Summary
Conan O'Brien interviews Philip, a relic hunter from Williamsburg, Virginia who uses metal detectors to find Civil War and Revolutionary War artifacts. Philip shares stories about his discoveries, including a colonial posy ring and a live Korean War grenade, and discusses his work as a firefighter and non-denominational preacher.
Insights
- Relic hunting requires extensive historical research using resources like Library of Congress maps and requires obtaining permission from private landowners before searching
- Community etiquette in niche hobbies is critical—proper hole coverage prevents property damage and maintains relationships with landowners
- Multi-vocational careers allow professionals to maintain credibility and relatability in roles like ministry by staying connected to real-world experiences
- Metal detecting hobbyists encounter significant amounts of modern trash alongside historical artifacts, requiring patience and knowledge to identify valuable finds
Trends
Growing interest in local history and heritage preservation through amateur archaeology and artifact recoveryImportance of community standards and ethical practices in unregulated hobby communitiesMulti-career professionals blending traditional roles with modern hobbies for authenticity and engagementLandowner collaboration models for historical site exploration and artifact discovery
Topics
Metal detecting and relic huntingCivil War and Revolutionary War historyColonial artifacts and historical preservationLandowner permissions and property rightsHobby community etiquette and standardsExplosive ordnance disposal proceduresNon-denominational ministryFire service careersHistorical research methodsArtifact authentication and valuation
Companies
Library of Congress
Philip uses Library of Congress online maps as a primary research tool for identifying promising relic hunting locations
People
Philip
Guest discussing his hobbies of metal detecting and artifact recovery in Williamsburg, Virginia area
Conan O'Brien
Podcast host conducting interview with Philip about relic hunting and artifact discovery
Sona Movsesian
Co-host participating in interview and providing commentary throughout the episode
Matt Gourley
Producer and co-host of the podcast
Gary Williams
Local Civil War buckle replica maker known for burying imperfect replicas for relic hunters to find
Quotes
"Cover your hole. That is the rule. That is the rule."
Philip•Mid-episode
"He doesn't know anything about real life. He doesn't know anything about me. He doesn't understand anything because they live in his little world."
Philip (quoting his father about preachers)•Late episode
"I found it in a field. And so oftentimes, people got married much younger during those times than they do today."
Philip (discussing the posy ring)•Early-mid episode
"Most of the stuff you find when you go hunting or relic hunting is trash. You find shotgun shells and beer cans and more beer cans."
Philip•Mid-episode
Full Transcript
The people of Britain love their spin bikes. They also love moving their card balances to a Barclay Card Platinum Balance Transfer Card with no interest for 36 months and £20 cash back until the 29th of January, 2026. A balance transfer fee of 3.45% applies. Subject to financial status, teas and season exclusions apply. Check if you're eligible at www.barclaycard.co.uk Representative example 24.9% AVR representative variable and 24.9% purchase rate per annum based on a £1,200 credit limit. Right now a guide dog puppy is taking her very first steps. One day she'll help someone with sight loss live a full and independent life. Find the crossing best. Good girl. When you sponsor a puppy with guide dogs you're there for it all. Her wobbly walks, her first harness, the life-changing partnership. It's more than a donation, it's the start of a life-changing story. Search, sponsor a guide dog puppy and be part of a story you'll be proud to share. Conan O'Brien needs a fan. Want to talk to Conan? Visit teamcoco.com slash call Conan. Okay, let's get started. Hey Philip, welcome to Conan O'Brien needs a fan. Hey you guys. Hey Philip, how are you? I'm doing well, how are you? I'm just going to comment right away and I encourage our listeners to watch the video. You've got one of the most neatly curated beards I've seen in my life. I mean, it's incredible. I feel like you had a jeweler come in and maintain your beard. Impressive. Very impressive. Philip, tell us a little bit about yourself. Where do you live? Where are you coming to us from right now? So I live in the Williamsburg, Virginia area. So Colonial Williamsburg, if you've ever been here, right in that area, Eastern Virginia. So yeah, this is live at. And tell us about yourself. What makes you tick Philip? All right. Well, I grew up in this area, so I've always been a huge fan of history. So love history. I live here. I'm married to my life Karen. She's a high school math teacher. I have two teenage boys. We love being outside, whether it's in the woods, hiking, boating, whatever it may be. So that's kind of our world. Okay. I feel like this is a dating app now. And I like, you swipe right if you're a sitter left. Swipe right, right, right. You swipe right if you're really interested, you swipe up for a super swipe. Get out. Yeah, that's right. I just swiped you up Philip. Yeah, because you like history, which I love. Now I