Neptune Yard Launches

A recent acquisition for the Archives is the visitors book for Swan Hunter’s Neptune Shipyard covering the years 1910-1963 (TWA ref DS.SWH/5/1/6/3). This volume had apparently been put in a rubbish skip on the closure of the yard in 1988 before being rescued.

The book covers the launches of over 170 ships, with the signatures of those who attended. There aren’t many very famous names, unlike the royals who launched Navy ships at the Wallsend yard but there are a few notables. These include the parties of Chinese who attended the launches of for example the SS Hai Yuan in 1934. The ship was launched by Dr Quo Tai Chi, Chinese ambassador to Britain and his wife. Their son Merlin Quo aged 9, also present at the launch, was to become a TV producer and died in New York City in 2008.

Swan Hunter Neptune Yard visitors book - SS Hai Yuan

Launch of SS Hai Yuan 1934

Also present at a number of launches was Susan Auld, nee Denham Christie, the first woman to graduate as a naval architect from Durham University and designer of battleships and of the landing craft used to land Allied troops in France on D-Day.

Launch of HMS Bullfrog

Launch of HMS Bullfrog (TWA ref ds.swh/5/1/6/3)

By far the most attractive thing about the book is the individual paintings that illustrate each launch, in some cases just flags, but in others very detailed illustrations such as the one of Bamburgh Castle.

Swan Hunter Neptune Yard launch MS Bamburgh Castle

Launch of MS Bamburgh Castle, with illustration of Bamburgh Castle (TWA ref ds.swh/5/1/6/3)

Kith and Kin

‘Heirlooms’– a cabinet curated by Christopher McHugh

Kith and Kin is an exhibition of new glass and ceramics which opens at the National Glass Centre on 10th November, 2011, 6-8pm. As a Collaborative Doctoral Award student based jointly at the University of Sunderland and Sunderland Museum & Winter Gardens, I have been invited by the curators, Prof. Peter Davies and Prof. Kevin Petrie, to curate a cabinet as part of the exhibition. I am presenting my new ceramic work alongside an arrangement of original Sunderland pottery. Documents from the Southwick Pottery (1788-1897), which I have recently archived as part of my doctoral research at the Museum, will also be displayed. These archive materials serve to give a voice to the people who made the pots while my new work references the original pottery collection, attempting to develop new imagery related to contemporary Sunderland. I have selected objects which address the theme of ‘kith and kin’ on several levels.

I have tried to underline that Sunderland pottery was made by families for use by families. Four generations of the Scott family were involved in the running of the Southwick Pottery and this exhibition displays pottery design notebooks used by Anthony Scott I (1764-1847) and his son, Anthony Scott II (1802-1882).  Similarly, amongst the workers, it can be seen that several generations of the same family often worked in the potteries. The declaration of non-receipt of parochial assistance, dated 1852, shows that Robert Crinson worked for the Scotts for over 35 years, starting in 1817, and that his father was also bound as an apprentice with the Scotts in 1788, continuing till his death in 1836”. A letter to the Sunderland Museum from a later Robert Crinson, aged 94 in 1969, describes how his father, James, and several of his uncles, including Mark Crinson, worked as throwers in Sunderland potteries. Mark Crinson’s indenture, showing that his apprenticeship at Scott’s Southwick Pottery began on 5th May 1858, is also displayed. The later Robert Crinson was also bound as an apprentice thrower at the Old Rickaby Sheepfolds Pottery and, in 1969, wrote:

“I am the last of a family of Great Throwers in the Trade of a Potter and claim to be the last Bound Apprentice In British Isles [sic].”

Many of the items displayed were family heirlooms which were eventually donated to, or acquired by, the SMWG. George Yearl’s pottery painting design book was donated to the Museum by a relative of his grandson, John Haswell.  Beatrice Mary Scott’s birth mug, notably not made, but possibly decorated, in Sunderland,  came from her daughter, Mrs Shaw-Hall, great grand-daughter of Anthony Scott III (1847-1897), while the paper ephemera in the ‘Scott Archive’ was also bequeathed by a Scott descendant.

The pottery displayed is of a commemorative nature, sometimes relating family events to current affairs. For example, Margaret Simpson Thompson’s birth in August 1855 is celebrated alongside the Crimean War (1853-1856) through surface design on her birth mug. The separation of family and friends through conflict is a recurring theme of Sunderland pottery and is demonstrated by the soup dish which depicts the return of a tar to his sweetheart after a voyage.

