Pitt Rivers Museum Named collector up to 1945 Beatrice Blackwood
[article ID:489]
Information included in this document:
Blackwood's relationship to her collection at the PRM
Profile of the collection: archaeology and ethnography; regional by continent; regional by country; classes; accession dates
Field collectors: data and profiling
Other owners: data and profiling
Information from Biographies PRM for individuals connected to the collection where available, and for Beatrice Blackwood
Beatrice Blackwood's relationship to her collection at the PRM
How many objects were donated by the collector in total?
[article ID:491]
3,620 objects (272 of which were not or may not have been collected by Blackwood in the field)
How many objects were collected in the field by the collector in total?
[article ID:492]
3,351 objects (only two of which were not also donated by Blackwood - two artificially deformed human skulls one from Melanesia and one from North America - given by her to the Department of Human Anatomy, Oxford University Museum of Natural History in 1931, and loaned to the PRM by them in 1940.)
How many objects were owned by the collector as an other owner in total?
[article ID:493]
3,359 objects (all of these were either field collected or donated by Blackwood as well)
How many objects are linked to the collector in these three ways, in total?
[article ID:494]
3,622 objects (including 3,620 objects donated by Blackwood, and a further two objects collected by Blackwood and loaned to the PRM by the OUMNH, see above)
Were other family members (i.e. with the same name) involved, if so, how many family members, in what relationship to the objects, how many objects?
[article ID:495]
None (But N.B. 68 objects collected and donated by Mrs. James Blackwood also known as Mrs. King were omitted from the following analysis. Beatrice Blackwood's father and brother were both called James, but the identity of Mrs. James Blackwood is uncertain and none of these records mention Beatrice Blackwood, so they have not been included in this analysis)
Profiling the collection as a whole
[article ID:496]
Archaeology and ethnography:
What percentage of the collection is archaeological and what percentage ethnographic?
What percentage of the collection is A/E?
Of the 3,622 total objects connected to Blackwood, 3,138 (86%) are definitely ethnographic, 246 (7%) are definitely archaeological and 238 (7%) are either ethnographic or archaeological.
Continents:
[article ID:497]
What percentage of the collection as a whole is attributed to Africa, America, Asia, Australia, Europe, Oceania, Unknown respectively?
Africa 4 objects (0%)
America 538 objects (15%)
Asia 23 objects (1%)
Australia 0 objects (0%)
Europe 481 objects (13%)
Oceania 2,596 objects (71%)
Unknown 2 objects (0%) (1 record: a cow horn tube with wooden stopper from the collection of Arthur Thompson, donated by Beatrice Blackwood in 1935)
NB these figures add up to 3,644 objects in total, indicated that 22 objects are attributed to more than one Continent.
Of the total 2,596 objects from Oceania, 2,468 are from Melanesia and 60 from Polynesia
Of the total 537 objects from America, 203 are from Middle America, 333 from North America, and 1 (probably) from South America
Of the total 481 objects from Europe, 274 are from the UK, 128 from Germany, 19 from Malta, 15 from France, 12 from Turkey (other European countries are also represented, see below)
What percentage of the archaeological collection is attributed to Africa, America, Asia, Australia, Europe, Oceania, Unknown respectively?
[article ID:498]
Africa 0 objects (0%)
America 137 objects (28%) of which 2 objects are A/E
Asia 0 objects (0%)
Australia 0 objects (0%)
Europe 100 objects (21%) of which 1 object is A/E
Oceania 247 objects (51%) of which 235 objects are A/E
Unknown 0 objects (0%)
The vast majority of the archaeology objects from Oceania are classed as either archaeology or ethnography (nearly all stone tools from PNG). Looked at another way, all but three of the objects that are classed as archaeological or ethnographic are from Oceania, and make up all but 12 of the total archaeological objects from this region. Because of this, we have differentiated the definite archaeology objects from the archaeology or ethnography objects for Oceania only in the chart.
N.B. we have only included regions with a positive value in the following chart (Africa, Asia, Australia and Unknown are not included)
What percentage of the ethnographic collection is attributed to Africa, America, Asia, Australia, Europe, Oceania, Unknown respectively?