see in my notes here, it says you're a relic hunter. I don't really know much about that. What do you do? So it's a hobby. So relic hunting, it's kind of like using a metal detector to go out and find old things. Oh, okay. You go out looking for, well, I guess if you're in Williamsburg, Virginia, you've got lots of stuff. I mean, mostly there's probably civil war stuff, and there's probably also revolutionary war. What else? Absolutely. I mean, that sounds like you had hit pay dirt. Go ahead. Yeah. So growing up in this area, it was sort of all around me. I live right between Jamestown, Colonial Williamsburg, Yorktown, Cold Harbor, all the battles outside of Richmond area. So I kind of grew up right at the epicenter of that sort of history. And so what are you finding when you got your metal detector? What are the things you're pulling out of the ground that are exciting to you? Also, we find bullets, civil war bullets, American Revolutionary bullets. We find buckles, sometimes old cannonballs and artillery shells and buttons and coins and all sorts of things. What's one of the coolest things you ever found? Like you pulled it out of the ground and you thought, this is awesome. One of the coolest things I found was a posy ring. It's called a Colonial. Posi ring is the name of it. It's a gold ring that a young man would have shared with a young woman back in colonial times. And when I first found it, I thought it was just simply, I'm not sure what it was. And then when I got home and cleaned it up, I realized what it was. And inside of it, it has some old Gothic script. I think it says, I choose the, I actually have some stuff over here. I have it here. That is so cool. That's amazing. How well you can see that. And now I swiped up and now you're proposing to me. That's right. That's how things happen on this. This is one fast app. That is so cool and poignant and sad and sweet at the same time. Yeah. Well, I mean, I found it in a field. And so oftentimes, people got married much younger during those times than they do today. And so it was much smaller and probably as she got older, she would wear it as a necklace or a charm. And it fell off at some point and laid there for probably 200 years until one day I dug it out of the ground. Right. And does her ghost haunt you now? No, no. That's what I would worry about when I pull something out of the ground is eventually the ghost or zombie would come looking for it. Zombie. And it says here, you once found a live grenade. Yeah. So you find all sorts of things. Did the grenades say, I choose the? No, it did not, fortunately. The one thing I would say is there's a sort of a... You're so proud of yourself. Yes. Yes. Sorry. Sorry. It's whatever. It's what I do. It's what I do. Nice, nice ceiling there, Michelangelo. That's what I do. It's what I do. Sorry. So what happens when you find a live grenade? Don't you have to call the police? Yes, you do. When you're digging, you find all sorts of stuff. And one of the things I would say is most of the stuff you find when you go hunting or relic hunting is trash. You find shotgun shells and beer cans and more beer cans and anything metal you can think of that's been in the ground for a long time. So you don't... Most of what you find is not worth keeping. Right. It's not Civil War, American Revolution. But this particular day, I dug a hole and pulled out of the ground. I wasn't sure what it was at first and realized quickly. We live, if you know anything about the Hampton Roads area, that's a lot of military bases in this area for a very long time. And realized pretty quickly what it was and moved it. I don't know. I sort of got told I shouldn't have done this later. I picked it up and moved it to a tree line and stuck it next to a tree. I don't know why I did that. I started juggling it. Ticking it like a hacky sack? Yeah. You kicked it like a hacky sack for 20 minutes. Yes. While you were listening to a fish album. There you go. You okay there, Sona? It laughed pretty hard. Sona, when you laugh, don't move away from the mic. Get those laughs right in there. I work hard for those. For the record, yeah. Okay, for the record, let me just say, Sona has the best laugh. She does have the best laugh. She has the best laugh. But Philip, you know what I'm trying to say this? Philip, this drives me crazy. Wait, let him continue. What I'm saying is I'll get... I'll say something. She'll laugh real hard and she does this. She fades away from the mic and I'm like, those are my laughs. Give me my milk, mama. You hear it. Wow. That's sweet milk to me. You hear them. You want other people to know I'm laughing at you. That's what that is. You hear it in the... With me. With me. Not at me. Anyway, Philip, we got off on this side track thing where you're just crazy. I'll talk about Sona's laughs. There it is. Bring it back. Yeah, let's get off the Civil War stuff. Let me just say this. Let me just say, okay, I know. I could hear you, Sona, before they called me in the room and they told you guys there was a Civil War relic hunter and you were like, oh, I knew that was going to happen with you. But that's okay. Because I wanted to... No, but my goal was that she would laugh at some point because you guys... Listen, do it real quick. We're going to get off the relic hunting stuff for a moment. I listen to you guys all the time in the car on