The Token, Or Jack's safe return to his True Love

A soup dish made at the Southwick Pottery. Image courtesy of TWAM, 2011

My new work, Time Future is Not and May Never Be, takes the form of an installation of porcelain objects, and borrows some surface designs from the original Sunderland items, serving to establish links between the past and the present. Just as the Sunderland pottery commemorated personal and wider narratives, this new work attempts to show the enduring relevance of much of the original imagery by identifying similar themes in contemporary Sunderland. Some of the imagery comes from interaction with groups connected to Sunderland, ranging from soldiers to writers.

For example, Wearside-born soldiers from Third Battalion, The Rifles (3 Rifles) were approached in order to develop some new work to commemorate their 2009-2010 tour in Helmand, Afghanistan. Techniques derived from the Collections Trust’s Rethinking Museum Collections toolkit and reminiscence training also offered through TWAM were adapted to deliver an object-based reminiscence workshop. Soldiers were asked to talk about significant objects they had used or acquired while in Afghanistan. Notable examples which have inspired work in ceramic include a British Army Prayer Book, a cross, and a paintbrush used to excavate IEDs (Improvised Explosive Devices). The soldiers’ commemorative tattoos  also provide powerful imagery which has been used to develop new surface decoration.

Rifleman Hiles' IED Brush

Rifleman Hiles' IED Brush

In the cabinet, contemporary ‘relics’ are juxtaposed with old items, forming a ‘shrine’ which aims to both celebrate the city of Sunderland today, while paying homage to the people in the past who used and made its pottery.

There will be an exhibition re-hang in January where I will re-curate the cabinet with more items form Sunderland Museum & Winter Gardens as well as more of my creative work.

Time Future Is Not And May Never Be

Detail of 'The Heart of Jack Crawford: A Shrine to Unsung Heroes', a Gallery of Wonder exhibition at the Great North Museum: Hancock, by Christopher McHugh, June 2011, Photo: Irene Brown, 2011

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Kith and Kin: New Glass and Ceramics, curated by Prof. Peter Davies and Prof. Kevin Petrie, runs from 11 November 2011 to 12 February 2012 at the National Glass Centre, University of Sunderland.

An explosive flower show

Towards the end of August a member of the public dropped some items off at the reception desk in South Shields Museum & Art Gallery. The individual preferred not to leave a name or contact details, but the items were duly placed on my desk, ready for me to look at when I was next in the office. It’s my job to decide if an item would make a good addition to the museum’s collection, based on its local relevance, provenance, and whether or not we already have similar examples.

reception desk and shop at South Shields Museum and Art Gallery

The reception desk and gift shop at South Shields Museum and Art Gallery

Among the items was a tin can of movie film. Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums don’t normally collect film, as we don’t have the proper facilities or staff to store, preserve and make film accessible. However, if a film is offered to us, we would normally pass it on to the Northern Region Film and Television Archive (NRFTA), who are based in Middlesbrough.

NRFTA logo

I opened the can and inspected the end part of the film, which read “Seaton Burn Flower Show & Sports, Sat. Aug 30th”. Seaton burn is a village in Tyne & Wear, north of Newcastle upon Tyne and near Wide Open, close to the Northumberland county border. Clearly, this was the title of an old news reel, probably made for distribution to local cinemas.

Seaton Burn about 1910

Seaton Burn about 1910, showing allotments and terraced housing. Image courtesy of Newcastle City Library.

Seaton Burn about 1912

Seaton Burn about 1912. Image courtesy of Newcastle City Library.

I got in-touch with David Parsons, Film Archivist at the NRFTA, who said that the film could well prove to be “quite important”. He was, however, concerned that it might be nitrate film, used in the early days of cinema and potentially dangerous, with a tendency to burst into flames if not kept in the right conditions.

Seaton Burn Flower Show film

The film in question

I took some pics of the film and sent them to David, who confirmed that the film was indeed nitrate stock, and would need to be handled very carefully. He said that the NRFTA would love to take possession of the film, but that as it was nitrate, it would need to be sent for specialist storage at the British Film Institute (BFI) National Archive in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, where it would be securely stored and a copy made, enabling it to be safely viewed.

