Historical information
This historic bronze nail dates back to 1790ss to 1890s. Nails such as this one were used for ship building, as deck fasteners and many other uses. This nail was made at a time when the shanks of nails were usually machine cut but the heads were hand formed by blacksmiths. The nail was recovered from a shipwreck along the coast of Victoria in around 1968 and is part of the John Chance Collection.
Significance
The nail is significant historically as an example of hardware used when building wooden ships in the early to mid-19th century.
The nail is historically significant as an example of the work and trade of blacksmith.
The nail is also significant as it was recovered by John Chance, a diver in Victoria’s coastal waters in the late 1960s to early 1970s. Items that come from several wrecks have since been donated to the Flagstaff Hill Maritime Village’s museum collection by his family, illustrating this item’s level of historical value.
Physical description
Nail; bronze, deck nail. Rounded rectangular head, rectangular shank cross-section, tip flattened to a rounded wedge shape but cut straight down at the end instead of a point. The surface is pitted and rough and has yellow and orange concretion and degradation on the nail's surface.
Recovered from an unspecified shipwreck along the coast of Victoria. Part of the John Chance Collection.
Subjects
References
- History, age and photographs of nails InspectAPedia, Nails and Hardware
- Nails as clues to age Real or Repro (reproduction)