The copper ornament of a American Indians child in Middletown or Chatham is described by De Forest (1852) as: "a copper box containing wampum strung on deer leather". This Indian ornament and similar small round sheet metal boxes may have been, or modified from, the 17th century European tobacco snuff boxes (Beauchamp 1902). Another, a handmade Narragansett Indians copper ornament, contained several tiny quartz pebbles resembled a tiny 'rattle' (Simmons 1970).
Other sheet metal pendants artifact from around this time include brass bear-claw-shaped pendants, which have been found by archaeologists at Fort Shantok, a 17th century Mohegan Indian village and other places including the upper Connecticut River Valley (Thomas 1979). Copper or brass triangular and roughly rectangular sheet metal pendants artifact have also been found around Ipswich, Massachusetts (Snow 1980: 84-85).
Large pendants artifact found around New England include a copper 'thunderbird' shaped gorget. This large neck ornament, from Amoskeag Indian, New Hampshire, was probably fashioned from a copper kettle Brasser (1978). Two fairly large 17th century Wampanoag Indian sheet brass pendants from Rhode Island were made to represent fish or whales, and were probably also made from worn-out kettles (Groce 1980).
Breastplates were also fashioned from sheet copper, described by Martin Pring at Plymouth in 1603 and by Gosnold on islands off of Massachusetts in 1602 (Rainey 1936) . These breastplates were about a foot long, six inches wide and were worn hung from around the neck.