Archaeologist Julie Schablitsky was frustrated. She and her team had spent two weeks digging in Peter’s Neck, Maryland, last November. They were searching for the site of a home where abolitionist Harriet Tubman once lived. Records showed they were in the right spot. But after digging more than 1,000 test pits, they were still empty-handed.
Schablitsky grabbed a metal detector and walked down an abandoned road. Suddenly, the machine beeped, letting her know she’d found something. As she dug the object out of the ground, Schablitsky couldn’t believe it. It was a coin from 1808—the year that Harriet Tubman’s parents were married.
That’s when she knew she was on the path to uncovering an important piece of history.