the XM radio. So I listen to you guys. There you go. A little plug for XM. I listen to you guys. So you guys are the voices in my car. And so we've talked about, Sona has the best laugh. There you go. You know what? I will agree. You have the best laugh, Sona. You've always had the best laugh. And I considered you one of the treasures I pulled out of the ground. Does that work? It was a compliment? It was so close. It was almost close. You were... When I met you, you were dirty. Yes, I get it. You know that, right? I get what you tell people. I jumped out of a bush. No, but you had soil on. There was a... Maybe the first year of me knowing you was me brushing you clean. Oh, that's so sweet. Thank you so much. Thanks for making me human. But she had a great laugh. I was the live grenade. You picked that. You were in a way. But wait, back to the grenade, Philip. What vintage is the grenade? Is it... It's not a... It was Korean... Oh, good. Okay. Korean War air grenade is what I found out later. And so, again, set it next to this tree. I'd spent over 20 years in the fire department. These sort of things happened in this area again because of all the military bases. So I knew what needed to be done. So I called it in. There's a lot of... The military base near by us sent their bomb technicians over who examined it and quickly determined that it was a live grenade and that... It was actually the pen had been pulled out of it and thrown. But I guess somehow it hit just right. It never exploded. And I moved it with a shovel. Oh, my God. And so the guys were not... They were like, you moved that? You should have never moved that. But what was really cool... I mean, these guys got out of the truck. They looked like they were extras in a military movie, I mean, Tall, The Mustache, the whole deal. And they go over and they basically put a thing of C4 and sandbags around it. And I have a video of it. They blew it up. They did a whole fire in the hole. Yeah, they did fire in the hole, fire in the hole, fire hole and blew it up. And I asked them where the little wire was that went from the C4 to the little explosive thing. He goes, no, we do that all by Bluetooth now. And so they blew it up with their phone. Oh, my God. That's not that cool. No, but it sounds dangerous to me. Like, I'm there setting up my C4 and I'm packing it around the object I want to blow up when someone near me accesses a song on Bluetooth. And half my face gets blown off because they wanted to listen to fish. Yeah, whatever, you know, fish. Just because David needed to hear Hillary Duff, I have to die. Hey, some things are worth it. This is a paid ad for Shopify. You know, I started this business, remember? Yes. Single-handedly, no one helped me. Oh, I don't know. I just said, I know a lot about podcasts and I should start one and I built all the equipment. Yeah, everyone believes you. Yeah. But it's intimidating. It's a lot. You have to wear a lot of hats when you're someone like me who does everything all by himself. Looking for a tool that not only helps you run your business but simplifies everything, that sure would help me. Try Shopify, the commerce platform behind millions of businesses worldwide. Shopify helps you use pre-made templates to build a beautiful online store. You can easily create email, social media campaigns too, and take advantage of Shopify's expertise, spending everything from inventory management. I could have used some help there, to international shipping and processing returns. I have to tell you that Shopify sounds like it'll be the right tool for me. Yeah. And I'm sure someone in this room is you, Shopify. You probably believe you, Shopify? Yeah, I've always got some side hustles going on. You have a lot of side hustles. And Shopify is great. In fact, I think this is your side hustle and your other things are more important to you. That's okay if it is. Well, I mean, importance is, yeah, I like to say busy and Shopify helps me get what I need to get done. Well, it's incredible. This is all stuff that could have helped me a lot when I was putting this whole podcast empire together single-handedly, without anybody's help. Everybody helped you. You had no idea what you were doing. I built this microphone. Turn your big business idea into reality with Shopify on your side. Send up for your one pound per month trial and start selling today at Shopify.co.uk. That's Shopify.co.uk. Can you imagine having that job where your job is to blow things up? Yeah. You have C4 and you have a van and you get to drive around and, okay, I got to go blow something else up in a field. Yeah. What a great job. Is it great? I think it'd be fantastic. Oh, I didn't know if you were going to say great or terrifying. No, I love that. You get, first of all, your time's your own. You get to drive around. Sure. Probably a company car. You get C4 that you don't have to pay for. Do you like it? I don't know. I just like it. You just want a company car? Kind of. It's just going to be fun and you get to see stuff blow up, which would be fun. Yeah. I don't think that ever gets old. How do you do, because how do you even know where to look? How do you do, I imagine there's some kind of research involved in finding out what's a good place to try and find relics, what will be fruitful, because you can't just wander around a big state like Virginia, hoping