Montblanc Meisterstuck 149 Desk-Pen Base

 

Despite restrictions and lockdowns, quarantine orders and masking-up, it is nice to still be able to attend auctions…even if, nowadays, they have to be done at home…through a screen…and online…instead of going out in-person to view the items you want to buy.

Nevertheless, it is still possible to score some amazing stuff online – like the latest addition to my fleet of Montblanc paraphernalia!

If you’re a regular reader of this blog, then you’ll know that one of my longest-lasting loves has always been for fountain pens and fine writing accessories. It was to this collection that, just before all this virus-stuff started, I added the Montblanc inkwell, and about which I had created a post of, just a couple of months ago:

Well, today we celebrate the recent (a few weeks is ‘recent’, right?) addition of the second piece of that collection: the matching desk-pen base!

What is a ‘Desk Pen’?

A desk pen (which can be either a ballpoint or a fountain pen), is a type of writing instrument which, instead of having a cap to protect the writing point, has a base or stand, into which the pen is placed. The base is kept on the user’s desktop, where it will always be available for use at a moment’s notice. Usually, such stands and pens exist to serve decorative purposes – they show off the owner’s taste in writing instruments, as well as displaying the quality of the writing instruments which they can afford.

Desk pens have a long history, and date back as far as the 1910s and 1920s, when fountain pens were first entering the mainstream consumer consciousness. Pen companies such as Parker, Sheaffer, Wahl-Eversharp, Pelikan, etc, manufactured desk-pen sets for executive types – CEOs, business-owners, lawyers and high-flying professionals, so that they could place them on their desks in pride of place in front of their customers and clients.

100 years later, and not much has changed, really! Desk pen sets are still manufactured (although in smaller quantities, and at much higher prices), and they’re still being sold, and people still buy them for exactly the same reasons as they were purchased in the 1920s and 30s – to show off, and to have a pen conveniently at-hand whenever one was needed. You know, for signing that big fancy contract, business-deal, or legal document, and all that jazz!

The Montblanc Meisterstuck Executive Desk-Pen Set

Naturally, a company such as Montblanc has to have at least something to offer, when it comes to desk-pen sets…and so they do!…or rather, did!

Made of clear acrylic and polished, black resin, the Montblanc Meisterstuck desk-pen stand, or base, is designed to match the resin and acrylic body and the gold detailing of the similarly square-shaped Montblanc inkwell, in the same line. It’s also designed to match the classic, black and gold styling of the Montblanc Meisterstuck 149 fountain pen – which the sconce at the top of the stand is designed to hold; the sconce even has “MONTBLANC-MEISTERSTUCK-149” on the gold banding. It’s basically a 149 cap with the finial removed, and replaced with the ball-and-socket swivel joint to attach it to the heavy, acrylic base beneath it.

Maintaining an angle of 45 degrees, the stand holds the 149 up loud and proud for everybody to see. The pen can simply be rested inside the cap, and rely on gravity to hold it in place, or it can be screwed in, like an ordinary pen-cap, for added security.

Here, we see the base, along with the pen that’s designed to fit into it. It’s a convenient place for a 149-owner to park their pen on their desk, without worrying that the pen is going to roll off the side of the table when you’re not looking – while also having the pen near-at-hand when you need it, without having to dig through your briefcase, desk-drawers, or your coat or jacket pockets to find it.

One thing I didn’t know about the stand before I bid on it was the fact that while the sconce swivels around on the base from side to side, it doesn’t have a full range of movement – for example, you can’t adjust it so that it sticks straight up, nor lies down flat – it always remains at an angle of 45 degrees. While this doesn’t really bother me, it was a surprise, in as much as it would make the stand more tricky to pack or store, if for whatever reason, I ever had to put it away somewhere, or box it up. It also means that it’s more susceptible to damage. It’s a bit of a design-flaw, if you ask me, but that quibble aside, I’m still glad that it’s the latest addition to my collection of Montblancs.

Antique Sterling Silver School Cufflinks

 

You find the strangest things on the internet.

I stumbled across these on an online auction site while bidding on some antique silverware. I’d never seen anything like them before, they were in very good condition for their age, and the price seemed reasonable, so I bid on them. I was very excited to win them and add them to my trove of treasures, and they now form part of my collection of antique cufflinks!

The silver cufflinks with the Scotch coat of arms on the front.

These antique ‘torpedo-style’ chained cufflinks, typical of the 1920s and 30s, are sterling silver with blue enamel on the front.

Normally, I don’t collect silver cufflinks, but I made an exception for these, because the face of the cufflinks depicts the crest of Scotch College, in Melbourne – my old highschool. Since I went there for so long, I decided that it’d be a nice little touch to buy them as a memento of my school-days.

The Coat of Arms on the Cufflinks

The coat of arms on the cufflinks is for Scotch College, a private boys’ school in Melbourne. Established in 1851, it’s the oldest school in the state, and, I think something like the…third oldest…school in the entire country.

The coat of arms is quartered by the Scottish Cross of St. Andrew on a background of blue. The quarters depict the Royal Crown representing Australia’s links to the British Empire, the Torch of Enlightenment and Education, the Southern Cross constellation, the Olympiad rowboat with its sails furled to indicate determination, and the Burning Bush (above the crown) to symbolise the school’s religious background.

The blue banner at the top has the Latin motto “DEO – PATRIAE – LITTERIS” (For God, for Country, for Letters). When the school was founded in 1851, the original motto was “DEO et LITTERIS” (“God and Learning”). This was ‘updated’ in 1914 with the start of the First World War, when the motto was changed to the current version, with the addition of “PATRIAE” during such a momentous time in international history.

The complete coat of arms, with the three-word motto and the quartered shield and bush were finally joined together and became the new school coat of arms in 1924.

What is ‘DAMMAN’S’?

Damman’s Tobacconists and Jewelers. Cnr Swanston & Collins Streets, Melbourne. 1954. (Image from SLV)

“Damman’s” was the name of a tobacconist’s shop and jeweler’s on the corner of Collins Street and Swanston street in Melbourne. Established in 1854, at the height of the Melbourne gold-mining boom, the shop lasted for at least 100 years, and was operated by at least two generations of the Damman family. Doing bulk custom-orders for specialised clients (such as these cufflinks for the school) must’ve been a big part of their business, because these aren’t the only Damman’s branded Scotch-related memorabilia which I have in my collection.

How old are these Cufflinks?

My guess is that they were made between the mid-1920s to the late 1930s. There’s a number of clues and indicators that point towards this.

The back of the cufflinks, showing the ‘torpedo’ toggles and the chain links.

First, the school coat of arms was adopted in 1924. So they can’t be any older than that. Second, I know that Damman’s was still producing Scotch-badged memorabilia in the mid-1930s (the cigarette lighter in my collection is from 1932). Thirdly, the cufflinks are chained cufflinks – very common in the Victorian era and the early 20th century…but which started to decline heavily in popularity in the decades after the Second World War.

Such cufflinks would have been unlikely to have been made during the war, and look too old-fashioned for postwar, 1950s construction, leaving a small window of about 15 years in which they could’ve been manufactured.

Does the School Still Sell Stuff like This?

Most definitely! Mugs, shot-glasses, tea-towels, books, clothing, and – yes, even cufflinks – are still sold by the school. They’re purchased from the school’s campus shop, or are offered to students for purchase as part of their graduation-memorabilia package, when they leave school at the age of eighteen.

Wearing History: Classic Men’s Jackets and Coats

 

As winter starts to bite down south, and the rain and wind and snow starts to increase dramatically, it’s time to start breaking out your winter wardrobe and trying to decide what to wear…or if you don’t have anything to wear…then trying to decide what to buy, so that you can wear it!

In this posting, we’ll be looking at the history behind various coats, overcoats and jackets which have been worn by men throughout history, and which have entered popular fashion as wardrobe must-haves, even in the 21st century. We’ll be looking at where they came from, what features they have, and what to look for if you want to buy one, and what sets them apart from each other.

I won’t be covering this in any particular order, so you might need to scroll around a bit, if you want to find the jacket or coat that you’re really interested to know more about. That said…let’s start!

The Peacoat

The peacoat is one of the most common types of short overcoats that exist on the market today. They’re thick, fluffy, warm, stylish, and they’ve been around for centuries! So…what is a peacoat?

Peacoats were created in the Netherlands in the late 1600s or early 1700s. The original Dutch name was the “Pijjekker” – where ‘Pij’ (pronounced ‘pea’) referred to the thick, water-repellent wool cloth from which the ‘jekker’ (‘jacket’ or ‘coat’), was made. This original Dutch spelling and pronunciation eventually entered the English language as Pea-jacket or, as is more common today – peacoat.

