Search Results:

<< Viewing Record 155 of 1000 >>
View : Light Box | List View | Image List | Detailed
 


Your search has been limited to 1000 records. As your search has brought back a large number of records consider using more search terms to bring back a more accurate set of records.
 


Maker(s):Clarkson, Eliza
Culture:American (1824-1907)
Title:sketches: "Banyan Tree" and "a proa of the Island of Celebes" (reverse)
Date Made:1849
Type:Drawing
Materials:paper, pencil
Place Made:Java (probably)
Measurements:overall: 10 x 7 7/8 in.; 25.4 x 20.0025 cm
Accession Number:  HD 2005.9.7
Credit Line:Gift of Ray J. and Anne K. Groves
Museum Collection:  Historic Deerfield
2005-9-7_V1t.jpg

Description:
Pencil drawings inscribed "a proa of the Island of Celebes" on one side; and 17 small images of a tree, boat, figures, and plants inscribed "Banyan Tree". "mangastuns", "Java, Java", and "upper dress white/ lower very dark" on the reverse. These drawings are part of the documentation in the Chinese export black lacquer sewing table (HD 2005.9.1) owned by Eliza Brown Clarkson (1824-1907) who married James A. Clarkson (c.1816-1849) of Gloucester, Mass, in 1845. James Clarkson worked as a captain for ships registered as passenger and mail lines; Eliza accompanied him on 1849 voyage of the ship "Marathon," which included visits to Java, the Philippines, and Canton. James died on the return voyage; according to Eliza's obituary, James "was stricken with a fatal illness and died in mid-ocean October 29, 1849." Traditionally, corpses were committed to the sea, which most of the sailors wanted, but Eliza wanted her husband's body to be buried in Gloucester. With the help of one of the sailors, the ship went to St. Helena where she stayed with the American consulate while lead casket was made. St. Helena, an island in the southern Atlantic discovered by the Portuguese navigator, Joao da Nova, in 1502, soon became a haven for visiting ships plying their trade because of its plentiful supply of fresh water, fruit and goats. Napoleon Bonaparte died there in 1821. Eliza returned to the United States in January 1850 with James' coffin, and buried him in Gloucester's Wesleyan Cemetery; she continued to live in Gloucester and never remarried.

Link to share this object record:
https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=HD+2005.9.7

Research on objects in the collections, including provenance, is ongoing and may be incomplete. If you have additional information or would like to learn more about a particular object, please email fc-museums-web@fivecolleges.edu.

2 Related Media Items

2005-9-7_V1t.jpg
2005-9-7_V1t.jpg
2005-9-7_V1t.jpg
2005-9-7_V2t.jpg
<< Viewing Record 155 of 1000 >>