that the thing that sets off your metal detector is a Civil War air loom. You have to do some research, I would think, right? Yeah. That's over half of it. It's just spending the time to study. It's really dorky, but it's a ton of fun. Just look at old maps in history and Library of Congress has maps that you can access online. You'll look at those and then figure out where you can go, but then getting permission to go to these places. Obviously, you can't go to any national parks or state parks or anything like that. It's finding private property, farmers, people that own land that you ask permission, can I come on your property and dig holes? Can I search for relics for old things that might be on your property? A lot of times, they'll say no, and sometimes they'll say yeah. And do they have a deal? If you find something valuable, they want to keep it? Sometimes. It depends. Most of them actually don't really care. What I've run into is they just go, I don't really care. That's your thing. It's not my thing, so whatever you find. There's others who have said, hey, I'd really like to see what you find. Then there's others you can maybe work a deal with and go, hey, let's split whatever it is we find. I'm intrigued. There's part of me that would want to go around and fool guys like you, drop things in the ground. Do you know what I mean? Go out and buy what looks like a knight's helmet and then drop it in a hole. Just hide and watch them? And then hide in a bush and watch you guys come by and think that you've found, oh my god, King Arthur's Court, they hung out here in Williamsburg, Virginia. I know that's a bad thing I'm admitting to, but no, there's people that do that. No, really? That's not cool. No, there's a guy here locally who has been known for decades as one of the best replica makers of Civil War buckles and things like that. And if he made one that wasn't quite perfect, he was known to go in the coal harbor area and bury it and hide it. And people would find it and lose their minds. I love this guy. Yeah, you would. Hey, can this guy contact me? I will fund your operation. Yes, yes. Gary Williams' name. I would be drawing up like a fake Gettysburg address and then dropping it in a hole, you know, stuff like that, a fake Lincoln's beard and a note that says, if you find my beard, contact A. Lincoln, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Just I would want to see people freak out. 1600? Was he, he couldn't live in the White House. Did he live in the White House? Lincoln? Yeah. Yeah, the White House was there. Who is the first person to live in the White House? Good question, Thomas Jefferson. Oh, okay. I didn't know that. So now there's a Lincoln bedroom. It's like the most famous room in the White House. Oh, that's funny. I knew that. I just thought it was, I'm sorry. I was, I wasn't sure who the first president was. No, it's true. You thought he lived in a split level condo in Recita, California. Yeah, I saw him at the hot tub yesterday, the communal hot tub. Sorry. Yeah. Bubble, bubble, bubble, bubble. I like learning. See, I asked questions. I'm curious. Yeah. This is, I mean, this is fascinating to me. I just, there's, because whenever you examine something, you find out that it's a whole ecosystem. There are probably really good, you know, artifact hunters, but they're also probably ones that give you guys a bad name. Do you know what I mean? That break some of the rules, I imagine. Yeah. Well, I mean, it's like any other. Oh, you just got mad. You just got mad. So much behind that, yeah? You got mad. Yeah. So much behind that. Well, yeah. No name names. Don't name names. No. I mean, there's just like any other niche or subculture. There's etiquette, and there are people that, that hold to that etiquette and do it respectfully. And there's others that just simply don't. What is the etiquette of, you know, treasure hunting like this? Well, one of the things would be just if you dig holes, you cover holes. And you'd be just surprised how many people will dig holes in somebody's yard and just leave them, which if they have animals like horses and livestock, they could step in it and get hurt. Yeah. Terrible. What? That didn't feel sincere. No, I meant that's bad. That's bad. Oh, okay. That didn't feel sincere. No. My rule of, if, man, my rule number one is cover your hole, you know? I've always, I've said that since day one. And when I meet a guy that doesn't cover his hole, I'm out. I'm like, cover that hole, dude. Cover the hole. What's wrong with you? And then every now and then etiquette. Yeah. I say that all the time in my regular life. And I'm rare, guess what? I'm rarely outside when I say it. Hey, dude, cover your hole. I'll cover my hole. You cover your hole. Just before. I don't like it when someone covers my hole. That's where I draw the line. Don't cover my hole. If I said you can't cover my hole, don't cover my hole. You cover my hole. I'll cover your hole. How much more do you think I can go on this? I don't know, but it needs to stop. I don't think it does. I think it needs to go more. I think it's just stop. Yeah. Oh, my God. But anyway. Never heard you say hole so many times. Well, I'm just saying cover your hole. That is the rule. That is the rule. Yeah, that is the rule. Guess what? That is the rule. Guess what? Phillip, people here are laughing and acting like