Peacoats were created by the Dutch specifically for seafarers. The coat’s thick, soft woolen fabric kept rain and sea-spray off the body, kept the under-clothes dry, and kept the sailor warm. Because of these properties, the peacoat was adopted by the English for use in the Royal Navy in the 1800s, and later on by the American Navy in the late 1800s-to-early-1900s.

As a result…there’s MILLIONS of military-surplus peacoats out there!

So, what does a peacoat look like?

A classic, eight-button peacoat with slash pockets and epaulettes. The eighth button is hidden under the fold of the lapel, and would’ve been used to button up the ulster collar when required.

Traditionally, a peacoat is…of course!…navy blue. You can also find them in black (and some navies did make them in black, because the blue tended to fade over time), or even in grey, but navy blue is the most traditional colour.

A peacoat is a short to medium-length overcoat. The skirt or hem stops at upper-or-mid thigh level, and typically goes no lower. It features double-breasted button closure, usually, with eight buttons.

Today, it’s really common to find peacoats with six button closures…but traditional models always had at least eight, sometimes even ten, buttons. In my opinion – a peacoat that doesn’t have at least eight buttons is not a peacoat – for reasons that I’ll get to in a minute.

Along with the buttons, the peacoat also had a lot of pockets. Most peacoats will have four pockets – two inner liner-pockets, and two outer ‘slash’ or ‘storm’ pockets – diagonal or vertical hand-warmer pockets in the sides of the coat. Some REALLY old versions of the peacoat, dating back to Edwardian, or even Victorian times, had even MORE pockets. These aren’t as common today, but if you hunt around, you can find versions of the peacoat which have SIX pockets – the two inner liner ones, the two slash pockets, and then underneath them – two extra flap-pockets. They’re a nice touch, but they’re not very common today.

Peacoats also have sleeve-cinchers, to tighten the sleeve-holes to stop wind and rain getting inside, and (sometimes), epaulettes on the shoulders. Traditionally, epaulettes were used for affixing rank insignia, so some ‘civilian’ versions may not have them, but if you can get one with epaulettes…hey, they’re cool, OK?

Another distinctive feature of the peacoat is what’s called the ‘Ulster’ collar, which comes from the Ulster district of northern Ireland…where it’s cold…and wet…and windy. The ulster collar is a collar that can be popped up and wrapped around your neck and chest, and buttoned into place!

…you can’t do this if you only have six buttons on your peacoat. They simply don’t reach up high enough.

See what I mean?

It’s because of the ulster collar that peacoats always had at least eight buttons, because you needed them to reach high up enough that you could button the collar across your chest and neck in really inclement, wet, cold or windy weather.

This photograph shows, possibly, the most traditional peacoat style of all – with ten button closure, and the six pockets. Two inside, and four outside. Like I said, they’re hardly ever made today, so if you want one, you’ll either have to hunt really hard, buy it vintage, or get someone to make it for you.

Another variation of the peacoat which is hardly ever seen today (except vintage), is the so-called “bridge coat”. Peacoats were issued to the ordinary seamen. Bridge-coats were issued to the officers. The main difference is that a bridge-coat is knee-length.

Why? Because officers often spent hours standing on the bridge-deck of a ship – which in times past – could be an open deck with no shelter, fully exposed to the elements – so the coats were cut longer to cover more of their bodies. Seamen weren’t given the same cut of coat because they were were required to climb masts and rigging – impossible to do, if you can’t move your knees around because you’re wearing a thick, heavy long coat! So they were given the shorter peacoat instead.

Peacoats are great for when you need a medium-sized, but warm overcoat for bad weather. If they’re made of quality materials, then you don’t have to worry about getting them wet or anything – remember, they were designed to go to sea!

Buying a Peacoat

Finding an original, vintage-style peacoat can be a bit of a challenge today. Your best bet for real vintage styling is to buy an actual military-surplus vintage peacoat. Since they were built for harsh, seafaring environments, they’re very long-lasting. Most modern styled peacoats only have six buttons…which kind of defeats the whole purpose of the peacoat – the reason I like them is because you can button it right up to your chin if you want to – and if you want to be able to do that because it’s rainy or windy or snowing, then the more traditional eight or even ten-button variety, is best.

They should be made of wool fabric (traditionally a style of fabric called “Melton”). The best are 100% wool, but anything that’s majority-wool blend should be fine, too.

The Greatcoat

Another popular style of overcoat is the greatcoat. Originally created for the army, greatcoats are long, heavy, double-breasted, knee-length overcoats. They typically have four pockets (two inside, two outside), and six button closure down the front. Designed to be worn by officers in the field, greatcoats were cut longer so that they would keep their wearers warm during long days and nights out in the open, while on active military campaigns.

You can easily buy army-surplus greatcoats secondhand, and they cost next to nothing. My greatcoat is a dark green, Canadian army surplus from the 1980s and it’s fantastic in cold weather! The wool is thick and VERY heavy, but then, it was designed to deal with a Canadian winter – and it does that very well!

A classic, army greatcoat. As with the peacoat, you may find that yours has epaulettes on the shoulders, again for holding rank-insignia badges.

Buying a Greatcoat

Greatcoats are VERY easy to find. Any decent military-surplus or army-supplies or secondhand store, is likely to have loads of them! Just be prepared for how HEAVY they are! Since they were designed to be worn outdoors for long periods of time, greatcoats are made from very heavy wool fabric, and since they reach down to knee-length or even lower, they might be a bit cumbersome. But they work amazingly for keeping you warm!

The Trenchcoat

Aah, the trenchcoat! Arguably one of the most famous articles of menswear ever created! Rugged, stylish, sophisticated, mysterious, sexy, practical…everything that a man…or an overcoat!…should be!

The exact origins of the trenchcoat are not clear. Two companies claim to be the originator of the trenchcoat – Aquascutum, and Burberry (yes, that Burberry). While it is true that both companies did create, and manufacture rainproof overcoats, exactly who started doing it first, is unclear. Partially because rainproof overcoats actually predate both of these companies!

What is clear, however, is that the classic trenchcoat that we know and love, was being manufactured by at least the 1890s, and first saw military action in the Boer War. However, as a small, colonial war, the Trench didn’t receive much press. That would all change, ten years later, when the Great War began. Although it was designed before the Great War, it was its heavy use in the trenches of that conflict, that gave the new garment its name: The trenchcoat.

By the 1910s, how wars were fought, and the clothes they were fought in, had changed dramatically. Gone were the fancy bright scarlet ‘redcoat’ uniforms of the 1800s, and in came army-brown uniforms and khaki in the 1890s and 1900s. As the British Army prepared to invade France and bolster up their allies in the fight against Germany and Austria, a new type of garment was required for the new fighting conditions.

So, companies like Burberry (the most famous manufacturer) started cranking out a new type of coat.

The trenchcoat is iconic. You know what one is the moment you see it. But what makes a coat a trenchcoat?

To find out – let’s take the most famous trenchcoat of them all, as an example:

Worn by Humprhey Bogart in the 1941 classic “Casablanca”, this is the actual garment used in the film, as sold by Bonham’s auction house.

Trenchcoats were cut long – knee-length at least. They were double-breasted, with, like the peacoat – eight-button closure. They had epaulettes and cuff-adjustors, like the peacoat, and diagonal or vertical storm-pockets, like the peacoat. They had interior liner-pockets, like the peacoat…but that’s where the similarities end.

The trenchcoat was designed as a raincoat which could be worn by army officers on the Western front. The water-table in northeastern France and Belgium, near the German border was notoriously shallow. After digging just four or five feet, you’d hit ground-water…which was terrible news for soldiers who were expected to dig trenches at least six or seven feet deep! Combine this with heavy rain, and the conditions that many soldiers and officers had to fight in were absolutely appalling.

Because of this, the trenchcoat was designed to repel water. To do this, it was made of a waterproof cotton fabric known as Gaberdine (which trenchcoats are still made of today). For warmth, the coats were given interior liners of wool, which were buttoned into place. Since officers had to move quickly through the trenches and across the fields, the coats were made lightweight, to facilitate movement. To deal with the heavy rain, the coats were given cuff-cinches, ulster collars, buttoned back-vents, full-shoulder yokes to keep water off the wearer’s back…and a curious flap of fabric across the right chest, known as a storm-flap.

The exact purpose of the storm-flap has been lost to history, and there are two competing theories. The first is that the flap is a ‘gun-flap’ – it’s where you rest the butt of your rifle while firing, and the flap provided padding against the recoil of the rifle. The other – more likely explanation – is that the flap – which buttons across the collar and top of the coat – prevents rain from running down in between the buttons, and getting your clothes wet!…which is why it’s called a storm-flap.

