Mudlarking the River Thames - A Glittering Trove of Thames Mudlarking treasures (May 2021)

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   Well today i'm here going for a mudlark with Ted  Sandling who is the Author of the very inspiring   book "A Mudlark's Treasures - London  in Fragments and it's a book that i   absolutely love There's a previous  version of it but Ted's going to tell you about   that later and we are here and we're hoping to  find some wonderful fragments of history ourselves   That is right we are here i'm just overjoyed to  be mudlarking with you again Nicola, it's been   far too long it has and it's brilliant too Ted  and i've got to mention you're also pretty   nifty because i've seen it on your instagram at  this parcour activity, you know when you sort of run up   walls and do little back flips and stuff and i am  hoping that you're going to do some kind of you   know exciting backflip type thing down these  stairs you might be disappointed with that i   think it will be a sedate mudlark today okay well if  you change your mind i'll be here with the camera Oh a wig curler! a wig curler with a WB . oh a wig curler that's fantastic! well half a wig curler these are just amazing i  love them so much they are 17th century though   yeah stuck in Samuel Pepys' wig so they would  be the same on the other side like an hourglass   and all of the ones i've found have WB on them  yeah i found one with WB and i looked it up   and that's the most common maker there was obviously  somebody or people named WB who were prolific in making   wig curlers i started to look into wig  curlers when i found my wig curler and i mean   they used to wear wigs to cover up a multitude  of sins like diseases and what have you it's   quite a fascinating subject so brilliant find i  remember reading in Pepys diaries about his   response to wigs it was pretty much  in the course of a year where he saw the   fashion beginning and was horrified by it and just  thought it was this decadent terrible thing and   later on in his diaries he writes about going  into the barber to have his hair shorn ready   for his first wig and it's a complete conversion  and it's very interesting i think the way in which   fashion can overwhelm you you know you  you think you're resisting it and suddenly   it seems the most natural thing in the world  to cut all your hair off and start putting on a   pompadour but this is marvelous that is well  done you're on fire ted well we'll see how it goes so here in this old mud here we have the  most beautiful piece of metal poking out  and not only is it gorgeous it's sardines   sardines in oil and sardines ancient sardines  i think it's sardines dont you think it says sardines sardines yeah for a minute i thought it  said huitres but it's not no it is sardines   oh it would have been better that is lovely though  because because vintage sardines are a delicacy   it's funny because i find so many fish past pots. I don't want to slice my fingers. yeah hang on i'll help you with my my trowel  i often find so many fish paste pots have you  ever found such a good sardine tin though? No. and i'm actually   reading a book to my son right now called the  explorer in which is some children lost in the   amazon rainforest and they find an ancient sardine tin oh no you're joking they find   an ancient sardine tin! so i'm going to bring this  home to him and the on the floor of the amazon  rainforest they see an ancient and it gives them hope so  they're on an airplane that crashed   so of course how extraordinary that  you've now just come down here and found a sardine tin! i love that yeah oh i have to find out who made it   yeah let's see she said grabbing it from  him you grab so no i'm just still wondering   oh yes look they're actually yes something  alimentaire, oh this is fabulous isn't it how very exciting is that it's obviously a lot posher than  the people who used to just   take their spoon to a fish paste pot at lunchtime. i just don't want   to give myself tetanus with an accidental slice  that wouldn't be a good idea oh that's marvelous we've got these we got thames  can you see the maker that's it   let's have a look at the end in our  round up and just see what it is that's   beautiful well done thank you very much i've  never been so excited about sardines before you   got me very excited too it's pretty good sardines  right well i've just seen bart simpson over here seriously oh i don't know maybe it's not Bart. It kind of looks like bart though doesn't it   i think that might be from like roblox oh  really oh i see i'm not up to date with roblox Ive found a couple of things over here which are very worn, but also really revealing so these are  triangular pins of biscuit of clay and they're really an important part of the  delftware making process of delft firing they're triangular pins that would sit inside  what's called a saggar a sort of big rough   pot in which delftware pottery was fired or more  than delft but in particular for this story delftware pottery  and saggerswould have triangles cut in them through which   