A couple of days ago, on my post about stooping, Ellen commented, "You are at war with yourself. One part of you loves to bring stuff home and the other part hates clutter."
That is completely true. Yesterday, after cleaning out that dark space under the stairs, I submitted all the information needed to arrange a hazardous waste pickup by the council. In other words, I inched forward on getting some stuff out of the house.
But as I was walking home from work, I found this (above)! A box full of antique clay smoking pipes, lying on the sidewalk in the same place where I found the bottles and the wet books. Someone is definitely having a clear-out, but I couldn't believe they'd just throw these pipes away. When I saw the box on its side, the pipes strewn across the sidewalk, I actually exclaimed out loud, "ARE YOU KIDDING ME?!"
Though not uncommon, clay pipes like this are quite old, going at least as far back as the Victorians and sometimes hundreds of years earlier. They featured long stems, and were inexpensive and made to be disposable. They're often found in the Thames by mudlarkers, but usually not on a sidewalk in West Hampstead!
It's much more common to find broken pieces of stem than it is to find a cup. I've found some stems myself, and years ago, my friend Sally gave me a cup that she bought from an antique dealer at Greenwich Market -- so I'd have at least one. Now look at them all!
I scooped the pipes back into the box and brought it home, so I could examine them more closely. The box was numbered -- 17 -- and there was a note inside: "17/ Pipes 13, 1/2 of 1882." Perhaps these are inventory or lot numbers, or is 1882 a year? Who knows.
Most commonly, clay pipes feature a simple cup with maybe some ribs or basic patterns around the outside. But some of the ones in this box are really unusual. Here's one that looks like a grinning man with a big nose.
This one has a stag's head, with a sun or a radiating eye above it...
...and this one has a sort of faux wood-grain texture.
This one may be my favorite, with images of giraffes on the cup. On one side of the stem it says "The Giraffe," and on the other is part of an address, "-ton Place, SE." The Giraffe was a pub on Penton Place in Kennington, in southeast London. I feel certain this pipe must have come from there.
Anyway, I have no idea what to do with them all. I can't even say for sure that they're all old or authentic -- people do make modern versions -- but I think they are. I wrote to the Museum of London asking them if they'd like to take a look. I don't know whether any of these are so unusual they're worthy of special preservation.
If not, maybe I can sell them on eBay or donate them to a pipe-collector's club. I just want them to wind up in the right hands, and not go out with the trash!
What an interesting find. You should keep going past the place where you found them.....you never know what else might turn up! I had a look on Ebay; they are hardly worth the trouble of putting them up for sale!
ReplyDeleteEnjoy the sun today. It is my son's birthday. Zoom with the family later. Last year we were out for lunch with them all.
I know -- I wonder what else has been put out at that curb that I've missed?! If I sold them I'd probably sell the whole box at once, rather than one by one.
DeleteCool find and I hope they find a home in which they are appreciated.
ReplyDeleteWe'll see!
DeleteGreat pipe collection. I would say they are Victorian. I have often found these pipes broken when repairing field drains and in old gardens. Notice one of them is from Cork. Irish Navvies perhaps. Any canals nearby?
ReplyDeleteThere's also another one that says "Irish Cutty." Definitely an Irish connection.
DeleteWhat a brilliant find Steve! I sometimes find little bits of clay pipes when digging my vegetable plot but never anything like these beauties. And how spooky that the grinning man looks so much like you!
ReplyDeleteEven with the top of his head missing, I feel certain he has more hair than me.
DeleteOh, Steve! Should I ever be reduced to the gutter, not a star in sight, I'll make sure it's in your vicinity. You'll take me home, rinse me off, take a photo and show me off to your esteemed readership as your latest find. How much do you charge for your now vacant occupancy of your understairs cupboard? I'll pay in kind.
ReplyDeleteU
Ha! I've so far managed to resist bringing found PEOPLE home, but I suppose there's a first time for everything. :)
DeleteGood for you!!!! You recognize importance in a throwaway world. To the right person, those will be valued. You care enough to look for that person. The world would benefit from more like you.
ReplyDeleteI just can't imagine why someone would discard irreplaceable, historic items.
DeleteYou should save them and give them as little souvenir gifts to your friends!
ReplyDeleteI certainly have enough of them!
DeleteThat is a find! Valuable in historic terms
ReplyDeleteI agree! Definitely not suitable for the rubbish bin.
DeleteThose are fantastic. I think I'd take the best of the lot and have them placed in a shadow box to display.
ReplyDeleteYeah, if I keep any of them myself, that's what I'll probably do -- have them mounted and framed somehow.
DeleteWow, what a great find. I'm in Wisconsin and so far away from an ocean , but I love to beach hunt when I can. London must be a wonderful place for a treasure-seeker. I'm a tad envious. Well, more than a TAD! lol
ReplyDeleteBeachcombing on the shores of the Thames is known as "mudlarking," and there's plenty of interesting stuff to be found there, from medieval pottery to modern plastic detritus. You need a license to mudlark, though.
DeleteWell, I too would have brought home that box. That's a treasure! The grinning man looks like Punch of Punch and Judy. If a museum isn't interested, I'd find a way to display (shadow box) the most unusual ... or I'd sell them and retire in style.