The storm-flap is always on the right chest – and you can see in the trenchcoat worn by Bogart, just behind the right lapel.

Another of the trenchcoat’s most famous features is the belted back and front. Like with almost everything else on the coat – this was added for purely practical reasons – the belted closure was designed to give officers (and trenchcoats were originally sold only to officers) somewhere to hang things, stuff like whistles, grenades, spare ammunition, and so on. For this reason, brass D-rings were often sewn into the belts to provide dedicated anchoring points, and to stop things from sliding around. Not all trenchies have this feature anymore, but they’re an interesting throwback to the coat’s military history.

Last but not least, the trenchcoat always had a buttoned vent. The ‘vent’ is the split or open flap at the back of the coat or jacket. A hidden buttonhole and button were sewn into the back of the trenchcoat so that you could, if you desired – keep the vent buttoned. Like with almost everything else on this coat – it was designed to keep off rain and snow.

That said – the trenchcoat is not really a cold-winter coat. It’s primarily a raincoat. If your winters aren’t excessively biting, you could quite easily get away with wearing a trenchcoat as a winter overcoat, but for anything involving snow, you’ll probably want something heavier, since the cotton construction (designed to shed rain), won’t be thick enough to deal with sub-zero temperatures, in most cases.

The Popularity of the Trenchcoat

More than almost any other garment on this list, the trenchcoat is iconic. It conjures up images of warfare, bravery, fighting tooth-and-claw. It also makes you think of the Golden Age of Hollywood, between the 1920s to the 1950s, of private detectives and shady characters, of guys who go around with watches hidden inside their coats, and sinister gangsters hiding shotguns inside the linings!

The coat proved so popular that, even before WWI was even over, Burberry started selling civilian versions of the trenchcoat directly to the public. American soldiers arriving in France in 1918 fell in love with the coat, and brought it back with them stateside, which led to its adoption in Hollywood…and anything big in Hollywood spreads around the world!

Buying a Trenchcoat

The trenchcoat is so iconic that almost every major fashion-house has produced a version of it at one point or another. If you want to be REAL traditional, you can buy one from Burberry, or Aquascutum…but be warned that they are EXTREMELY expensive, and that retail-prices of $1,800 – $2,500+, are not uncommon!

This being the case, it’s probably better to buy one either vintage or secondhand, from a decent vintage clothing store, or to buy a trenchie from another manufacturer – making sure, of course, that they have all the necessary details that make it stand out as a trenchcoat…otherwise, what’s the point?

Trenchcoats come – broadly speaking – in four colours: Black, navy blue, grey, and tan. Tan, camel, or khaki, is the most traditional colour for a trenchcoat, since it was designed to go with the original colour of the British field-dress uniform of the First World War. If something like that is a bit too stand-outy for you, however, then navy blue, or grey variations are also available. There are also black trenchcoats, but black is rather overrated as a trenchcoat colour sometimes.

The Chesterfield Coat

Available in both single and double-breasted varieties, the Chesterfield is a formal, knee-length overcoat, with slash, or flapped pockets, and is characterised by the contrasting, dark velvet collar across the back and sides, and the breast-pocket below the left lapel.

Not all modern Chesterfield coats have the contrasting velvet collars, but if you’re going for the traditional look, then try and find one with such a collar. Despite its current status as a rather formal overcoat style, the Chesterfield was originally considered to be a more casual option! When it was created in the 1800s, it was largely worn as an alternative to a coat that has almost completely fallen out of fashion – The Frock Coat!

I won’t cover frock-coats here as a separate entry, but it was the main type of overcoat worn between the Regency era of the 1810s, up until the Edwardian era, of the 1910s, a span of roughly 100 years.

Edwardian-era, double-breasted frock coats

The frock coat was heavy, and long, reaching knee-length, or even below! It was seen as cumbersome, old-fashioned, and impractical. This was largely due to its flaring, full skirted hem. The excessive fabric used to make it just wasn’t fashionable anymore!

Overall, the Chesterfield was just more practical. It had more pockets, and it had a straighter, less flamboyant cut, which didn’t use so much fabric. It basically did everything that the frock coat did, but with less fabric, and more options!

Buying a Chesterfield

Chesterfield coats are basically the quintessential look, when most people think of an ‘overcoat’ – as such, any decent outfitter or retail store is likely to stock them. Keep in mind that chesterfields are designed to be long-draping, however. A hem that doesn’t reach at least the knee, can’t really be called a chesterfield. On some older chesterfields (like, if you buy vintage), can drop right down to the ankle, although this is rare on most modern coats.

Flight Jackets

A relative newcomer to the menswear scene is the fighter jacket and bomber jacket, which first appeared in the 1910s. These are typically gathered under the overall title of ‘flight jackets’.

The First World War was the first major conflict to see heavy use of aircraft. Early fighter, bomber and reconnaissance aircraft, used by the German Imperial Airforce, and the Royal Flying Corps (RFC, later the RAF), often featured open cockpits. Flying at heights of several thousand meters, windchill, exposure and cold temperatures were a big problem for early aviators.

To stop pilots from dying of exposure, or from getting frostbite, tailors started creating new types of jackets and coats for them, which were specially designed to take into account the peculiarities of this new occupation.

Bomber jackets were typically made of leather. Windproof and extremely durable, leather was unlikely to rip, it would repel water, and since leather doesn’t have any weave – it was the most effective way to block wind.

The flight-jacket of a WWI-era RFC pilot. The diagonal, cross-chest pocket was added in specifically so that pilots had somewhere secure to stow documents such as maps, mission-orders, pencils and identity-cards, without having to reach into lower pockets, while sitting in the confined spaces of the cockpit.

The only problem is that raw leather is rather uncomfortable against the skin. To combat this, bomber jackets were given soft sheepskin, fur, or wool linings inside. This prevented the pilots and bombers of WWI and WWII from freezing to death while on long-range missions.

Since pilots spent most of their time seated, with their jackets zippered or buttoned shut, bomber jackets were designed with pockets on the outside – usually two breast-pockets, with buttoned flaps to stop things falling out – and two lower flapped pockets, or even just simple slash pockets.

When the first flight-jackets were created, open cockpits were the norm. Because of this, flight-jackets were designed with cinched-in waists, cuffs, and even collars! Elasticated, gathered-in hems and cuffs were common. Wind-flaps or storm-flaps (such as on the relatively-recently-invented trenchcoat!) were also used.

By buttoning over the gaps in a jacket or coat that existed near the collar or around the chest, the storm-flap prevented wind and rain from getting inside a pilot’s uniform. To further improve things, in WWII, flight-jackets were made with zipper, to ensure an even more windproof closure.

Another common accessory used to reduce the wind and cold was the humble white, silk scarf. It’s an iconic part of the uniform of a WWI-era aviator! The scarves were used to keep the neck and chest warm, and to stop wind from blowing down inside your clothes.

The soft, silk fabric also prevented the fur or sheepskin lining of your jacket from scratching, rubbing and chafing your neck – which could happen a lot to WWI pilots, because without RADAR on their aircraft, they were constantly turning their heads left, right, up and down, to scan the skies for enemy aircraft.

When you probably had gloves on to keep your fingers from freezing off, the last thing you wanted to do was to have to remove them every few minutes to scratch an annoying itch on your neck!…the scarf prevented this from happening.

Flight-jackets became immensely popular after WWII, and greasers and bikers in the 1950s and 60s adopted the flight-jackets that their fathers wore during the War as part of their ‘look’, for purely practical purposes – the close-fitting cuts, convenient pockets, leather construction and windproof designs made them the ideal garments for motorcycle-attire!

Buying a Flight-Jacket

Due to their rugged, modern appearance, flight-jackets are still widely available, either at vintage stores, or at modern retailers who produce their own variations on them. That said, flight-jackets have kind of morphed into motorcycle-clothing, so the two may be used interchangeably. Flight-jackets are typically wool or sheepskin-lined, for warmth, and with elasticated or belted waists and cuffs, to hold back the wind.

The Montblanc Meisterstuck Executive Inkwell

 

Partially due to the price of their products, Montblanc tends to be a very polarising manufacturer of writing instruments and accessories. They’re either a company that you love, or a company that you love to hate, or a company that you have a love-hate relationship with.

Personally, I like Montblanc products. I’m not so sure that I LOVE them – certainly not for the retail prices – but I do like them, for the styling and the designs that they come up with for their various products, and their simple elegance, which has stood the test of time. Not for nothing, after all, is Montblanc one of THE most faked brands in the world, right up there with Rolex, and Louis Vuitton – after all, you don’t fake something that isn’t worth faking.