these would be inserted and the plates and  things would be resting very lightly on the   the apex of that triangle so that the the glaze  didn't stick to anything as it was being fired   so finding these here shows our proximity to  you know 18th century delftware potteries which is   fantastic this area here is just filled with the  detritus of the delft pottery so lots and lots   of biscuit that has all gone wrong you can see  there are a bit of glaze it's just oh yeah melted   really badly so they've discarded it down here  this is all discarded many more pieces of saggar   you get some fine biscuit too with a different body so here's a nice piece of delft  work you can see the biscuit is exactly the same  as was lying around yes but this one is decorated   can't quite tell what it is a windmill a vase  of flowers there's some really interesting bits   here so that's also been fired then and just  discarded oh that's here so this is where the   fire got too hot in the kiln and the clay has vitrified it's turned into glass   that's a lovely spot nicole that's nice and that  is beautiful it's that mossy green it's like jade half half a triangle so this is  what i was talking about when i said   those pins fit through a  triangular hole in the saggar what have you found oh i just  love that just look at the way it's there in the mud  it's so tantalizing and actually funnily enough  i've just seen another pipebowl down there   now that's nice i love the way that  it's in the mud such a lovely picture Oh it's lovely though! Can i see yours all right well mine's just a bowl   but it's um it's a tiny one that's great isn't  it wonderful that you can find two things that   are separated by an age as well yeah separated  by a century or so yeah definitely definitely   that's nice it's quite a small it's delicate  for a georgian pipeline it's very delicate and   it's much smaller than you'd expect it's nice  it might have a maker on the heel oh lovely i'll put it in my bag and then give it back  to you afterwards she said squirreling it away well that's the 1700s for sure definitely and it's  the right size and it's got a bit of a maker's   mark on it that's lovely that's nice i always keep  the mud in it just in case there's some tobacco in   the bottom were you posting about that recently  people sometimes think it's because i want to smoke it! now i have just seen a coin here actually i have   but it's just being covered  up slightly now it's around here no that's a oh that's a george look at that that's  a george the second i think well done nicola   well you were talking about  moving on to coins so i duly did   i'm really glad that i was able to walk right  over it yeah perfect i love seeing the    the profile yeah beautiful oh  what a stunner - that's so beautiful what have we got here it could be bottle stopper  oh and it is look it is it's purified milk and it's from somewhere but i can't quite read  that yet yeah an old milk bottle stopper lovely so this is another nice one um it is an old  bottle you can see here the the string course   which is this rim of glass here on which uh you  tie the um the cover to the bottle and it's still   got its cork in it's a really big hefty cork i  love it when you find bottlenecks still with the   cork it's the thought that the last person who  yeah plugged it in there they couldn't find their  corkscrew so they just smashed the top off the bottle but this  might be quite good for storing the pins that we   find what a great idea it is now a pin cushion  very resourceful always got to be resourceful   many years ago i saw a very well dressed  gentleman hunched down rather like i am   and uh just making a very repetitive movement um  rather like I am and i wandered over to see what   he was doing and he was picking up these pins  and he had a tobacco bag like a golden virginia   plastic bag which he was methodically putting pins  into - because finding them it's just it's addictive   you sit in one place and you keep spotting  more and more pins everywhere you look   and we spoke about how pins were used before  zips were and whatnot we spoke about how   how pins were used to fasten women's clothing and  pin money husbands would give their wives pin   money to buy pins um and then he asked  me if uh i'd ever seen a 20-pound note   i've seen a 20 pound note - just a few well not that  many but he asked me if i'd ever looked at them   and he took one out of his billfold and on the  front of this old 20-pound note now it's turner but there was a picture of  um adam smith and a pin manufacturer   it's a quote from the wealth of nations so  i went home and i got the wealth of nations and   very very early on in the book adam smith is  describing how um the process of making pins   um can be broken down and made more  efficient he says something like one man making   a pin all on his own doing all the processes  could make maybe 10 in a day 10 but if you break   down maybe it's 20 i don't know small number  if you break down the processes so that one man   is pointing the pin and one man is uh  wrapping the head and one man