The next we hear about the Jenny Lind figurehead from the Nightingale clipper ship was 1994. Swedish maritime antique dealer Karl-Eric Svardskog heard about a large wooden carving shaped like a woman that a Swedish family had which had once been used as a scarecrow and went to se it. he found it in a hayloft with one arm sticking out where it had apparently been for a century.
Svardskog determined to find out about its origins and spent six years looking for clues. He was able to trace the carving to Boston artist John Mason and then matched the figurehead to publicity pictures of Jenny Lind back in her 1850s tour of the United States.
Of the four ships named after Jenny Lind, only the clipper ship built in the Portsmouth, New Hampshire (Eliot, Maine is in it) matched the timeline he was using.
But, a problem was that the Nightingale had sunk in the North Atlantic off the coast of Norway in 1894. Then, why would its figurehead still be around and not at the bottom of the ocean?
--Old B-Runner
No comments:
Post a Comment