In this posting, I’ll be talking about another addition which I made to my humble Montblanc collection, shortly before all this coronavirus malarkey started going off around the world – and that addition isn’t a pen, it isn’t a watch, or even a piece of jewelry – but rather – an inkwell!

The inkwell is square in shape, and is surprisingly (and reassuringly) heavy

Montblanc has been making inkwells to go with their pens for many years, and if you search Google Images, there’s a surprisingly wide range of Montblanc inkwells out there, made of crystal, glass, brass and, if you can find one to buy – even solid silver! But the one in this posting is the one Montblanc inkwell that I’ve always wanted to own.

I won this particular inkwell at auction shortly after the start of the year, and just a handful of weeks before everything went into lockdown over the coronavirus. I’d been chasing an inkwell like this for years, ever since I’d seen photographs of it online, and I finally had my chance to grab it!

I wanted this inkwell specifically because of its design and styling. I liked the fact that it was big, black and chunky – substantial – heavy – and decidedly executive-looking – like it belonged on the power-desk of some sort of high-ranking CEO or something like that. I also liked the black and gold detailing, which was clearly designed to match the black and gold detailing of Montblanc’s classic flagship pen – the infamous No. 149. The two items – the inkwell, and the pen – were clearly designed to go together – and for that reason alone (among perhaps…a few other reasons!), I just had to have it!

The inkwell is not a standalone piece, however. It was originally sold as part of a four-piece set. The complete set included a paper-knife, a desk-stand for the 149 fountain pen, a rocker-blotter, and finally – the inkwell. All four pieces had the same basic design – black and gold, with clear resin in between to break up the colours.

As for how old the inkwell is, I’m honestly not sure. My research suggests a manufacture-date of the late 80s or early 90s, but that’s all I’ve been able to figure out. I believe that the inkwell (and the matching blotter, pen-stand, etc) all came out at the same time, as a sort of limited-edition thing, specifically designed to tie-in with the styling of the famous Montblanc No. 149, but that’s all I’ve been able to surmise. That being the case, they are relatively scarce.

Cool Inkwell! I Want One!!

Having seen the inkwell, you might be wondering – how much do they go for? The price varies. I’ve seen everything from $550, to $900, to $1,000+, on eBay. I’m glad to say I didn’t pay anywhere NEAR that for my inkwell. Despite that, I was lucky enough to buy the whole set, with the box, and everything that went along with it! As far as I’m aware, they’re no longer sold by Montblanc directly, (and aren’t mentioned anywhere on the company website), so if you decide that you do want one of these inkwells, then you will have to buy one secondhand.

So, if you CAN only buy these beautiful black and gold inkwells secondhand – what should you be looking out for?

The inkwell, with the three main sizes of Montblanc fountain pens next to it, for comparison. From L-R: the 149 Diplomat, the 146 Le Grand, and the 145 Classique

Given that the inkwell isn’t nearly as well-known as the fountain pen which uses it, it’s unlikely that you’ll ever see a fake Montblanc inkwell, but even so, it’s nice to know what the inkwell comes with, so that you’ll know whether or not you’ve got the full set.

Originally, it came in a black and white MONTBLANC cardboard box, with foam lining and the obligatory Montblanc user-manual. It also comes with a fascinating little gadget which I’ve never seen before…or since. It’s a little black plastic spout or funnel, with a detachable screw-on ring, which goes over it. After a bit of umming-and-aahing, because its function was not explained in any paperwork that I could find, I realised that this screw-down funnel or spout is designed to screw onto the neck of a Montblanc ink bottle! The contents of the bottle can then be decanted into the inkwell through the spout, thereby minimising the risk of spilling any ink!…Pretty nifty!

The inkwell also comes with a removable, round-bottomed, clear plastic inkwell liner-cup – this is to stop any ink that you put into the inkwell from staining the clear resin midsection of the inkwell – possibly permanently – depending on the ink you like to use! Given that this is the function of this clear plastic liner-cup, it’s probably a good idea to check that your inkwell has this, before you bid on it at auction or buy it online. Otherwise, you could end up with an inkwell full of ink-stains, which would be irritating, to say the least!

The Montblanc Meisterstuck executive inkwell alongside the Montblanc flagship fountain pen: The Meisterstuck No. 149

Globetrotting – The Golden Age of Travel (Pt I)

 

In this posting, we’ll be looking at the birth of the ‘Golden Age of Travel’, and exploring how the changes and innovations made to transport and communications during the 19th century, gave birth to the first great age of travel and tourism. We’ll be looking at what tourism and travel was like when it first became available to ordinary people, how the tourist experience differed between then and now, and what we might have lost and gained during the journey.

The Golden Age of Travel’ is defined as the era from the second half of the 1800s up to the early 1940s, when cheap international travel and the tourist trade really started taking off, thanks to technological and transport advances made during the Industrial Revolution. It was an age of wonder and excitement, and was the first time that ordinary people were able to travel in style, speed, safety, and comfort. It was also the first time when people could travel strictly for pleasure at reasonable prices.

The Second World War, and the subsequent geographical, technological and political changes which it forced, irreversibly changed the tourist landscape, making the difference in the travel-experience between the first and second half of the 20th century almost as different as night and day.

The changes brought about by the War made it impossible to return to the elegance, excitement, wonder and grandeur of the pre-war travel experience – it’s something which exists only as a ghost, which lingers in old photographs, antique luggage, hotel and steamship-tickets and the stamp marks found in fading passports. So what was it really like? What was travel and tourism like before and after the War? How did pre-war travel differ from post-war travel, and how did post-war travel morph into what we know today? In this issue, we’ll find out together, on our very own tour through history!

So stamp your passport and clip your tickets. Strap down your trunks and hold onto your Baedekers. We’re about to take a trip back into history. Our ancestors may not have been jetsetters, but they were globetrotters, who still managed to explore the world in a haze of smoke, steam and gasoline. A flag waves, a whistle blows. It’s time now to depart! All aboard!

Before the Golden Age of Travel

For much of history, travel was slow, boring, painful, expensive and dangerous. People rarely travelled any great distance unless it was absolutely necessary, and almost never for pleasure. It was not uncommon for people to be born, live, and die all within the confines of the communities of their birth, or within a very few miles thereof. Travel meant days and weeks on the road. It meant needing money to pay for bed and board, it meant having to guard yourself against those who would wish you harm in any number of ways. Thieves and robbers on the public roads also meant that you were restricted in your travel, largely to daylight hours when it was easier to protect yourself. This limited your travel-time each day, and made travel even slower. And this if you were poor. If you were rich, travel was slightly easier, but still not without considerable risks.

Even if you had the money to allow for travels, and even if you did travel for pleasure, the journey was still slow, costly and potentially dangerous. Money had to be paid for coachmen, horses, carriages, food and lodgings, and servants. And there was the constant danger of being attacked during your journey. Travelling ‘in style’ told every highwayman along your route that you were rich, and that attacking and robbing you would likely gain a highwayman rich rewards for his efforts. This put you in just as much danger of assault and even death, as someone who had almost no money at all. And the manner of your travel did not change these odds at all.

For most people, travel meant walking. And walking was slow. Walking made you vulnerable. Walking along a country road, or through a town, city or village left you open to all manner of dangers – cutpurses, footpads, pickpockets, muggers, rapists, beggars, robbers and thieves who would all do their level best to relieve you of your worldly possessions. But for most people, this was the only way to travel from A to B – horses were expensive to keep, feed and maintain. And only the wealthy could afford carriages. And even those were not as safe as one might think.

Travelling in the relative speed and comfort of a private carriage or stagecoach did not guarantee you protection. Coaches or carriages which ran regular routes, and even private carriages running along busy Highways, risked being held up. Highwaymen created roadblocks to hold up coaches and force them to stop. Once a carriage was stopped, they could rob its passengers of their valuables and money, and even kill them if they wished. Famous highwaymen made names for themselves, like Dick Turpin, who was a notorious outlaw in Georgian-era England.

Before railroads, one of the fastest ways to move around was by mail-coach, which ran regular overland routes between major cities, delivering mail.

If you wanted protection on long journeys, you had to either bring your own weapons and know how to use them, or else pay for armed coach guards, who protected you with swords and loaded blunderbusses, or later, shotguns. To this day, sitting in the front passenger-seat of a motor-vehicle is still called “riding shotgun” – an allusion to the armed coach guard who would sit next to the driver of a stagecoach, to provide armed protection in the event of a holdup.