[article ID:499]
Africa 4 objects (0%)
America 403 objects (12%) of which 2 are A/E
Asia 23 objects (1%)
Australia 0 objects (0%)
Europe 382 objects (11%) of which 1 is A/E
Oceania 2,584 objects (76%) of which 235 are A/E
Unknown 2 objects (0%)
N.B. we have only included regions with a positive percentage value in the following chart (Australia is not included; neither is Africa nor Unknown, since they account for less than 1% of the ethnography collection and their presence in the chart does not effect the other percentages given)
We have differentiated the definite ethnography objects from the archaeology or ethnography objects for Oceania only in this graph
By combining the above data, how is the collection as a whole divided between archaeology, ethnography, and region?
[article ID:500]
America archaeology 137 objects
America ethnography 403 objects
Europe archaeology 100 objects
Europe ethnography 382 objects
Oceania archaeology 12 objects
Oceania ethnography 2,349 objects
Oceania eth/arch 235 objects
Asian ethnography 23 objects
N.B. we have only included regions with a positive percentage value in the following chart (Australia is not included; Asian archaeology is not included; neither is Africa nor Unknown since they account for less than 1% of the ethnography collection and their presence in the chart does not effect the other percentages given)
In this chart, like the ones above, we have differentiated the Oceanic records classed as A/E, because otherwise these 235 records would have been counted twice (within the archaeology totals and ethnography totals respectively).
Countries:
[article ID:501]
Based on our analysis of the countries represented in each of the named collector's collections (see file named collectors/all collectors/countries and named collectors):
The following countries are represented in Blackwood's collection, including the two objects collected by her and donated by the OUMNH, one from the USA and the other from PNG (see above)
Country |
No. Objects |
% total collection (3,622 objects) |
Papua New Guinea |
2,571 |
70.98 |
Solomon Islands / PNG |
386 |
10.66 |
USA |
288 |
7.95 |
UK |
274 |
7.56 |
Mexico |
203 |
5.6 |
Germany |
128 |
3.53 |
Canada |
46 |
1.27 |
Malta |
18 |
0.49 |
France |
15 |
0.41 |
New Zealand |
15 |
0.41 |
Turkey |
12 |
0.33 |
The Netherlands |
10 |
0.28 |
Austria |
7 |
|
Japan |
7 |
|
Poland (possibly Germany) |
7 |
|
Unknown (or Continent only) |
7 |
|
Denmark |
6 |
|
Ireland |
5 |
|
Fiji |
4 |
|
Greece |
2 |
|
Belgium |
1 |
|
China (ex. Hong Kong) |
1 |
|
British India |
1 |
|
Italy |
1 |
|
Pakistan |
1 |
|
Sweden |
1 |
|
Yemen |
1 |
|
Total number of countries 28
Total number of objects 4,018 (the discrepancy of 329 objects compared to the 3,622 total number given above is due to objects that are provenanced to more than one country)
N.B. In the chart below, percentages have been worked out according to the total number 4018, not 3,622, and we have only included down to Malta (0.45% of 4,018 objects), and the other countries below Malta have been put together under 'Other' which represents 3% of the 4018 objects.
Classes:
Using our data below (all named collectors/named collectors top 20s/BB top 10s)
Blackwood as donor, top 20 classes and countries
Rank |
Class |
Number of objects |
1 |
Ornament & Bead |
724 |
2 |
Tool (definite) |
662 |
3 |
Currency |
347 |
4 |
Weapon (definite) |
332 |
5 |
Trade |
329 |
6 |
Clothing |
266 |
7 |
Pottery |
247 |
8 |
Specimen |
237 |
9 |
Food |
227 |
10 |
Animalia |
224 |
11 |
Tool or weapon |
219 |
12 |
Vessel |
213 |
13 |
Basketry |
208 |
14 |
Music |
154 |
15 |
Figure |
142 |
16 |
Textile |
141 |
17 |
Toy & Game |
140 |
18 |
Children |
132 |
19 |
Barkcloth |
119 |
20 |
Religion |
116 |
Accession dates:
[article ID:502]
Profile the collection by decade (any particular decade can be further studied at a later date if necessary)
Possibility of profiling particular classes by decade
N.B. for the purposes of this table, where Solomon Islands and PNG have both been entered in the country field, the object is included in PNG only; when only Solomon Islands has been entered, the object is included in 'Other'.
