• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Online Button Museum

  • Home
  • Button Galleries
    • Button Galleries
    • Backmarks – Hammond Turner (etc) and others
    • Dandy and Dress Buttons 1
    • Dandy and Dress Buttons 2
    • Livery Buttons 1
    • Military Buttons
    • Naval Buttons
    • Sporting Buttons 1
    • Sporting Buttons 2
    • Sporting Buttons 3
    • Sporting Buttons 4
    • Uniform Buttons 1
    • Uniform Buttons 2
  • History
    • History
    • Hammond Turner timeline
    • Trade directories
    • Native American visit
    • The Penny Magazine Supplement on Birmingham
    • Harriet Martineau for Charles Dickens
    • The Birmingham Button Trade parts 1 – 10
    • Employment of children in the button trade, HT&Sons, 1833, 1841 & 1864
    • Children working in the button trade – 1841
    • Children working in the button trade – 1864
    • West’s patent buttons
  • Wills
    • Wills
    • William Kempson 1768
    • Bonham Hammond 1808
    • Charles Glover 1819
    • Mary Greenhill Hammond 1822
    • John Dickinson 1822
    • Samuel Hammond 1825
    • William Elliot 1831
    • John Turner 1841
    • Samuel Hammond Turner 1841
    • Rebecca Dickinson 1845
    • John Chatwin 1848
    • William Hammond Turner 1851
    • William Brunton 1851
    • George Bragg 1852
    • George Davey Bragg 1900
  • People
    • People
    • Samuel Hammond Turner
    • John Pemberton Turner
    • Locating Birmingham Button Makers
    • Repeal Button
  • Contact Us
You are here: Home / History / Special / Hunting Button Found

Hunting Button Found

by

Trevor Dixon found this button near the Murray river on the border between New South Wales and Victoria. On the same site he also found some coins and a needle holder of about the same age.

He says that you cannot now tell that there was ever a building on the site, and that is was only his research that revealed the one-time existence of a homestead there. He wrote ‘I so envy you and your history. We have all of about 220 years of it here in Australia, so a find like this is very exciting.’

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Filed Under: Special

Footer

ABOUT OUR MUSEUM

This web site has been created by Lesley Close as an on-line museum displaying some of the buttons and other artifacts manufactured by Hammond Turner & Sons (and related companies), button makers of Birmingham (and Manchester), England.

GET IN TOUCH

 enquiries@hammond-turner.com

 www.hammond-turner.com

WHAT WE DON’T DO

The button-making company Hammond Turner no longer exists – we do not make buttons!

Designed by LTheme.com - Powered by Wordpress

DMCA | Term of Use | Primary Policy