For all these reasons and more, for much of history, most people did not travel great distances. And if they did, it was rarely for pleasure, but mostly out of necessity – to escape disease, danger, poverty, a troubled home life, or to find employment or other business related reasons. What were the changes that happened in society and technology that allowed people – ordinary people – to travel for pleasure for the first time in their lives? And what was it like to travel and go on a vacation during this first great age of travel? What allowed this to happen?

The Birth of Mass Transport

Widespread travel for pleasure would not be possible without a corresponding development of means of cost-effective mass transport. Spurred on by the Industrial Revolution, the second half of the 19th century, saw efficient, cheap mass-transport becoming a reality, and for the 19th century, and the first half of the 20th century, efficient, cheap transport was symbolized by two great new inventions of the age: The steam-powered locomotive, and the steam-powered, ocean-going passenger-ship – the ocean liner! Where did these machines come from, and how did they change the world?

Steam Boats & Steam Trains

The two vehicles which would allow for the movement of large numbers of people with ease and economy were both invented in the early 1800s. By the start of the Victorian era, the first passenger ships and locomotives powered entirely by steam were plying trade around the world. Locomotives and steamships both originated in England, and it was this steam-powered transport technology that gave birth to the modern travel industry.

Conflicts during the 19th century such as the Crimean War, the Chinese Opium Wars, the American Civil War, and the Franco-Prussian War of the 1870s were the conflicts that laid the groundwork for the expansion and improvement of steam technology. Expansion of railroad networks caused by the need for rapid troop movements now allowed for swift, efficient movement of civilian passengers.

Advances in steamship technology for wartime uses now allowed for faster, safer and more comfortable ocean travel in peacetime. No more was it about sleeping in hammocks on rocky, creaky, cramped sailing ships that relied on the wind and weather. Now you could steam across the Atlantic or the Pacific in a berth, or a cabin of your own, in comfort and style, lulled to sleep by the throbbing of the powerful steam-pistons deep beneath the ship, that turned paddle-wheels, and later, screw-propellers, which drove great vessels across the ocean at speed.

No more was travelling by train a smoky, dusty, sooty experience, full of coughing and gasping for air in uncomfortable, windswept, open-topped carriages; now you could travel on a train with enclosed, corridor carriages with separate day-compartments, or if the journey was an overnight ride, in the relative comfort of a sleeper-car. If you found yourself hungry or thirsty, dining-cars and kitchen-cars provided you with food. If you wanted somewhere to relax, the lounge-car provided you with comfortable seating and bright lights to read, write, smoke, or chat with friends on the journey.

By the late 1800s, travel was safer, faster, cheaper and far more comfortable than lurching around inside a horse-drawn carriage with little suspension. It was also open to a wider range of people. You paid a ticket according to your means. First Class, Second Class, Third Class, or on ocean crossings – Steerage. ‘Steerage Class’ on ocean liners got its name from the fact that third-class passengers were often housed at the back of the ship, and deep in the hull, in the smallest cabins, the closest to the ship’s engines, power generators and steerage mechanisms. First- and Second-Class passengers got cabins on the upper decks, with the bright sea-views, away from the throb and rumble of the engines.

Motorised Transport

Along with steam-powered transport, the rise of cheap, personal and public motor-vehicles in the early 1900s also contributed to the Golden Age of Travel. Vehicles like motorcars, motorcycles and buses freed people from the restrictions of train and streetcar timetables, allowing them to make the best and most use of their free time. Planning trips and holidays around the country or continent became much easier and faster when each person or family had their own vehicle with which to travel in, which was not dependent on such variables as horses, timetables or weather, and which was much faster and more comfortable than previous methods of transport.

Cheap cars for the ordinary middle-class worker such as the Model T and Model A Fords in the United States, the Austin 7 in England, and the Volkswagen ‘Beetle’ in Germany meant that more people could go more places, and weekend drives to explore locations previously impractically far from home could now be accomplished in a few hours. Trips to the country or to other cities and towns were now easy and simple. And a car was easier to maintain and faster to start than a horse and carriage!

The Birth of the Golden Age of Travel

Along with steam-powered transport, the rise of more personal transport also contributed to the birth of the Golden Age of Travel. Starting in 1885, you had the world’s first modern bicycles, and increasingly as the Victorian era came to an end, the rise of the motorcar. Able to take people places that the railroads could not reach, these two inventions further improved people’s ability to travel and explore. This led to an increase and improvement of road networks.

Travelling around the country and going from city to city – road-trips – became popular. Rest stops, motels and diners popped up around the United States. The famous “Route 66” in the United States stretched from Chicago, Illinois all the way to Los Angeles, California, passing through many cities and states on the way, making it a popular road-trip and an easy way to visit many famous cities and towns along your tour of the American interior.

With the infrastructure for safe, speedy, comfortable and cost-effective mass transport now in place, and social changes such as the rise of the five-day working week, it was now possible for people to take time off, and time away from home and work, and to start travelling and go on holiday for the first time in history. The Golden Age of Travel had begun!

The Cunard Line advertising travel to all parts of the world! The ship illustrated in the poster is the RMS Aquitania.

Now, it was easy to travel to such places as the countryside, the beach, the bay, or to take day trips into town to go window shopping, to buy gifts, necessities for the house, or to explore cities and towns far from home. It was possible to live far from the city in a new, quiet suburb and commute into town. Journeys that might once have taken days or weeks could now be done in hours or minutes. The amount of free time available to people was beginning to grow. Holidays became popular, with more people getting time off work. People with time off work and money to spend wanted to go travelling, and the number of exciting destinations to visit was growing, catering to all levels of tourist, as were the ways to get there, and places to stay, once you arrived.

As the 20th century progressed, travel became faster still. With the opening of the Suez (1869) and Panama (1914) Canals, long detours around the horns of Africa and South America were eliminated for all but the largest of ships, slicing days off of voyages to Asia, the Middle East, the Mediterranean and the coastal cities of the United States.

The White Star Line advertising travel to the New World on its two most famous ocean liners, The Olympic and the Titanic, ca. 1911.

To lure people away from their homes to far flung destinations, travel agencies, railroad companies and shipping lines produced vivid, colourful posters advertising luxurious travel to the edges of the world in fast, sumptuously appointed ocean liners and railroad-carriages, fast connecting trains and short crossings; anything to part a potential traveler from his living-room, and the money from his wallet.

Steamships of all sizes now plied the oceans, seas and rivers of the world. No longer was sailing from England to the Continent (Europe) a dangerous, costly endeavor. Now, you could buy a ticket. You could get on a ferry and in steam-powered speed and comfort, take a trip across the English Channel to France. With rail-links around Europe, cities like Paris, Berlin, Rome, Milan, Venice and Pompeii became great tourist attractions which were easily accessible thanks to efficient public transport services from the port cities of France, Denmark, Germany and Italy. People could travel all over Europe, America, and Asia, in speed, comfort and safety for the first time in history. All this was what contributed to the birth of the Golden Age of Travel.

Packing for a New Age

As the 19th century progressed into the 20th century, travel became cheaper still. After the hell of the First World War, the United States of America tightened its once open door policy on immigration. No longer were shiploads of poor European refugees allowed to be dumped on Ellis Island for large-scale processing. The ending of this policy in 1924, and the subsequent introduction of immigration quotas (which allowed only a set number of people from different countries or backgrounds to migrate each year to specific countries) meant that steamship companies, which had once made thousands of pounds and dollars a year in the immigrant trade, suddenly had their main passenger base swept out from under them!

In the new, optimistic age of the “Roaring” 1920s, a solution had to be found! The answer was ‘Tourist Class’. Ships no longer transported human cargo from A to B. They now transported fare-paying passengers, or ‘tourists’ in comfort, from their home ports to destinations far and wide around the world, for a reasonable price. Cheap tickets were snapped up by eager holidaymakers with free time on their hands, and international, ocean going travel began!

Travelling by ocean liner to cities and countries all over the world often meant long sea-voyages! Very long! London to Paris might take half a day by steamer and rail. London to New York might take a week or more. Melbourne to Singapore might take three or four days. But it was for the mammoth, long-haul voyages, such as those from Naples to Shanghai (eight weeks by steamer!) for which a whole new kind of luggage was required!

These days, we have check-in luggage and carry-on luggage, and it’s all weighed and measured and assessed and tagged. You can only have 10kg carry-on and 40kg check-in and if you want more you have to pay for more, and you have to repack, redistribute and reorganize everything over and over again, so that the plane doesn’t crash into the ocean and sometimes you wonder whether going on holiday is even worth it?

Packing for a long voyage during the Golden Age of Travel was just as challenging, although those challenges were of a rather different nature. One benefit of travelling by steamship was that there weren’t really any luggage weight restrictions. So long as it fit in the hold, or in your cabin or suite on board ship, you were fine. But even for short holidays, you often brought mountains of luggage. Remember that you did not go on ‘holiday’ or ‘vacation’, you went on ‘tour’ – hence ‘tourist’.

You expected to be away from home for days and weeks at a time – and that might be just the ocean voyage, before you even reached your destination! And having spent days and weeks at sea, you weren’t going to spend just a couple of weeks at your destination and then sail for days and weeks, all the way back home again! You expected to be away for a long, long time. A month or more, at least! So the kind of luggage that our grandparents and great-grandparents brought with them on their epic journeys was significantly different from what we would pack and carry today. So, exactly what kind of luggage would you expect to bring on a long ocean voyage?

The Steamer Trunk

The mainstay of luggage for most of the 20th century, and indeed, for most of history, was the trunk – large, wooden boxes into which everything you might require for a long voyage was packed. Considering that an ocean voyage to any destination could take anywhere from a few days to a few months, such large personal storage space was deemed necessary to fit in all the clothing, accessories and other related travel paraphernalia that might be required for a long time spent at sea.

Antique steamer trunk, complete with brass hardware and locks

Trunks were designed to be tough. They had to withstand being hoisted by cranes, roped up in nets, and being stacked up, lashed down, and rocked around at sea. They had to put up with rough train rides, carriage journeys, motor trips, being dragged around and shunted from place to place by porters, bellhops and stewards. To protect against damage, they were reinforced with wooden ribs and braces. This was to prevent cracking and warping from the weight of extra luggage stacked on top.

Rivets and studs were hammered into corners and joints to strengthen them. Exposed wooden parts of trunks were varnished to prevent wood-rot, or were lined on their exteriors with leather or canvas to provide a weatherproof finish. Corners were again reinforced with brass plates which were again, riveted on, to prevent damage from abrasion and rough handling. Catches, locks and clasps were made of brass. This made the trunks all pretty and attractive, but it also came with an added bonus – unlike steel, brass does not rust, so provided further protection against the moisture and corrosion of seawater.

The Suitcase

These days, most people pack their clothes and belongings into roll-on cabin-baggage when they go travelling. The days of the actual ‘suitcase’ are steadily disappearing. But there was a time when people who went on holiday carried suitcases, and these cases actually contained the suits which provided them with their names.

A typical suitcase of the Golden Age of Travel, from the late 1800s through the early 20th century was made of leather or canvas. It came with two lockable clasps to hold it shut, and depending on the style, may or may not have come with additional leather belts that were strapped over the suitcase. These belts provided a failsafe mechanism if the clasps were broken, but the belts (which wrapped around the entire suitcase) could also be removed from the belt loops around the suitcase and linked together. They could then be used to strap the suitcase on top of other suitcases or luggage, to keep them together, or to secure them to the roof or luggage-rack of a motorcar or horse-carriage during transport, if other storage space was not available.

The Gladstone Bag

Sturdy, of large capacity, secure and easy to carry, Gladstone bags were the backpacks of their day. Everyone who travelled anywhere on a regular basis was likely to have at least one of these, and like backpacks, the humble Gladstone was used to carry as wide a range of items as you could possibly imagine.

The Gladstone was invented by a London bag-maker in the 1800s and named after globetrotting British prime-minister William Ewart Gladstone. It was immediately popular because of its large capacity, and secure, gate-mouth opening. Reinforced with a metal frame, the bag could be opened, and remain open while it was packed. This made it ideal as an overnight-bag into which anything could be packed with haste.

Vintage leather gladstone bag

Once packed, the bag was closed, locked, and then simply carried away. No consideration had to be given to how the bag’s contents might shift upon movement, since it did not have to be tipped onto its side to grasp the handle, unlike a suitcase.

This was likely the reason why this style of bag was so popular with physicians, who commonly carried sharp, dangerous and breakable objects in their medical-kits, which were likely to be broken if they shifted unexpectedly inside a backpack or other type of luggage. The gate-mouth opening also meant that a doctor’s hands were free to dive in and out of the bag to retrieve whatever instruments and medicines might be required in an emergency, without having to constantly pull the bag open over and over again.

The Portmanteau

‘Portmanteau’ is a French loanword for a type of luggage which has all but disappeared from travel in the 21st century. You never see these things anymore unless they’re in museums or in period movies and TV-shows.

A Louis Vuitton portmanteau, or wardrobe trunk

Literally meaning “Coat-Carrier” (‘porte’ as in ‘portable’, and ‘manteau’ meaning ‘coat’), or also called a ‘wardrobe trunk’, this style of trunk was used for carrying your more expensive clothes – your best dresses, favourite suits, your dinner suit or your white tie and tails. It was stood on one end, and then opened up, looking for all intents and purposes, like a portable closet, complete with hanger-rack and separate drawers and compartments for shoes, shirts, trousers, socks, underwear and space for coats, trousers and jackets so that they wouldn’t get crushed during long journeys.

Portable Word-Processing – Vintage Style

Then, just as now, our globetrotting forebears often wished to keep some sort of record of their travels, or wished to inform others of their travels. Or had a need to communicate and write to others during their travels.

If we had to do this today, we’d bring along an iPad or a laptop computer and seek out the nearest establishment boasting free WIFI. And in their own way, our grandparents and great-grandparents had their own methods for keeping in touch and connected with others.

The Writing Slope

The reservoir pen which could be carried around in your pocket, and used anytime, anyplace, anywhere, at a second’s notice, is a relatively recent invention. If you went travelling any time before 1900 and you needed to write while away from your desk, chances are that you probably had one of these things packed in amongst your trunks, boxes and cases:

Antique writing-slope manufactured by Toulmin & Gale of London, ca. 1863

Writing-slopes were the laptop computers of their day. They carried everything that you required for on-the-move communications: Ink, pens, paper, stamps, sealing-wax, seals, spare nibs, matches, envelopes, pencils, paper-knife, eraser, paper-folder, and storage for money, letters, important documents and valuables. The writing box or writing-slope shown here is typical of the more expensive, up-market writing-slopes of the 1800s. It comes complete with desk accessories in elephant-tusk ivory, inset matchbox and inkwell, and an automatic deadlock security system (and the original key!).

Half-closing the writing-box exposes three, flat ivory panels, or an ‘Aide Memoir’. Here, simple notes and reminders could be scrawled on the ivory slates in graphite pencil. They could be erased using a moist cloth, and the ivory could be reused.

Writing boxes were common travelling companions of the educated globetrotter or travelling businessman of the 19th century. They died out at the turn of the century when they were replaced by fountain pens, and by yet another common piece of luggage which might be brought with you on a long voyage during the early 20th century.

The Portable Typewriter

Invented in the 1870s, early typewriters were bulky, heavy things. Weighing up to 15-20kg (about 30lbs+), they were impractical as portable writing machines. As travel increased towards the end of the 19th century, and as typewriters became better designed and more commonplace, a market was realized: Portable typewriters would surely prove popular with the travelling public, if only such a machine could be produced!

The first portable, laptop typewriters came out in the first decade of the 1900s, but their golden age started in the 1920s. Portable typewriters were manufactured by Remington, Royal, Underwood, Corona and countless other typewriter companies. They were snapped up by reporters, authors, journalists, travel writers and businessmen who often had to travel as part of their jobs, and needed to be able to correspond swiftly and neatly while on the road.

This Underwood Standard Portable from the second half of the 1920s was typical of the portable typewriters carried around the world by tourists and writers during the Golden Age of Travel. Newspaper reports, story drafts, letters home, business reports and magazine articles were all typed up on machines like this and sent home across the seas by untold thousands of writers, eager tourists, journalists and businessmen during the early 20th century.

Oddments and Accessories

Along with large pieces of luggage like suitcases, Gladstone bags, trunks and portmanteaus, our globetrotting predecessors also brought with them all manner of smaller boxes, bags and cases for holding almost everything you could imagine. Shoeshine kits, collar-boxes, handbags, hatboxes, stud-and-link boxes, and toiletry cases carrying everything from straight-razors to talcum-powder.

Such large amounts of such small luggage were often packed inside trunks and suitcases, to separate and organize one’s belongings on long trips, but also to keep the items most commonly used closer to hand. Until the 1930s, men’s shirts came in general ‘one-size fits all’ style with longer sleeves, and without attached collars and cuffs (called ‘tunic shirts’). The separate collars and cuffs were stored in collar-boxes. The studs and links to attach these to the shirts were stored in jewellery cases.