Date |
Total Objects |
PNG |
USA |
UK |
Mexico |
Germany |
Canada |
Other |
1920 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1921 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1922 |
28 |
|
|
|
|
22 |
|
6 |
1923 |
16 |
|
|
|
|
2 |
|
14 |
1924 |
100 |
|
|
|
|
100 |
|
|
1925 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1926 |
28 |
|
2 |
|
|
|
26 |
|
1927 |
38 |
|
36 |
|
|
|
2 |
|
1928 |
103 |
|
97 |
|
|
|
6 |
|
1929 |
13 |
1 |
1 |
|
|
|
|
11 |
1930 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1931 |
439 |
415 |
|
|
|
|
|
24 |
1932 |
2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
2 |
1933 |
6 |
4 |
|
|
|
|
|
2 |
1934 |
7 |
7 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1935 |
43 |
5 |
19 |
1 |
|
|
3 |
15 |
1936 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1937 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1938 |
2,455 |
2,137 |
60 |
35 |
203 |
4 |
7 |
9 |
1939 |
68 |
1 |
67 |
|
|
|
|
|
1940 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1941 |
141 |
|
5 |
110 |
|
|
|
26 |
1942 |
7 |
1 |
|
3 |
|
|
2 |
1 |
1943 |
123 |
|
|
123 |
|
|
|
|
1944 |
3 |
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
2 |
1945 |
1 |
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
|
N.B. in the lower chart we have adjusted the massive 1938 reading to 490 objects which is WRONG but we wanted to clarify the pattern between 0 and 100 objects
Blackwood Collection: Field Collectors
[article ID:503]
Name |
Field Collector |
Other Owner? |
|
Where |
When |
No. |
What |
|
B.A. Reuter possibly Bertha Ann Reuter |
Santa Clara, New Mexico |
By 1939 |
1 |
Pottery tool, stone polisher |
- |
Pupils of the Hindman Settlement School, Kentucky |
Kentucky, Appalachian Mts. |
By 1935 |
16 |
Stone arrow/spear heads |
Ann Cobb, a teacher at Hindman Settlement School |
L.G.Vial |
PNG (some from Tami Island) |
By 1937 (d. 1938) |
44 |
Domestic utensils and tools, fishing accessories, ornaments, bags, skirts, canoe model, music inst. |
- |
Francis Edgar Williams |
PNG, Orokolo Bay |
By 1937 |
1 |
Childâs rattle |
- |
S. Moon |
PNG |
By 1936 (d. 1938) |
1 |
Wooden drum (musical instrument) |
- |
Ernest John Wauchope |
PNG |
By 1937 (d. 1938) |
21 |
Food accessories, tobacco accessories, ornaments, music inst, stone axe |
Ernest John Wauchope |
Mrs Ernest John Wauchope |
PNG |
By 1939 |
7 |
Shell ornaments |
Mrs Ernest John Wauchope |
Mr Murphy |
PNG |
By 1937
(d. 1938) |
1 |
Humming top (music/game) |
- |
K.W.T. Bridge |
PNG |
1936-7
(d.1938) |
5 |
4 clubs, 1 pottery vessel |
- |
Unknown Miners |
PNG |
By 1936 (d. 1938) |
1 |
Ground stone adze blade |
Given to BB by Mike Mather at Wau on 27.7.1936 |
Mr Clark |
PNG |
By 1937 (d. 1938) |
2 |
Ground stone adze blades |
Given to BB by Mr Clark at Surprise Creek 21.1.1937 |
R.H. Tutty |
PNG/Solomon Is |
By 1933
By 1930 |
6
1 |
2 stone adzes, 1 axe, woven belt, shell currency
Shell neck pendant |
- |
Evan Alexander Wisdom |
PNG |
By 1931 |
4 |
Loom, 2 skulls, basket |
Evan Alexander Wisdom |
Unnamed men (working in Smith's pit, Oxon) |
England |
Dec 1941 |
1 |
17thC clay pipe bowl |
- |
John Thomson HMS Rattlesnake |
PNG/Solomon Is |
1846-50 (d.1935) |
6 |
Lime accessories, ornaments, string tunic |
From the collection of Arthur Thomson |
E.W. Leggatt [or?E.W.Leggats] |
PNG |
By 1937
(d.1938) |
11 |
7 stone adze, 1 cooking pot, 3 wooden shields |
Leggatt/Leggats |
Mike Mather |
PNG |
By 1936 (d.1938) |
1 |
Cassowary bone dagger |
|
Mr Jenyns |
PNG |
By 1937 (d.1938) |
7 |
2 stone adze, bag, currency, ornament, 2 cord |
- |
Mrs Schroeder |
PNG, New Ireland, Manus |
By 1937 (d.1938) |
9 |
Shell ornaments |
- |
total |
|
|
146 |
|
|
Blackwood Collection: Other Owners
[article ID:504]
