guide. Not home right now but will try to find a pix later and post it.
Sounds like a great hunting site, best of luck with it.
Bunker
 
I could be wrong of course, I'm definitely no expert, but it looks a little to me like some relics I've seen which people claim were used to hang sword scabards from belts during the civil war. Does your local area have Civil War history?
 
I found one just like it with a chrome finish
I think the horse bridal thing is along the right track
 
n/t
 
It is indeed a check rein holder. I drive my horse, and although I do not use this type of check rein, I have seen it on many harnesses. It hangs on the bridle just below the ears and the overcheck or check rein goes through it. It is a means of keeping the horses head up.

003DraftDrivingBridle.jpg
 
Top