Seaton Burn Flower Show film title

The title

And so that brings me to today, when a specialist transportation company have arranged to pick up the film and take it from South Shields to the BFI in one of their temperature controlled vehicles, within an airtight cylinder. Such measures are necessary to ensure against the film spontaneously combusting!

Seaton Burn Flower Show film title with nitrate film symbol

Note the nitrate film symbol (representing a flash / explosion) at the edge of the film

I’m intrigued to discover what is on the film, as I was only able to unravel enough to look at the end bit with the title on. It is believed to date from about 1920 or thereabouts, judging among other things by the style of the title lettering. When I hear back from David Parsons at the NRFTA, via the BFI, I’ll blog again about the contents of this mystery film!

The Tyne Regatta of August 1843

 

A few months back TWAM acquired an interesting group of items relating to one of the early Tyne Regattas, held in August 1843.

 
Items from Tyne Regattas of 1843 and 1844

Silver cup and results sheet from regatta of 1843 with programme of 1844

 

For a modest sum we purchased a silver cup that was awarded to the winner of one of the sailing races, together with a results sheet for the regatta and two programmes for the following year’s event.

Results sheet for Tyne Regatta 1843

Detail from Results sheet for Tyne Regatta 1843 TWCMS : 2011.2634

The cup is undoubtedly the star item. It was made by the London silversmith Francis Crump in around 1770, so it was already about 70 years old when it was offered as a prize at the 1843 Regatta.  

'FC' - Maker's mark of Francis Crump

'FC' - The mark of silversmith Francis Crump on the base of the cup

The Tyne Regatta of 1843 was a huge social and sporting event arranged for Monday 7th and Tuesday 8th August. Tents were erected on the sands at both North and South Shields and the band of the 37th Regiment played to the crowds from within Cliffords Fort in North Shields. Fireworks were set off from a moored Keel in the Narrows on Monday night and on the Tuesday night there was a ball at the Golden Lion Inn, South Shields.

There was a mix of races for amateurs (“gentlemen”) and professionals (anybody who wasn’t a “gentleman”). Most were rowing races and the professional classes were dominated by Harry Clasper and his brothers. One of the skiff races was contested exclusively by Claspers after two other entrants withdrew. Harry Clasper won and was followed home by Edward, Robert and William! There were three races for sailing boats, one of which was “for open sailing Pleasure Boats, not exceeding 18 feet over all, managed by gentlemen”. The prize for this race was a Silver Cup and Sweepstakes of half a sovereign from each entry. After a hard fought contest among nine boats the race was won by Anthony Ford Stafford and his crew, G Thomson and J Robb, in Stafford’s boat Venus.

Silver Cup won by Anthony Ford Stafford at the Tyne Regatta 1843 - before conservation

Silver Cup won by Anthony Ford Stafford at the Tyne Regatta 1843 - before conservation

The silver cup was passed down through the family until, earlier this year, Antony Ford Stafford’s great niece decided it was time to return it to the Tyne.

Silver cup engraved with the names of the winning boat, VENUS, and her owner, A F Stafford

Silver cup engraved with the names of the winning boat, VENUS, and her owner, A F Stafford

I’m delighted that we now have the cup in the TWAM collections. It will soon be on display in a Heritage Lottery funded exhibition we are working on for Discovery Museum in 2012, Home and Away – North East Sport and the Olympics.

A New Look at Some Old Friends

Emily, one of our Conservators, is this week steam cleaning sculptures in advance of their display in the upcoming exhibition at the Hatton Gallery. 
 
John Graham Lough (1798-1876) (2 Dec 2011 – 18 Feb 2012)
 

Emily Steam Cleaning one of the Sculptures

My colleague Rob at the Hatton explained that “these four fantastic marble sculptures grace the entance foyer of the Newcastle University Fine Art Department and Hatton Gallery, they are by the locally born sculptor John Graham Lough and were donated by the 10th Duke of Northumberland.
 
Their constant presence does perhaps for regular visitor and users of the building make them blend into the background, so we decided that a clean and ‘re-presentation’ of them as part of a bigger exhibition in the gallery, would bring them and Lough himself back into the public eye.  
 
As the sculptor of both the Stephenson Memorial near central Station and the Collingwood Memorial at Tynemouth, Lough’s works is perhaps better known than people think, but his name is now rarely associated with these well know public monuments.
 
In his heyday c. 1828-62 however he was very well known and often hailed alongside the likes of Stepehenson and Bewick as a local man ‘of genius’.