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Thursday, June 19, 2008

pleasure little treasure

We've begun digging out half the backyard to lay down a flat patio that will have the rest of the yard about 3 feet high behind a retaining wall. Our backyard is that sloped.

We've removed 75% of the crappy grass, laid out posts and string to mark out the area to dig, and got started this weekend. We had dug out about a quarter of the yard about a foot deep when we started coming up with all this broken glass. We figured the frat boys that lived here before us and put down the pavers for the tiny uneven patio that was here had dug a fire pit and thrown in a bunch of beer bottles or something.

Then we dug into really corroded twisted wire attached to a really old light socket. We (I) started to dig more carefully, much to JR's dismay. I came across more antique lightbulbs, and then a whole area of seashells that had apparently been in a glass container that broke in the fire. I dug even more carefully, setting all the broken glass aside. As I kept digging, it started to look like I was digging out parts of an old chandelier, and then I started finding some intact apothecary bottles. And then a perfume bottle badly warped from the fire: close inspection showed it was "Bracelet Eau De Parfum".

By this time, I was flat on my stomach, digging carefully with a golf tee and a small gardening shovel. I started to unearth a metal box, which disintegrated when the tiny shovel slipped on hard soil and hit it. So I was using just a golf tee and my gloved fingers. When the golf tee broke, I started using a long nail I had found.

I unearthed an oval-shaped metal lid with a religious statue on it and an inscription that I made out later to be "O, MARY CONCEIVED WITHOUT SIN, PRAY FOR US WHO HAVE RECOURSE TO THEE". I was digging up jewelry chains, small bones (ick!), all kinds of broken wine bottles... It was fascinating! I even dug up an intact Seagrams bottle that still had some liquid inside! And who knows what else is under there? Careful excavation will re-commence this weekend. I think I've found a new passion - urban archaeology. I've started a backyard archaeology photoset of just a few of the things I've been able to take clear photos of.

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6 Comments:

Blogger KCKoenig said...

Very cool! Ya'll are the best treasure hunters. First the 100-year old bench and now this? Awesome!

5:49 AM, June 19, 2008

 
Anonymous skorloff said...

great way to awaken the poltergeist.

8:58 PM, June 19, 2008

 
Blogger John Forsythe said...

Thats what I told her too when she started digging up Bones and Crucifixes.

Think that stopped her? No way.

:)

10:58 AM, June 20, 2008

 
Blogger Lee said...

Wow. You need to get those bottles appraised. For some reason a few months ago, I was transfixed on a program about these types of bottles. As I recall, one fellow made his living tracking down sites of old out-houses (as people typically threw their old bottles into the pits) and digging these things out. Some of the bottles were worth thousands. Just sayin'.

11:29 PM, June 21, 2008

 
Blogger Lee said...

Okay... The Seagram's bottle was produced between 1932 and 1964 based on the "federal law..." lettering. The screw tops on the other bottles suggest they were produced sometime after the 1920's. If not worth a fortune, they're at least great conversation pieces. :) What a cool backyard find!

Sources:
http://www.bottlebooks.com/federal_law_prohibits_.htm
http://www.antiquebottles.com/dating.html

11:59 PM, June 21, 2008

 
Blogger GeekGal said...

Awesome! I used to spend hours in the greenbelt behind our family's house when I was in middle school. Found all sorts of bottles and stuff (metal tins, long since illegible). Was too young to realize I should hld on to finds like that, though, so I didn't keep any of it.

You might enjoy -> http://www.foundmagazine.com/

10:27 PM, June 23, 2008

 

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