As it would be impossible to store all of one’s belongings into a ship’s cabin or berth, or on a railroad-carriage, only the trunks and cases carrying the most essential items were stored close-at-hand. Clothes and other belongings that would not be required until the ship or train reached its destination would be stored in the hold, or in the luggage vans coupled to the backs of trains.

Classic Luggage Stickers

Hotel chains as we know them today did not exist in the early 20th century. Every hotel in town was owned and operated separately, and competition between them was fierce. Every hotel had to be grand, classy, have a catchy and elegant sounding name, and have everything that the guest might desire. Hotels that wanted to stand out had everything custom made. Everything from the stationery, silverware, glassware, china and towels were emblazoned with the hotel’s monogram or logo. And of course, every hotel had to have its own distinct and immediately recognizable set of stylish and colourful luggage-stickers.

Luggage stickers were once like tattoos – unique, colourful, and evidence of a varied and well-travelled past. Just like how sailors who went to sea came back festooned with ink, a steamer-trunk, set of suitcases or a well-travelled Gladstone bag often returned home plastered from lid to base in stickers. Stickers came from almost anywhere and everywhere: from train stations, stickers from shipping companies, and stickers from hotels.

Stickers contained information such as the name of a trunk’s owner, his room number, the train which he had taken, or the name of the ship he had boarded. And if he had boarded a ship, then the sticker might also have his deck and cabin number. If he was on a long train journey and his luggage was stored in the goods-van at the back of the train, his trunk sticker might have his carriage or compartment number.

Today, luggage-stickers are just ugly, black-and-white barcoded, print-out, rip-off, stick-on-and-done affairs. As soon as you arrive at your destination, it’s immediately your mission to remove these stickers as soon as possible, lest their blandness offend the eyes and sensibilities of the delicate. On the other hand, vintage luggage stickers were works of art. They often had bold letters in artistic fonts and colours which spelt out the hotel name, the ship name, the city or port where the sticker was plastered on, and came with decorative pictures or photographs as part of the design. They were like miniature travel posters in their own right and passengers often kept the stickers on their luggage as proof of their travels, and as proof of the extent of their travel. And also because it gave their luggage ‘character’, with the various stickers creating a rainbow patchwork of paper on the bland leather surfaces of their cases and trunks. 

Hotels During the Golden Age of Travel

The rise in the frequency of travel from the late 1800s to the start of the Second World War saw a corresponding rise in the number of hotels. A number of the world’s most famous hotels trace their roots back to this first great age of tourism. In the United States, the Stanley Hotel (1909) was opened by Freelan O. Stanley, co-owner of the famous Stanley Motor Carriage Co., which produced the well-known Stanley steam-powered automobiles of the 1900s-1920s. Notoriously haunted, it gave Stephen King the inspiration for one of his most famous horror novels: “The Shining”. Its guests included Titanic survivor Margaret Brown, musician J.P. Sousa, and President Theodore Roosevelt.

Raffles Hotel. 1, Beach Road, Singapore (opened 1887)

In New York City, the famous Plaza Hotel was opened in 1907. In London, the Langham and Grosvenor Hotels were opened in 1865 and 1862 respectively. The Ritz (1907) and the Savoy (1889) in London remain two of the most famous hotels in the world. In Singapore, Raffles Hotel opened in 1887. But as grand and famous as all these structures are, they all owe a debt to one hotel which has sadly faded into history, no longer operating, and which has been overshadowed by the fame of all the other hotels that have come after it.

The Plaza Hotel, New York City (opened 1907)

The Tremont Hotel, in Boston (closed 1895), one of several hotels named Tremont House or Tremont Hotel scattered around the United States (there were five in total) was the first hotel in the world as we would know them today, which offered amenities like lockable bedroom doors, indoor plumbing, indoor heated baths, indoor toilets, a proper reception area, and bellhops to carry the mountains of luggage mentioned earlier on. Opened in 1829, it predated many of the most famous hotels in the world which still operate, and paved the way for standards in hotel amenities and services which we take for granted today.

As the numbers of hotel guests started to climb as more people found more time and more spare cash with which to travel, hotels started competing with each other. To lure in more customers, they came up with more and newer amenities, better service and furnishings, and all kinds of features and extras which today are considered standards across the hotel industry. In some respects, the service was also much better than what we might be used to today.

These days, we arrive at the hotel and check in. Then, we’re given our key-cards and told our room numbers and left to it, and that’s basically it. In older times, when hotel competition was fierce, this level of ‘service’ was not always acceptable. Back when even a short journey meant bringing a small cartload of luggage with you, the front-desk clerk would ring the counter-bell (similar to the one shown above) to summon a youth who would take your room key and some or all of your luggage, which he either carried upstairs, or loaded onto a hotel luggage-trolley and took upstairs in an elevator. This boy (they were traditionally young men) got his name from the very bell used to summon him – ‘Bellhop’. Once at your room, he unlocked the door for you, helped you carry in your luggage, handed you your key and then left you to your thoughts.

A luxury hotel of the era would’ve come with such amenities as a lobby, hotel restaurants, lounges, bars, and even a ballroom, where a house orchestra or jazz-band would provide music which you could dance to, if you wished. Hotels which had their own house-bands included the St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco, the Savoy Hotel in London, the Hotel Pennsylvania in New York, and Raffles Hotel in Singapore. Big names like Glenn Miller and Benny Goodman would often broadcast live from the Pennsylvania Hotel at set times each evening, for hotel guests to dance to, and for people at home to listen to via radio.

Popular Tourist Destinations

During the Golden Age of Travel, from the late 1800s through to the mid-20th century, a number of countries became popular, famous, and even infamous destinations for the well-heeled globetrotter of yesteryear. Countries like Canada, the United States, Cuba, Mexico, Germany, Italy, Egypt, Spain, France, Scotland, Ireland, England, Australia, India, the British Straits Settlements, Hong Kong, Japan and China were all popular tourist spots. If you had the time and money, you might take a whole year off, and visit all of them, going on a world tour.

Among the most popular travel destinations were those considered ‘exotic’, such as Egypt, the Middle East, India, the Dutch East Indies, the Straits Settlements, Japan, and one of the most famous of all: The International Settlement of Shanghai.

The Shanghai International Settlement

Shanghai, China’s most famous port city was a free port from 1843-1943, one of several treaty-ports opened and developed by the British after the Opium War of 1839. Anyone could go there and free trade was encouraged, much like Singapore during the same era. Shanghai in the first half of the 20th century, free from the ravages of war in Europe, flourished. It was not only famous, it was notorious.

Tales abounded of gambling, prostitution, drug-trafficking (mostly opium), giddy nightclubs with raucous jazz music, high living, department stores, the Shanghai racetrack, grand ballrooms and luxurious hotels. But Shanghai, for all its glitz and glamour, pulsing nightlife and sheen of neon, also held a seedy underbelly reeking of gangland violence and crime. The police fought riots, stabbings, shootings, kidnappings, rape and an endless battle against the fierce underground opium trade. Shanghai was the original Sin City.

Who wants to go to Shanghai?

Visiting Shanghai in the early 20th century was like visiting Las Vegas today. Its lurid reputation more than anything else, was its biggest draw card. And for the right price, any and all kinds of thrills could be had, if you knew where to look, and who to contact in the crime-infested underworld of the International Settlement.

The Bund of the International Settlement of Shanghai, 1926

One of the first views of Shanghai that you got was The Bund. The Bund, or raised embankment, was the main riverfront thoroughfare of pre-war Shanghai, then called the Shanghai International Settlement. Stretched out along the entire length of the Bund were banking houses, shipping offices, grand hotels, newspaper headquarters, upscale clubs, the Shanghai Customs House, and foreign consulates.

As your ship sailed up the Huangpu River and away from the Yangtze, this was your first view of the city – all its grandeur out on display like some gaudy jewellery-shop window display. The Bund ran the entire width of the British and French Concessions of Shanghai, from Suzhou Creek, and down the west bank of the Huangpu River. And the ships docked right there on the riverside. The moment you got off, you were plunged right into the heart of Old Shanghai. You had your choice of the two best hotels in town: The Palace Hotel, and the Cathay Hotel (which remain there still, along with all the other buildings, which are heritage protected, although the hotels have since been renamed).

The Palace Hotel (left), and the Cathay Hotel (right). Today, they are called the Swatch Art Peace Hotel, and the Fairmont Peace Hotel. In the old days, the Cathay Hotel was also called Sassoon House. Shanghai’s premier retail street, Nanking Road, runs between them.

