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My First Large Cent

02/21/16

<p><strong>This past weekend some friends from our metal detecting group ā€œSPHRGā€ Southeastern Pennsylvania Historical Recovery Group which I founded four years ago met in Concord Township, PA.</strong></p> <p>We did some research on an old farm that sits back about two hundred yards from Smithbridge Road. Using Google Earth and Bing Maps we saw that there was a large home and barn that did not show on the maps after 2002.</p> [split] <p>Two of us were using Minelab E-TRAC and the rest were using Garrett and White’s detectors. I was at this same location the week before using my Garrett AT-Pro and failed to detect my find of the day.</p> <p>Using my new Minelab E-TRAC I was re-checking the area alongside of the long driveway near the stairway where the house used to be and the E-TRAC sounded off a nice higher tone with 12-47 on the FE-CO number display. It also told me the target was around five inches down.</p> <p>My friend was there video taping our recoveries so I called him over to capture this recovery.</p> <p>I cut a nice plug with my relic shovel and started digging down to see what target was hiding there, and after about four to five inches down there was my ā€œFIRST EVERā€ 1847 Large Cent in Very Good Condition.</p> <p>I have been hunting for over 30 years and had never found one of these or an Indian Head penny, so I was thrilled to cross this one off my bucket list.</p> <p>I was telling my friend how much I wanted to come back to this site and use my E-TRAC so I could find the deeper targets and now here was the proof in my hand.</p>

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