ReplyDeleteI think you're right about Punch! I didn't make that connection but that's definitely who it is. Selling them might buy me a hamburger but I don't think it will fund my retirement. LOL
DeleteIf the museum isn't interested in any of them, definitely try to sell them! Listen to me giving you advice. Do what you like with this incredible find, Steve. And good for you!
ReplyDeleteI don't know what else I'd do with them except list them on eBay. We'll see what happens!
DeleteSteve Reed, single-handedly rescuing material culture. You could arrange them in a shadow box picture frame if you had to keep them, but yes, pt them for sale on line and find them good homes.
ReplyDeleteYou don't look anything like the grinning man. That Punch, isn't it?
I think that is indeed Punch! They'd look good in a frame, wouldn't they?
DeleteThat is such a cool and interesting find. I am looking forward to hearing what the Museum of London has to say about it.
ReplyDeleteMe too. I imagine they get offers of lots and lots of stuff, so they may not be interested at all, but a few of these seem very special.
DeleteWell, they could go under your stairwell since it's empty now...and clean!
ReplyDeleteThat's true! I could just leave it there for the next tenant to deal with -- and probably put in the trash. So, yeah, not the best solution.
DeleteWhat an excellent find!I wouldn’t have been able to resist either.
ReplyDeleteWe'll see how I can dispose of them! Stay tuned!
DeleteYou find the oddest things! Who would have thought?! Hope you can find them a home!
ReplyDeleteI certainly never expected it!
DeleteThose pipes are quite the find, Steve!
ReplyDeleteI've often wondered how anyone can part with some of the obvious family heirlooms at weekend garage sales. Those are treasures! But I now realize that when they've travelled out here for a weekend to clear out the home of someone who's died unexpectedly, and they have to get back to work on Monday in another city halfway across the country, and they already have a full house of their own stuff, they don't have much choice. From the outside it looks like they don't appreciate what they've got, but I bet there's often more to it than that. And it's good for the rest of us! -Kate
Yeah, you're right -- sometimes discarding things is simply borne of desperation, especially when there's a lot of stuff to deal with.
DeleteLondon has the best cast offs. I'm surprised that any of them are not broken. Do you have wall space for a display rack for the ones that are really interesting?
ReplyDeleteA few of them are broken. They were literally spilled across the pavement, so I imagine they'd been treated roughly before I got to them. But you're right -- it's surprising that more of them weren't badly damaged.
DeleteNow that you have all of those pipes, perhaps your secret garden could use a cannabis sativa plant. 😎😎😎
ReplyDeleteHa! I do NOT need trouble with the cops, thank you very much. :)
DeleteWhat a fascinating find! You will have to let us know what the museum says. I would thing the Museum of London would be a perfect home for them especially if they can link some of them to actual places in the city.
ReplyDeleteI had the strangest reaction when I opened your site and saw that first photo. I could swear I had seen that photo or one similar to it before. I still feel that way. How odd.
Hmmmmm...well, I guess it's not a very innovative photo. It probably looks like a lot of pictures you HAVE seen in one place or another!
Deleteoh Steve, this made me laugh. but it is a very cool find.
ReplyDeleteI thought of you and your remark immediately!
DeleteSO JEALOUS!!! Those are magnificent and you did not even have to put on wellies and go knee deep is Thames mud!
ReplyDeleteEasiest mudlarking ever!
DeleteThose pipes are quite beautiful, and it wouldn't surprise me one bit if you were to discover that they are quite valuable. Perhaps you should should choose 3-5 of your favorites before letting the rest go to a good home. They'd make an interesting mantel display.
ReplyDeleteIf the museum wants any of them I would happily donate them, and if they don't I'll probably keep the most interesting ones and sell the rest in bulk on eBay. We'll see!
DeleteMy Grandad smoked a clay pipe all of his life. He used to come to stay with us sometimes to give my dad's sister a break. He would sit an puff this pipe whilst sitting under the budgie cage, how that budgie didn't die I'll never know. lol
ReplyDeleteI would think some of those could be worth a few pound. Wish I'd found them.
Briony
x
Poor budgie! Second-hand smoke! I didn't realize people were still smoking clay pipes so recently. (Not THAT recent, I know, but probably in the '50s or '60s, right?)
DeleteWhat a find. I'd be intrigued about the one with Cork written on it (in your big picture).
ReplyDeleteI haven't even emptied the box and studied them all in detail, but there seem to be a few with an Irish connection.
DeleteWhat a wonderful find. I have heard of them but I haven't seen them close up. It will be interesting to find out what you eventually do with them.
ReplyDeleteApparently clay pipes were also used during the Civil War in the USA, and I'd be surprised if they didn't make their way to Australia with the colonists.
DeleteI had no idea about those pipes until I watched “Detectorists”— one of the characters (amateur archaeologist) has a can he drops the pipe stems in when he finds them, which seems to be often.
ReplyDeleteI’d never seen nor heard of them till then.
Yeah, the freakin' stems are EVERYWHERE, especially on the shores of the Thames.
DeleteWhat a cool find! I can't imagine throwing out antiques that are so interesting.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
Me neither! If something has lasted so long, it seems to be deserving of more respect.
DeleteThose are fascinating and beautiful!
ReplyDelete