N.B. only those other owners who did not collect the material in the field are included in this table, otherwise they are included in the Field Collector's table above
Name |
Other Owner |
Field Collector? |
|
Where |
When |
No. |
What |
|
Mr Ayer, Indian Trading Post |
Onamia, Minnesota, USA |
By 1939 |
1 |
Lacrosse stick without netting |
Given to BB by Ayer in field |
Maria Chino |
Acoma, New Mexico, USA |
By 1927 (d.1939) |
2 |
Silver metal finger rings |
Given to BB by Chino, Acoma woman, in 1927 |
Ann Cobb (see Field Collector's table) |
Kentucky, Appalacian Mts. |
By 1935 |
16 |
Stone arrow/spear heads |
Pupils of the Hindman Settlement School, Kentucky |
used by Yawa of Andarora village |
PNG |
By 4.2.1937 |
1 |
Stone flaked tool |
|
Bought from visiting mission boy's wife |
PNG |
By Feb 1937 |
1 |
Fibre knitted bag |
Bought from boy by BB |
Arthur Thomson collection |
Shetland Is
?
the Netherlands
Pakistan
?S.America |
By 1935
By 1935
By 1935
By 1935
By 1935 |
1
2
10?
1
1 |
Stone tool
Horn vessel
Tinder box matches
Medical accessory
Bird figure vessel |
?BB |
Arthur Thomson collection |
PNG/Solomon Is |
1846-50 (d.1935) |
6 |
Lime accessories, ornaments, string tunic |
John Thomson HMS Rattlesnake |
Thomas Henry Huxley, John Thomson, Arthur Thomson |
PNG |
c.1850 (d.1942) |
1 |
Watercolour painting of natives by Huxley |
Given to John Thomson, given to Arthur Thomson, given to BB |
Adolf Wiedemann |
Germany |
By 1924 |
83 |
Banknotes, currency |
(Bought by BB/PRM 1924) |
R.H. Tutty |
Solomon Is |
By 1931 |
1 |
Net bag |
Given by Tutty in Oct 1930 |
Nanepâ's Mother |
PNG |
By 7.1930 |
1 |
Bark flap with shells |
BB |
Nawi |
PNG |
By 1931 |
1 |
Narrow cane belt |
BB |
Gordon Thomas |
PNG |
By 1931 |
1 |
Model canoe outrigger |
Given by Thomas Jan 1930 |
Mr F. Archer |
PNG Anchorite Island |
By 1931 |
1 |
Carved wooden canoe baler |
Given by F. Archer of Buka |
T. Skiffington |
PNG Admiralty Islands |
By 1931 |
3 |
2 stone axes, 1 decorated comb |
Given by T. Skiffington |
Siejonna and Nerisi |
PNG |
By Nov 1929 |
2 |
Plaited grasswork armlets |
Given to BB by S&N Nov 1929 |
Lutheran Mission Trade Store, Finschhafen |
PNG |
By May 1937 |
24 |
Fishing hooks |
Bought by ?BB |
Assistant District Officer, Gasmata |
PNG Gasmata |
By May 1937 |
1 |
Carved wooden headrest |
Given to BB by the ADO in Gasmata |
W. Lodder |
England, Kent |
(c.1887)
By 1940 |
14 |
12 leather working tools, 1 leather specimen, 1 apprenticeship indenture |
|
W.E. Thorpe [White?], an antique dealer, who purchased them from Professor Thorpe |
W.Africa |
By 1940 |
4 |
Coiled basketwork trays with geometric designs |
|
Mike Mather |
PNG |
By 1936 (d. 1938) |
1 |
Ground stone adze blade |
Unknown miners (see above) |
F.C. Halliday |
UK, ?Somerset |
By 1943 |
117 |
Lace accessories (bobbins) |
âbought for the donor [BB] from the shop of F.C. Halliday, Tauntonâ |
Johny Weitchpec |
Weitchpec, N.W. California, USA |
By 1927 |
1 |
Frying pan for salmon |
Bought from JW by BB in the field |
Magnin |
PNG, New Britain |
By June-Aug 1937 |
162 |
Various items including 145 obsidian flakes |
Bought from Magnin by BB in the field |
Man from Selua village |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
2 |
Fishing spears |
Sold to BB in the field |
Luluai of Selua village |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1927 |
2 |
Stone axes |
Sold to BB in the field |
Luluai of Kalapen village |
PNG, New Britain |
By Aug 1937 |
1 |
Netting tool |
Sold to BB in the field |
Luluai of Yalobo village |
PNG, New Britain |
By July 1937 |
5 |
2 stone axes, stone adze, feather head ornament, stone disc |
Sold to BB in the field |
Luluai of Aviklo village |
PNG, New Britain |
By July 1937 |
2 |
Stone adzes |
Sold to BB in the field |
Luluai and Tultul of Alomos village |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
3 |
2 bone spoons, plaited arm ornament |
Sold to BB in the field |
Luluai Paiyon |
PNG, New Britain |
By June-Aug 1937 |
2 |
Barkcloth and human skull with lower jaw |
Sold to BB in the field |
Luluai of Mibolok village |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
1 |
Barkcloth |
Sold to BB in the field |
Audbo Luluai of Aliwa village |
PNG, New Britain |
By June-July 1937 |
3 |
Barkcloth beater, 2 perforated stone discs |
Sold to BB in the field |
Luluai of Kalagen village |
PNG, New Britain |
By Aug 1937 |
5 |
Shell arm ornament, 4 shell ear ring |
Sold to BB in the field |
Luluai Wagal |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
2 |
Human skulls without lower jaw |
Sold to BB in the field |
Aiyal |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
3 |
2 hunting slings, 1 rattle |
Sold to BB in the field |
Rulu |
PNG, New Britain |
By Aug 1937 |
1 |
Hunting net |
Sold to BB in the field |
Lealang |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
2 |
Bark for string and piece of finished string |
Sold to BB in the field |
Awlaio |
PNG, New Britain |
By July 1937 |
1 |
Cassowary bone dagger |
Sold to BB in the field |
Boys |
PNG, New Britain |
By July 1937 |
1 |
Stone axe |
Sold to BB in the field |
Doctor 'boy' of Senori village |
PNG, New Britain |
By July 1937 |
1 |
Stone adze |
Sold to BB in the field |
Pemlik, doctor 'boy' of Senori village |
PNG, New Britain |
By Aug 1937 |
1 |
Human skull without lower jaw |
Sold to BB in the field |
Tunegit, doctor boy of Aviklo village |
PNG, New Britain |
By Aug 1937 |
3 |
Human skulls, 1 with lower jaw, 2 without |
Sold to BB in the field |
Man from Parua Hamlet |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
1 |
Stone adze |
Sold to BB in the field |
Owasa |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
1 |
Stone adze |
Sold to BB in the field |
Siar |
PNG, New Britain |
By June - July 1937 |
5 |
3 hammer stones, net bag, string with shell beads |
Sold to BB in the field |
Aririo or Magnin (also included under Magnin above) |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
1 |
Stone tool |
Sold to BB in the field |
Man from number 1 island |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
1 |
Cassowary bone spoon |
Sold to BB in the field |
Tultul of Alomos village |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
2 |
Stone beaters |
Sold to BB in the field |
Tultul Yawo |
PNG, New Britain |
By Aug 1937 |
1 |
Human skull with lower jaw |
Sold to BB in the field |
Tultul Ambon |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
3 |
Human skulls, 1 without lower jaw, 2 with |
Sold to BB in the field |
Monkey |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
1 |
Polished shell blade |
Sold to BB in the field |
Alip |
PNG, New Britain |
By July 1937 |
3 |
Decorated shell token, 2 pieces of wood for fire making |
Sold to BB in the field |
Owas |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
12 (3) |
3 skirts of bunches of dried grass |
Sold to BB in the field |
Lipisio |
PNG, New Britain |
By June-July 1937 |
2 |
Barkcloth, cassowary feather waist ornament |
Sold to BB in the field |
Old man of Alomos village |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
2 |
Barkcloth lengths (belt) |
Sold to BB in the field |
Audbo, Luluai of Aliwa village |
PNG, New Britain |
By June- July 1937 |
3 |
Stone barkcloth beater, 2 perforated stone discs |
Sold to BB in the field |
Longlong |
PNG, New Britain |
By July 1937 |
2 |
Plaited arm ornaments |
Sold to BB in the field |
Rulo |
PNG, New Britain |
By Aug 1937 |
3 |
Neck ornament, 2 leg ornaments |
Sold to BB in the field |
Kelekelme authorised sale by Magnin (also included in Magnin above) |
PNG, New Britain |
By July 1937 |
1 |
