Nautical instrument maker’s shop sign

£2,500

In stock

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[Shop Sign].

[ANONYMOUS]
[New England,
twentieth century].
Heavily polychromed pine in the form of an over-sized octant, inscribed on the 'T' bar: J. Kinros[s], [Plymo]uth.
1397 by 1118mm. (55 by 44 inches).
14862

To scale:

notes:

notes:

Given the long nautical history of Massachusetts, a surprisingly small number of the Massachusetts craftsmen working before the end of the eighteenth century produced nautical scientific instruments. The Bedford Whaling Museum lists only three in their archives; Josiah Muller, Joseph Halsey and John Dupee. Silvio A. Bedini, who made a considerable study of the 'Early American Scientific Instruments and Their Makers', in his book of 1964, points out that the earliest manufac...

bibliography:

bibliography:

Bedini, 'Early American Scientific Instruments and Their Makers', 1964.

provenance:

provenance: