More...Tug-O-War
For those of you who just can’t get enough Tug-Of-War memorabilia…you’re in luck here at Net54…there have been two new developments related to this copper plated plaque…And I'm sure many have been laying awake nights wondering if there would be any new updates about Tug-Of-War items...





First of all I received the plaque in hand and it’s signed and dated by the sculptor…As someone who researches this stuff...those two attributes are outstanding intel…The sculptor was Thomas Swaffield-Brown...who I learned was the Art Director at William Hutton & Sons in Birmingham and Sheffield England from 1880-1914. William Hutton & Sons produced decorative metal ware items and may have been the Reed and Barton of England. Logically the plaque would have been produced by William Hutton & Sons since Brown was the Art Director there for 34 years…as noted until 1914….and the plaque is dated very precisely under the signature “3-4-1898”. I didn’t find Brown’s obit but did find a dispersal of estate notice in the January 29th 1915 London Gazette…So he would have died sometime within the previous year.
So anyway…the plaque isn’t American…but I still speculate it is collegiate….only it probably represents a Tug-Of-War between Oxford and Cambridge…not Harvard and Yale…still cool…but not quite as cool as having something that represents an American scene…..I’m still glad to have it though.

And then…more news…I sent a link to this thread to my friend Bart White…In turn Bart sent me a link to an eBay listing for the c1886 photo above of a Tug-Of-War between Harvard and Yale….When I first looked at it I thought it was interesting but I’d sort of had enough Tug-Of-War finds for a while…But the next day I revisited it and took a harder look…First of all it was an eye opener that the real Tug-Of-War events between Harvard and Yale did not look like the scene in the plaque…and were a lot more structured…i.e. the foot braces….and they are nearly on the ground…not standing like the plaque…so that was interesting….like they say a picture is worth a thousand words….And where in the world would I ever find another 1886 photo like it…
The way I started seeing it was you can have an interesting photo with a blank back….or you can have a photo with some markings on the back that give a little bit of background on the image…..OR….you can have a photo that just kills it with info…this one kills it….It had the teams….the names of all the “tuggers” of both teams…even the year they were to graduate….and the score…in almighty 1886 dip pen handwriting….oh yeah…..So….it had a BIN or best offer…I sent a feeble offer and the seller happened to be a fan of my website and let me have it for my offer!
There are some things that are puzzling about it though….The handwriting one the back is what convinces me its real…but it was apparently trimmed from the way the top of the word Harvard is cut off…and the modern little title card is adhered on…like it was part of a display at one time…very curious…By the way...check out the garments...the hats and shoes...The belt apparatus worn by the anchor appears to be a specific proven design not something worked up last minute...Could have been made by a harness maker or could have been ordered from Spalding or one of the other sporting goods companies.
Last edited by CarltonHendricks; 11-19-2013 at 02:48 PM.
|