is whitening it   so you've got i don't know 10 people making  pins they can make 50 000 in a day and it's that   sense of mass production of the assembly  line of breaking things down efficiently   that lead from there to the industrial  revolution to you know to henry ford to   China which is currently making however  many millions of iphones a day from these   on the foreshore, that was so incredible to me  that you can go from absolutely tiny things   and you leap to world spanning you know macro  economical shifting stories it's just incredible oh what have you got there i have just found this  rather beautiful bangle with nice red and black   incised dots and i wonder if it might be bakelite. i think it might be do you think   it might be 1920s oh it could it's got a bit of age to it. and it's kind of got that sort of art deco  feel but it's very irregular it's quite  amateurishly done it's not bone it's plastic   so it's really cold there's this beautiful little tesserae  right here so that is a fragment of stone   that would have been laid into a mosaic  floor and if you come around this way they could be roman but they're  more likely to be victorian   oh look i don't think it's going to be that  long but it's still quite exciting just watching   the extraction there oh there we go look at  that ah that's a nice one isn't it beautiful   yes it is fantastic there we go  another one for you for my bag your bag let's have a look over here i think let's see oh   yeah look you can see the  pipe stems in the mud there beautiful old nails as well lovely old nails just have a look over here oh i just  nearly tripped over a pipe well you've done a pretty good  job on the pipes today though oh oh yes yes i sense from here  that there is some stem on it not bad not bad so i think that's slightly later  yeah but really nice i love this   old mark that's such a sharp thing down there  yeah i like that and that's probably a nice um   maker on the heel we were just talking about coins and  i suddenly saw one and it's right down   there not too far away from ted's boot i  think it might be modern can you see it   i was just telling nicola that i have  coin blindness and although i'm almost   standing on this coin i can't see it anywhere  i can see it there is it it's give me a okay oh it's a ha'penny oh that's the ship ha'penny i think  it's quite a good ha'penny actually yeah i think   it's 1944 1944 so can you just make that uh  so just towards the end of second World Ward oh yes well   keep talking about coins and then i  might find another one so this it's not much of a pipe but it's tantalising because it has   the maker's name i think on  it let's go rinse it off yeah   most of my regular viewers will know  that i love a pipe with a maker on it (who doesn't love a pipe with a maker on it!) let's see what does it say i hope it's a name  i hope it's the name and i hope it's legible   do you know what oh yeah it's Deptford - it's  a place oh yeah well it will be the place on   that side and there should be the name on the  other side yes yes there is can you read that   let's have a look - it's the other way around i'm sorry  i keep grabbing all your finds out of your hand   i should make a note to the viewers that i no  longer have any of the pipes that i found today   i know i've just realised i keep taking them  they're all in Nicola's pockets um i'm sure   we we might be able to see it we can take a  photo of it yeah i think we're going to have to and then i can look up the maker i've got a few Deptford Pipes let's add this one to your collection of my pipes   this is nice and old and i don't know what it  is but i recognize the style oh do you know what   i think i recognize that from my outings with  Richard Hemery, i mean it could possibly be the   bottom of one of these german that's what i think  beer mugs or vases i think yeah yeah the sort   of pinched base is really recognisable yeah  it really reminds me of that of the uh base of one   of these german drinking ware vessels we will have to do a bit  of research absolutely take it and find out by   the time this goes out we will know what it is  and how old it is but i i would say this is what   sixteen hundreds yeah definitely maybe something  like that for sure really nice and old and lovely lovely find well everyone  look at our beautiful array   of treasures a Mudlark's Treasures  absolutely a Mud Lark's treasures what a trove we have found today Nicola we have  amazing just look at that it's just such a large   collection of objects all of which have such  a fascinating history really so we won't go   through everything because the tide is heading  right up but there's definitely some things that   i want to concentrate on and actually i  wonder if you could first just explain   these absolutely we were talking about uh  we found a lot of delftware today and so delftware   is predominantly 18th century this earlier  um but let's say 18th century um pottery in   in london it's this sort of pottery often blue  and white it's called tin glazed earthenware   um potters came over from the netherlands