I have been in and around old homes for many years. Worked in the architectural salvage field and now working in preservation and historic site maintenance. Always poking around for junk, extra proud of these bottles as they came from our own back yard.Do you collect New York bottles specifically? Or just whatever hits you?
I have been in and around old homes for many years. Worked in the architectural salvage field and now working in preservation and historic site maintenance. Always poking around for junk, extra proud of these bottles as they came from our own back yard.
Also, the stoneware bottle is labeled C&P, for Cunningham & Powers. A family by the name of Cunningham lived in our home in the late 19th century. Looking into that possible connection.
In one photo you show a single item. On my phone it looks like a plunger to a syringe. Is that correct?
that’s cool. I think there was a popular Cunningham from the Philadelphia area that was a big time maker of stoneware too - so maybe that could be a lead.
would love to see other bottles or just cool stuff your saved over the years.
the work I do requires lots of coordination with SHPOs and THPOs and then often recovery and preservation - cool stuff you are doing.
This button came up burried under the original hearth, back then surplus lime from mortar and plaster was sometimes used as a base for dry laid brick or stone.
Did some brief research, seems to be civil war or just after. There are several versions if this, no makers marks.very cool. Have you identified it? We find a lot of buttons detecting and I’m often surprised at some of the old ones having makers marks on them
Not sure, my first guess is that it may be an insulator for passing wires through a timber or stud. It is glazed and has a star imprinted.
Wow that’s a dream come true. Sooooo lucky!!!Treasures from our yard, behind 1830s home. Digging privy and previous shed location.