Sites I have worked on that have remains from the 1780s/1790s on Norfolk
Island and Sydney/Parramatta (Australia) invariably yielded flat buttons
(British military, naval and convict/free settlers origin). The brass
buttons were sometimes engraved (eg anchor) and coated with a thin layer of
gold or silver. I haven't found any pewter buttons of that date. Bone/horn
buttons had a single hole. A few of the above are illustrated on my website
under - Archaeology - Phillipsburgh.
I have found the convex buttons more common for the 1830s/1840s period -
mainly from military sites though.
> 1) How common are pewter and brass buttons with flat faces as
>opposed to the same buttons with slightly rounded (convex) faces? With
>what kind of comparative frequency are convex-faced buttons found on
>archeology sites of our period? Didn't everyone use flat buttons?
FAMILIE: http://www.geocities.com/Paris/LeftBank/6559/scc17.html O O
31 Wombat Street Berkeleyvale CentralCoast NSW Australia 2261 | \__/
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1800s ceramics etc illust! Norfolk Island _/_____________/
Archaeology: http://www.geocities.com/Paris/LeftBank/6559/scc18.html