When one homeowner started clearing out the basement of an abandoned house he had recently purchased, he stumbled upon a rusty metal box filled with hundreds of shiny oval-shaped objects. At first glance, they looked like old coins or some kind of strange currency. But after posting a photo online, the mystery quickly caught fire.
Thousands of people chimed in with guesses — silver nuggets, old tokens, or even ancient artifacts. Some joked it was treasure hidden during the war. But when experts took a closer look, the truth turned out to be far more practical — and surprisingly fascinating.
The metallic ovals weren’t coins at all. They were lead printing slugs, used in typesetting machines back in the early 1900s to cast letters and numbers for newspapers and books. Each one would have been melted, molded, and reused in printing presses long before the digital age.
These pieces of history were often stored in boxes like the one found — heavy, dusty, and forgotten in basements or print shops. Lead was valuable and reusable, so many old printers saved their leftover slugs rather than throwing them away.
While they may not be worth a fortune, they tell a story of a time when every word on a page was made by hand — one letter at a time.
So no, it wasn’t treasure. But in a way, it was something even more special — a frozen snapshot of the printing world that once powered an entire century of news and literature.