Can you help this B.C. man find the descendants of the owner of this antique jewelry?
CBC
A man in Kamloops, B.C., is asking for help finding the descendants of the owner of a 209-year-old piece of jewelry he recently discovered in a local park.
Travis Bussard, 39, says he found the Georgian-era mourning pin while he was out metal detecting with his father near Riverside Park last week.
"It's probably the most amazing thing I think I've found," Bussard said.
"Any day you can find something that's old with an engraving or inscription or something that relates to someone's personal life is pretty incredible."
Engraved on the back is an inscription that reads, "Elias Jeffs, Ob Jan 8, 1814, Abt 47." Ob is short for obit, Bussard says, which is Latin for day of death.
Bussard says he didn't know what the item was when he first found it, so he posted a picture of it on a Facebook group for hobbyist metal detectors like himself.
Answers came flooding in that it was a mourning pin — a piece of jewelry designed to remember someone who has died. The item usually has an inscription related to the deceased and often includes a lock of hair.
Elisabeth Benamou, a Vancouver-based gemologist and mourning jewelry collector and trader, says these types of items date back centuries and were most popular in the Victorian era.
"For me, it's a passion because I just appreciate so much the idea of remembering your loved ones," Benamou said. "You know, it's more of a sentimental attachment to this kind of jewelry."
Benamou says this particular pin wouldn't have much resale value because of its condition and the fact that it's made from copper, not gold. Otherwise, she says, an item like this that has better withstood the test of time could fetch about $500.
"It's the beauty of the workmanship as well. Most of these are so intricate," she said. "It would cost a fortune to make things that were made back then … it's also a lost art."
Benamou says the pin still has historical value, especially as a way for people to remember and commemorate their ancestors.
Bussard agrees, which is why he wants to find living descendants of the person memorialized on the pin. Seeking answers, he also posted images of the pin on another Facebook group, Historical B.C.
Bussard says he was "flooded with replies" from amateur historians.
The Rachel Notley government's consumer carbon tax wound up becoming a weapon the UCP wielded to drum the Alberta NDP out of office. But that levy-and-repayment program, and the wide-ranging "climate leadership plan" around it, also stood as the NDP's boldest, provincial-reputation-altering move in their single-term tenure.