Father's skull with lower jaw, decorated with ochre |
|
Alola |
PNG, New Britain |
By July 1937 |
2 |
Bundle of plant fibre and barkcloth |
Sold to BB in the field |
People of Magien village |
PNG, New Britain |
By Aug 1937 |
2 |
Wooden canoe paddles |
Sold to BB in the field |
Boy, Moewehafen |
PNG, New Britain |
By July 1937 |
1 |
Wooden paddle |
Sold to BB in the field |
Boy, Moewehafen |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
1 |
Model of fish figure |
Sold to BB in the field |
Small boy, Moewehafen |
PNG, New Britain |
By June 1937 |
2 |
Single bamboo flutes |
Sold to BB in the field |
Sources of the collection
[article ID:505]
As mentioned before, only two objects connected to Blackwood were not donated to the PRM by her: two artificially deformed human skulls one (1940.4.04) from New Britain, Melanesia and one (1940.4.06) from Arizona, North America, given by her to the Department of Human Anatomy, Oxford University Museum of Natural History in 1931, and loaned to the PRM by them in 1940.
Other Owners
[article ID:506]
What proportion of the collection as a whole did they own?
551 objects (15.21%) have a person in the other owners field who is not BB, however the vast majority of these people owned the object/s in the field before selling them to BB, therefore she is both the field collector and the source.
Of this total number, Magnin sold Blackwood 162 objects (4.47% of total collection); 117 objects were bought from F.C. Halliday (3.23% of the total collection); 83 objects were bought from Adolf Wiedemann (2.29% of the total collection); and 24 objects were bought from the Lutheran Mission Trade Store in Finschafen (0.66% of the total collection). Objects in the latter three groups were not definitely bought by Blackwood.
Field collectors for the collection
[article ID:507]
What proportion of the collection as a whole did they collect?
143 objects (3.95%) in the collection were definitely collected in the field by someone other than BB.
Of this number, L.G. Vial collected 44 objects (1.21% of total collection) and Ernest John Wauchope collected 21 objects (0.56% of total collection).
Divide all the field collectors for the collection into:
Those with no known object-related connection to the PRM other than via this collection:
[article ID:508]
B.A. Reuter possibly Bertha Ann Reuter
Pupils of the Hindman Settlement School, Kentucky
L.G. Vial
S. Moon
Ernest John Wauchope
Mr Murphy
K.W.T. Bridge
Unknown miners
Mr Clark
R.H. Tutty
Evan Alexander Wisdom
E.W. Leggatt [or ?E.W. Leggats]
Mike Mather
Mr Jenyns
Mrs Ernest John Wauchope
Mrs Schroeder
Mr Ayer
Maria Chino
Ann Cobb
Yawa of Andarora village
Thomas Henry Huxley
Adolf Wiedemann
R.H. Tutty
Nanepâ's mother
Nawi
Gordon Thomas
Mr F. Archer
T. Skiffington
Siejonna and Nerisi
Lutheran Mission Trade Store
W. Lodder
W.E. White
Professor Thorpe
Mike Mather
F.C. Halliday
Johny Weitchpec
Magnin
Aiyal
Rulu
Lealang
Awlaio
Pemlik
Tunegit
Owasa
Siar
Aririo
Monkey
Alip
Owas
Lipisio
Longlong
Rulo
Kelekelme
Alola
Those who are also a PRM source of material collected or thought to have been collected in the field by themselves:
[article ID:509]
Francis Edgar Williams
Those who are also a PRM source of material collected or thought to have been collected in the field by others:
[article ID:510]
Arthur Thomson
Those who are also a field collector or possible field collector named in PRM collections other than Blackwood or her own (the latter defined by these individuals being PRM source:
[article ID:511]
Francis Edgar Williams
John Thompson
? Arthur Thomson
? T.H. Huxley
Statistical significance of individuals with direct connection to the collection
[article ID:512]
What percentage of the collection as a whole came from each individual represented in the collection?
