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Handcrafted Nautical Decor - Solid Brass Captain's Push Button Compass 3"

Solid Brass Captain's Push Button Compass 3"

Nautical Decor Overall Dims: 3" L x 3" W x 1" H

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MSRP: $39.99

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Total Price: $19.99

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SKU: CO-0601

Solid Brass Captain's Push Button Compass 3"

The Hampton Nautical solid brass push button 3" antique pocket compass is polished to a mirror-like shine and is a great companion for the true navigator.

The antique compass looks just like a 100-year-old antique but with a shiny and brand new feel. It has a brass trim and a smaller face. A push button connected to a ring, when pushed, will pop open the compass and reveal a shiny mirror-like back lid.

Custom engraving is available on this brass pocket compass with a minimum quantity purchase. Contact us for details. 


  • Polished brass housing for compass

  • Hinged lid closes to protect compass

  • Custom engraving available on large quantity orders (call us for information)

WARNING WARNING: This product can expose you to chemicals including Formaldehyde, and Styrene, which are known to the State of California to cause cancer, and Chromium and Toluene, which are known to the State of California to cause birth defects or other reproductive harm. For more information go to www.P65Warnings.ca.gov

Additional Information

First developed in China, possibly as early as 2634 BC, the nautical compass has become one of the most important tools in history. Discovering that a needle magnetized by a piece of lodestone would always point North or South the basic idea of the nautical compass emerged, and by 1044 the Song Dynasty had a written account of the device. Within the next hundred years the Chinese began using compasses to navigate at sea, and by 1300 the nautical compass had reached Europe where it would come to truly change the world. Magnetic hand compasses have changed very little from the initial Chinese devices because of the fundamental principle that makes them work. Initially the Chinese simply attached a needle to a silk thread, or floated it on a piece of cork in a bowl of water. The silk and cork provided almost frictionless pivot points, and the needle would be magnetized by being rubbed across a piece of hematite, or lodestone, which is a naturally occurring magnetized mineral. As the Earth’s magnetic field exerts torque on all other magnetic fields, the newly magnetized needle would point to one of the poles, and the hand compass now operated. This occurs because the hematite causes all electrons, spinning around each of the atoms that make up the needle, to rotate in the same direction, creating a flow from positive to negative resulting in an overall magnetic charge.