in  i think 1570s something like that originally   um and it developed before it was  replaced by easier longer-lasting   longer-lasting pottery so the way in which they  were fired was in dishes which were placed inside a saggar   inside a kiln and a saggar was something like this  that protected the dish from the smoke of the kiln   and the plates would rest on little triangular  sat through here and then it would sit on that   and it would mean that the there was a tiny amount  of exposure between the glaze and and this   pin so they were unlikely to to fuse to it and  get stuck so really really nice that we're able   to find all three parts of that pottery process  brilliant thank you for that explanation i'm   going to pop those back there what else have we got  we've got our favorite sardine tin these sardines   in oil were manufactured by Joseph Peneau who  set up his company in Nantes in france in 1844   Nantes was very famous for canning and the  first canning factories were located on   rue de la ville en bois which is where Peneau  proudly proclaims its locations on the tins   Peneau even exhibited his sardines in london in  the great exhibition of 1851 and the english   market was very important for him in 1872 his  son wrote to Joseph about their rival Levesque in an article in 1900 in the london express  Peneau is considered to epitomise sardines   when the average englishman feels that a taste of  sardine is necessary for the purpose of enjoying   life unless he can get Peneau's sardines in oil  he feels mortified - so who enjoyed tucking into   this can of Peneau's sardines in oil back in the  19th century we've got these tessera here pins um of uncertain dates but nice enough loads of  pipes we've got loads of pipes some of them with   makers i am obviously quite excited about the  little bit of stem because it's got the name   it just adds that extra layer of intrigue and  interest really because a tiny stem can lead to   the story of a person so i'm definitely going  to be looking them up hopefully there's enough   letters there that we can find the maker very  happy with the coins and um yeah we've got a   beautiful selection of treasures oh this um this  ancient bit of pottery that we need to do loads   of research on it and find out what it is  we encountered a man today and i'll send you   a photograph who found the top of a bartmann jug  i mean my dream is to find the face of a bartmann   but he found the top of a bartmann jug still with  the cork inside so we found a bottle with a cork   in it's nothing compared to finding a bartmann jug  with a cork in it's a massive cork we've never   seen anything like it in all our time hunting on  the river but also not really in the literature    so really exciting to see that and i'll   send you a photo so you can show it in the video   and so what a lot of beautiful treasures and  talking of Mudlark's treasures... Nicola i have   a book for you - Wow exciting! A Mudlark's Treasures so this  is a new edition of my book London in Fragments   we've switched the titles around a little  bit and this is to accompany an audio book   i recorded um reading out A Mudlark's Treasures - which is going to come out in may   so this is a lovely book to read it's got  lots of pictures of the objects on the inside   marvelous oh and look and you've signed it too  um i have the previous edition of your book   and i love it and i'm often referring to it  for information about what i find and honestly   everybody if you get the opportunity to purchase  this book now where is this edition coming out so   this edition is coming out on the 18th of may  and so is the audiobook the audiobook will be   on audible and this is from all good book sellers  did i hear something about a giveaway i think you   might have heard something about a giveaway so  i'm really happy my publishers have offered a   few books uh to Nicola's viewers so  if you would like to get a copy of this for free   i think the idea is post a comment  in the comments and we'll do a sort of lottery thing yeah that's right so if you would like to be in with a chance to win a copy of Ted's book and i think we've got  three if you could put down in the comments   #AMudlarksTreasures and then who knows you may be in for a chance  to win one of these beautiful books   thanks Ted oh Nicola thank you so much for  inviting me out today i have had an absolutely   wonderful time i can't believe how many treasures  we found in just a short walk by the River Thames me neither it's amazing isn't it such an endless  source of inspiration this river it really is   excellent well here's to the next time  next time let's hope it isn't too long You can purchase A Mudlark's Treasures on Amazon or at any good book sellers https://smarturl.it/amudlarkstreasures.
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Channel: nicola white mudlark - Tideline Art
Views: 46,099
Rating: 4.9697647 out of 5
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Length: 28min 59sec (1739 seconds)
Published: Sun May 16 2021
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