See above section, where we have calculated this for the most significant contributors only
How many of the individuals connected with the collection are associated with over 10% of the collection / of PRM collection as a whole up to 1945?
None:
Francis Edgar Williams collected ten objects from PNG and also donated them, 1 in 1936 and 9 from the Fly River area in 1937. He also collected a further two objects in the field that came to the PRM, one given by Blackwood in 1937 and one given by Dr Cairns in 1936.
T.H. Huxley is the possible field collector for one other object in the Museum, a club that came as part of the Pitt Rivers founding collection from HMS Rattlesnake; it could have come to Pitt Rivers either through Huxley (the ship's doctor) or Owen Stanley (the ship's commander).
In addition to the six objects given by Blackwood, John Thomson is the possible field collector for two further objects in the Museum, two Melanesian human skulls loaned by the OUMNH in 1940. (N.B. another John Thompson, Arthur's brother, not his father, is the source for six objects in the collection)
Arthur Thomson was the most significant person linked to the Blackwood collection for the PRM as a whole. He is the possible field collector for 61 objects given via his daughters in 1945, and an other owner for a further 47 of these objects (his daughters gave a total of 108 objects previously owned by their parents). He is a PRM source for 80 objects and an other owner for a further 79 objects in total (32 on top of the 47 given by his daughters). In total, Arthur Thompson is linked to 220 objects at the PRM (61 as possible field collector, 80 more as source, and 79 more as other owner). This means he is linked to just 1.22% of the whole PRM collections up to 1945 (using Objects PRM uo to 1945 1.12.03)
Relevant information from field collectors tables
K.W.T. Bridge |
No |
5 |
PNG |
By 1937 |
Colonial Service |
via BB |
|
Mr Clark |
No |
2 |
PNG |
By 1937 |
? |
via BB |
|
Mr Jenyns |
No |
7 |
PNG |
By 1937 |
? |
via BB |
|
E.W. Leggatt [or ?E.W. Leggats] |
No |
11 |
PNG |
By 1937 |
? |
via BB |
|
Mike Mather |
No |
1 |
PNG |
By 1936 |
? |
via BB |
|
S. Moon |
No |
1 |
PNG |
By 1936 |
? |
via BB |
|
Mr Murphy |
No |
1 |
PNG |
By 1937 |
? |
via BB |
|
B.A. Reuter possibly Bertha Ann Reuter |
Poss |
1 |
USA |
By 1939 |
?Academic |
via BB |
|
Mrs Schroeder |
No |
9 |
PNG |
By 1937 |
? |
via BB |
|
?Arthur Thomson |
PRMS Yes |
60 |
Guatemala UK |
By 1945 |
Academic / Nat Hist |
Oxford based ?OU Educated Museum Prof Clubs & Socs: BAAS [1894] |
|
?John Thomson, HMS Rattlesnake |
No |
3 |
Solomons Kiribati |
By 1850? |
RN Medic |
via granddaughter. Father of Arthur Thomson |
|
R.H. Tutty |
No |
7 |
PNG [Solomons] |
By 1933 |
Religious / ?Mission / Amateur Archaeol or Anthrop |
via BB |
|
L.G. Vial |
Yes |
44 |
PNG |
By 1937 |
Colonial Service |
via BB |
Ernest John Wauchope |
Yes |
20 |
PNG |
By 1937 |
Planter |
via BB |
|
Mrs Ernest John Wauchope |
No |
7 |
PNG |
By 1939 |
Planter |
via BB |
|
Francis Edgar Williams |
Yes |
11 |
PNG |
By 1937 |
Anthrop / Colonial Service |
OU Educated. Diploma student PRM Oxford based |
|
Compiled by Frances Larson 2003