Friday, May 21, 2010

Belle's Bells

Another Friday, another set of artifacts.  You'd think we'd be running out, but there's a lot of different types of artifacts on board!

Today I started working on Belle's collection of "flushloop" or "hawk" bells.  These little brass bells are made out of two pieces of metal with a little loop, probably in Holland (remember the map from earlier?).  Inside is an iron clapper, or bead for making them jingle.  Maybe by next week I'll have figured out how to put sound on the blog, and you can hear what one of them sounds like.


Here's one of the ~1300 bells we have.  It's the bottom, and you can see the little soundholes.  You can also see the engraved "bowtie" maker's mark, used to identify the person that made it.  There are several different marks, indicating that the bells were from different manufacturers.  They include this bowtie, a letter "S", and a cat.

As with so many Belle items, we have a lot of bells.  They're in big bags right now, and the goal is to get them retagged, rebagged, and lined up in trays, so that researchers can find them easily.  We also need to make sure any analysis we've done in the past can be linked with individual bells.

They start like this...

Then they're laid out on a table...

Because we're still working on these bells, I don't have pictures of the nice neat trays they're all going.  Next week I'll try to get you some sound from a bell, and also more pictures.

Anything you want to know about them?

Friday, May 14, 2010

Pewter

I've got two artifacts to share this Friday, both from the pewter collection.

There are several hundred pewter artifacts in the Belle collection, most of which are (or used to be) plates.

There are quite a few of these small pewter plates, which were mostly stacked in crates in Belle's hold.

The backs of the plates are pretty interesting.  They carry two marks: a maker's mark and a owner's mark.  Most are marked with the owner's mark LG, probably for Le Gros.  Le Gros was a merchant who was on the La Belle expedition, and he died early on after a rattlesnake bite.

Above, you can see the owner's mark (top), and the maker's mark (bottom).

The second artifact today is a pewter screw top.  Just like today, bottles needed removable, replaceable tops.  The bottles on the La Salle expedition have threaded pewter tops.