Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.
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| Find for ID Found by Dan K. |
Here is what Dan K. said.
I found this piece of broken gold recently on a Treasure Coast beach. Im not sure what this was a piece from. It rang up a 3 on the equinox. A friend thought it may be old. I wanted to send it in too see if anyone has any thoughts on the age. I’m not sure if this type of setting for the stones is more modern or older.Thanks,
Dan
Thoughts anyone. How old do you think it is. I'll keep my thoughts until I hear from the readers.
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Someone mentioned something the other day that made me think of how quickly the indigenous tribes came into possession of Spanish colonial coins and silver. They used it to manufacture a variety of items.
The Seminoles liked and used a lot of silver.
Ted Smallwood established the store [in Chokoloskee, Fl.] as a trading post to serve the remote area in 1906.
Smallwood only had a third-grade education, but he quickly became fluent in several Native American dialects and gained the trust of his Seminole neighbors.
A large wooden box that Smallwood used to keep money and other valuables for his Seminole customers. A sign on the display notes, “The Seminoles did not like to use paper money.”
“Everything paid out, other than food trade, had to be done in silver.”
According to family lore, the Seminole traders would arrive with 8-pound lard buckets filled with silver coins. They entrusted their money with Smallwood, and he kept it in his “wooden bank.”
“Due to the weight of the coins, Ted Smallwood carried around with him daily, his daughters relined his pockets with canvas, replacing them as needed from wear. His pockets were his personal bank.”
I've done some posts on Seminole silver in the past.
The above image shows the wearer with a silver gorget, pendannt and arm band.
Another illustration from that post shows this Seminole finger ring.
You'll find more links in the following linked post.
Of course, the Seminoles were not the first indigenous tribes to covet and use silver. Some of the earliest Spanish shipwrecks were salvaged by the local indigenous tribes. There was little delay between the initial European contact and the adoption of European cultural materials by the natives.
Native groups living on the central and south Florida Atlantic coast, were nearly as proficient as the Calusa in recovering large quantities of goods from wrecked Spanish ships. The 16th-century Spanish shipwreck sur vivor Fontaneda wrote: I desire to speak of the riches found by the Indians of Ais, which perhaps were as much as a million dollars, or over, in bars of silver, gold, and in articles of jewelry made by the hands of Mexican Indians, which the passengers were bringing with them. These things Carlos divided with the ca ciques of Ais, Jeaga, Guacata, Mayajuaco, and Mayaca, andhetookwhatpleasedhim,orthe best part. (True 1945:34)
You might want to read that entire article. Here is the link. Glass Beads and Spanish Shipwrecks: A New Look at Sixteenth-Century European Contact on the Florida Gulf Coast
That site also includes a nice map showing areas in Florida where early contact materials were found.
And here is a great article on collecting trade silver.INDIAN TRADE SILVER IN THE AMERICAS
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After looking at my most recent finds from this week, the nice looking ring has just a maker's mark. It has no gold karat mark, so until I get it tested, I'm doubting that it is gold. The other items I showed are silver.
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Good hunting,
Treasureguide@comcast.net



