it's a joke, but it is the rule. And it's a simple rule to live by. Cover your fucking hole. It's very serious. You know what I mean? Or I'll come over there and cover it for you. You know what I'm saying? I've got a hole cover in my pocket. It's a little brass plate. So you cover the hole. I love you. You know what I love? And that's what I love. I love that you just said so. My favorite thing about this whole interview is Phillip finally going so. And you think you're going to get away from the topic, and then you said you got to cover your hole. So you brought us right back. Can we also talk about what else he does, which is he's also a preacher. I spent over 20 years in a fire station. There is little of these years of that hurt. You got to cover your soul. You got to cover your soul. And if you don't cover your soul, I'll come and get a preacher to cover your soul. So you live by two rules. Cover your hole and cover your soul. These are the rules that Phillip lives by. And then he was a fire chief. Yeah. Listen, we'll get to that. We've got a lot to cover here. Yeah, we really do. Preacher. Yes. So I hope I didn't offend you with my cover your hole run, but I think it can be taken many different ways. And so I'm not worried about it. And what is your religious denominational acceleration? Non-denominational. Non-denominational. Got it. Very good. You accept all kinds. All kinds. I'd be welcome as a Catholic. You would be welcome. Okay. Absolutely. I like that. I like it. Very accepting. Absolutely. Okay. And how long you've been preaching for? 12 years? Oh, wow. I think it is 13 years, something like that. And before that you were a firefighter. I was bivocational for a while. I worked in the fire service and I worked at a church simultaneously and did that for a period of time. And then as the church grew, it was a church plant. So it started from scratch. And as things grew, then I was full-time here as the preacher. You seemed like you'd be a good preacher. You seemed like you're very, someone that would be very understanding, accepting, a cool guy, good sense of humor. I think you'd be very good at that. I hope so. I will tell you this. I grew up and my dad did not go to church very often. And one of his biggest things was he was like, he'd meet preachers and he would go, that preacher doesn't know anything about real life. He doesn't know anything about me. He doesn't understand anything because they live in his little world. He just reads the Bible all day and sits in his office and sings hymns or whatever. And so I was determined from the beginning that I wouldn't be that guy. And that's one of the reasons why between the fire service and just real life, just to be a regular, just a regular dude, just a regular guy. Regular dude out there digging up grenades. I get it, man. It's not the sexiest hobby. I get it. I love it. It's actually pretty cool. I think it sounds great. I'm sorry you heard me make that voice. That's not what I meant at all. I thought it was just more like Conan's gonna geek out a word. She was mocking me for being a Civil War history geek. No, that's the typical response I get whenever anyone finds out that I dig holes and find old stuff. So I completely, it's the reaction I get from my wife when I bring stuff home and there's mud and I bring it in the kitchen and I'm cleaning stuff up that I found and I'm dorking out over it. And my wife just like, could you, uh-huh, uh-huh, could you just please get that out of the kitchen? Yeah. I get it. It does not offend me at all. Oh, good. I mean, I just know Conan what is gonna get really excited about it. I am excited about it. And I feel like you want to go out with Philip and like dig holes in Virginia. I do. I tell you what, you come to Eastern Virginia, I got another metal detector, we will go out and dig holes. We'll find something cool. And we'll cover them. We'll cover them up. We'll cover them up. And we will make sure that every single one of them's covered. We'll make sure every single one of them's covered. That's right. No one plugs a hole like me. All right. I think we broke it. Philip, it was lovely talking to you. By the way, when this airs, you will no longer be a preacher. So you need to find yet another vocation. Because that is over when our little who's on first routine plays. But it was really nice, really nice talking to you. And I'll see you on down the road, sir. Hey, man, I really appreciate the time. It's good to see you guys. Seriously, I listen to you guys all the time. Thanks for listening to us. I've followed you since I was in college. So I just think for just taking a few minutes just to hang out. Let me talk. This was a joy for us. Seriously, really fun talking to you. I appreciate it. All right. Take care, Philip. Bye-bye. You'll take care. Thanks a lot. Bye. Conan O'Brien Needs a Fan with Conan O'Brien, Sonam of Sessian and Matt Gourley. Produced by me, Matt Gourley. Executive produced by Adam Sacks, Jeff Frost, and Nick Lea. Incidental music by Jimmy Vivino. Take it away, Jimmy. Supervising producer, Aaron Blair. Associate talent producer, Jennifer Samples. Associate producers, Sean Doherty and Lisa Byrne. Engineering by Eduardo Perez. Get three free months of SiriusXM when you sign up at SiriusXM.com. Please rate, review, and subscribe to Conan O'Brien Needs a Fan wherever fine podcasts are down.