Victorian Cap Badge Decorative Badge Ilkley River Bank Find 2002 UK Artefact with Certificate


£ 84.00

GENUINE VICTORIAN CAP BADGE OR DECORATIVE BADGE

This carefully chosen Victorian cap badge or decorative badge is a genuine
historical artefact, found on a river bank at Ilkley in March 2002. It is an interesting British metal-detected or surface-find style collectable with strong appeal for collectors of Victorian artefacts, antique badges, British social history, military-style badges, decorative metalwork, and local history items from Yorkshire.

The photo shows the actual artefact you will receive, allowing you to view the design, preservation, surface texture, patina, colour, wear, and overall character before purchase. Full sizing can be seen in the photo. This artefact is a genuine specimen and includes a Certificate of Authenticity lifetime guarantee generic card.

FOUND AT ILKLEY IN MARCH 2002

This badge was found on a river bank at Ilkley, a historic spa town in West Yorkshire known for its long human history, riverside landscape, and connection to Victorian leisure culture. Ilkley developed strongly during the 19th century, when spa towns, railway travel, civic identity, uniformed societies, decorative dress accessories, and organised clubs became important parts of British social life.

A river bank find often develops a distinctive aged surface through contact with soil, sediment, water, minerals, and changing environmental conditions. Natural wear, patina, surface marks, small bends, corrosion, loss of fastening parts, and age-related imperfections may be present. These features are part of the artefact’s genuine history and help give it character as a recovered historical object.

VICTORIAN PERIOD COLLECTABLE

The Victorian period, spanning 1837 to 1901, was a time of major change in Britain. It saw industrial growth, railway expansion, military reform, civic pride, social clubs, sporting associations, and a strong interest in decorative personal items. Badges were used in many contexts, including uniforms, caps, organisations, clubs, commemorative dress, workwear, school or civic identity, and decorative personal display.

This piece may be of cap badge or decorative badge form, making it a versatile historical collectable. Badges from this period are valued because they provide a direct connection to the people, clothing, organisations, and everyday material culture of 19th-century Britain. Even when the exact original use is uncertain, the form, age, and find history make it a charming and displayable artefact.

CONSTRUCTION AND MATERIAL CHARACTER

Victorian badges were commonly made from metal using casting, stamping, pressing, or die-struck methods, depending on their intended use and level of detail. Decorative or uniform-style badges often featured raised designs, shaped outlines, pierced areas, lettering, emblems, crests, or symbolic motifs. Attachment fittings such as loops, lugs, pins, sliders, or clips were often fitted to the reverse, although these can be missing or worn on recovered examples.

This artefact’s surface condition should be judged from the photographs, which show the actual item. The age, patina, and recovered character are part of its appeal, making it suitable for collectors who appreciate genuine historical finds rather than modern reproductions.

COLLECTABLE BRITISH HISTORICAL ARTEFACT

This Victorian cap badge or decorative badge is ideal for collectors searching for genuine Victorian badges, antique cap badges, British historical artefacts, Ilkley finds, Yorkshire collectables, decorative metal badges, and 19th-century display pieces. It would sit well in a cabinet of curiosities, local history collection, militaria-inspired display, antique badge collection, educational history resource, or museum-style arrangement.

With its Victorian character, Ilkley river bank find provenance, March 2002 discovery history, genuine aged surface, and Certificate of Authenticity, this artefact is a distinctive piece of British material history.