Shanghai was so popular that in the United States, some young men joined the United States Marine Corps (USMC) hoping to be posted to the 4th Marine Regiment, also called the ‘China Marines’, because they were based in Shanghai, a city of exotic and oriental wonder! Due to the city’s cheap labour and high standards of living, even humble soldiers lived in relative luxury while deployed to Shanghai. Here, their main tasks were protecting the boundaries of the city and the American Concession, and enforcing the laws of the International Settlement, although this second duty was also carried out by the multi-ethnic Shanghai Municipal Police, whose job it was to enforce law and order within the Settlement.

The SMP was originally largely British, but also included Chinese, Indian, French, and American officers as well. In 1917, famous American songwriter, Irving Berlin, wrote a now, almost-forgotten song called ‘From Here to Shanghai’, which spoke of the singer’s longing to experience something more exotic than just a trip to ‘dreamy Chinatown’. 1922 saw the publication of ‘Goodbye, Shanghai’, and in 1924, one of the most famous jazz standards of the day, ‘Shanghai Shuffle’ was published, showing how popular this destination was among travelling Europeans and Americans.

Travelling to Shanghai from Europe, or even America, took several weeks. Most ships did not sail to most of their destinations directly. Even the largest ocean liners didn’t do that. There was far more money to be made by making regular stop-offs along the way, which at any rate, were necessary to re-coal the ship, drop off mail and passengers, pick up more mail and more passengers, restock the ship for the next leg of its voyage, and then carry on. A ship sailing from England to China might stop at Cherbourg, Casablanca, Marseille, Naples, Port Sa’id, Bombay, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Tokyo before finally dropping anchor at its final destination: Shanghai. You can see now, why such a trip would take up to two months to complete! 

The Shanghai International Settlement went by many names. ‘The Paris of the East’, and ‘The Whore of the Orient’ were two of the most common, reflecting both its ritzy, exotic nature, and its Devil-May-Care way of life.

The Peking Legation Quarter

For tourists wanting to visit the old capital of China (it was moved to Nanking in 1927), you either caught a train from Shanghai to Tientsin, and then to Peking, or else sailed to Tientsin directly and caught a train from there. And while in Peking, you stayed at the famous Peking Legation Quarter, at the Grand Hotel de Pekin, or the Grand Hotel Des Wagons Lits. The Legation Quarter, like the International Settlement to the south, was the Western expatriate enclave within a larger, Chinese city.

After the famous Siege of the Legations in 1900, the entire compound was surrounded by walls and gates to protect it against possible future uprisings, making it look like a walled city. The Grand Hotel Des Wagons Lits was operated by the same company which ran the famous Orient Express, the Compagnie Internationale Des Wagons Lits (“International Sleeping-Car Company”). In Peking, just like in modern Beijing, chief tourist destinations were the Great Wall, and the Forbidden City. After the end of the Qing Dynasty in 1911, the Forbidden City was opened to the public as the Palace Museum in 1925, a position it has held ever since.

Singapore: The Crossroads of the East

Another popular tourist stop was Singapore. Called ‘The Crossroads of the East’, Singapore was ideally situated for a quick stopover on your inspection of the South Pacific. A British colony since the 1810s, Singapore was widely considered to be one of the nicest, grandest, most exotic, and safest places in the world to have a holiday. After all, it had one of the finest military airbases in Asia, as well as some of the best coastal fortifications. For this reason, it was also proudly touted as the ‘Gibraltar of the East’, as well.

The place to stay at while in Singapore was of course, Raffles Hotel. Opened in 1887, Raffles has housed all manner of celebrities, from Noel Coward to Rudyard Kipling and even British royalty. Raffles’ main slogan in the early 20th century came from a review given by Kipling in 1887, months after the hotel opened. Glowing with praise, Kipling had said: “When in Singapore, feed at Raffles!” – however, Raffles was careful not to publicise the rest of his review, which continued: “…and sleep at the Hotel De L’Europe!” – The Hotel De L’Europe was Raffles’ main competition in Singapore at the time! Unlike the Hotel De L’Europe, however, Raffles survived the Great Depression. The De L’Europe, by comparison, closed its doors in the mid-1930s due to falling guest numbers.

As a free port and main stopover for ships plying the passenger trade from Europe to Asia, Singapore boasted excellent shopping. A visit to Orchard Road was almost mandatory, to seek out the latest oriental wonders brought to the colony by ships sailing back from China and Japan.

Berlin: Cultural Center of Europe

Despite the scourge of the Franco-Prussian War and the First World War, during the late 1800s and early part of the 20th century, the city of Berlin, Germany, was a popular tourist-spot for the well-to-do. Renowned as a center of culture, art, music and politics, Berlin attracted writers, journalists, politicians and famous actors.

Hotels like the Adlon became famous as haunts for foreign newspaper-reporters and visiting VIPs. As the Hotel Adlon in particular was (and still is) located in the governmental and diplomatic quarter of Berlin, it was the ideal place to stay for journalists wishing to cover German politics. Foreign embassies and the Reichstag were all nearby. Even today, the Russian and British embassies in Berlin are located just a few blocks from this famous hotel, which was rebuilt in the 1990s on its original location.

Before the scourge of Nazism in the mid-1930s, Berlin was famous for its café culture, its jazz-music and its contributions to film and theatre. European cabaret flourished in Germany during this period and developed its own unique, raunchy humor in the nightclubs and taverns of Berlin. The center of commercial and social life in Berlin was Potsdamer Platz, one of the city’s main squares. Originally formed by the intersection of five different roads, this large, open space was an ideal hub in the center town from which almost anything could be reached. Grand hotels were built nearby, the Potsdamer Platz railroad station was built near this location, and in 1897, the Wetheim department-store was opened near the square. By the 1920s, it was the largest department-store in Europe.

The Nazi rise to power spelt the end to almost all of this. Many of the actors and musicians were at least partially Jewish, and they fled Germany in droves to escape persecution. Many of the actors in the famous 1942 film “Casablanca” were German, Austrian or Czech Jewish refugees which had been actors in their home-countries. They fled to America during the 1930s and reestablished themselves in Hollywood, when it became clear that they could no-longer act in Nazi-controlled countries. German cabaret, which had a strong focus on political and social satire, was all but abolished by the Nazis.

Baedeker Guide Books

Any eager tourist heading off to far-flung destinations today might consult TripAdvisor, or read up on their Lonely Planet guidebooks. If you went anywhere during the Golden Age of Travel, most likely, you stopped off at your local bookshop or travel agency, and asked to be shown their current stock of ‘Baedekers’.

‘Baedeker’ was a German publishing house established in 1827. Throughout much of the 19th and the first half of the 20th century, the Baedeker family became famous for printing guidebooks. Published in German and English, ‘Baedekers’ covered everything from countries around the world, to counties or states within countries, to cities and towns within states, and could be remarkably detailed. From the mid-1850s, Baedeker guides, which were regularly updated, covered countries all around the world. They started being printed in English in 1861, when company founder, Karl Baedeker, realized that for their firm to be successful, they had to appeal to as many languages as possible.

Countries which had Baedeker guidebooks written about them included: Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, France, Palestine, Syria, Norway, Sweden, Great Britain, Italy, Greece, Egypt, Mexico, Canada and the United States! And that’s just from 1861-1900! Other countries that were included in editions printed in the 20th century included Spain, Portugal, Austria-Hungary, and Russia. Cities which earned their own guidebooks were numerous, and extended from London, to Paris to Peking, in China!

Stop and consider for a minute what a challenge it would’ve been to amass such a stockpile of information in an age before the internet. Imagine having to write guidebooks on cities and countries thousands of miles away, and having to rely on steam-post and electric telegraph for communications. Imagine the effort and time it took to send people thousands of miles away to far-off countries to research and gather this information. Far-off countries? In 1914, Baedeker published its first guidebook (in German) on the South Pacific, covering the British Straits Settlements (Malaya, Singapore) and the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia). A journey from Germany to Singapore took over a month by steamship!

An Ongoing Journey

The number of things that a person could say and write about this exciting and romanticised element and era of history are almost endless. I’ll be making another posting soon, about the three most famous vehicles of the Golden Age of Travel – the Hindenburg Airship, the Queen Mary, and the Orient Express!

Antique Brass Pen-Cleaner

 

During the last public holiday long-weekend, I got the chance to visit the Ballarat Antiques Fair. Two hours’ drive outside of town was rewarded with two venues to visit, and dozens of stalls to peruse! A lot of the stuff on offer was fascinating, a great deal of it was extremely expensive ($1,200 for a silver card-case?), and all of it was very beautiful.

The fair had everything. Antique radios, inkwells, pocketwatches, watch chains, rings, silverware, carriage clocks, ceramics, a Victorian-era pudding-basin (why not?), posters, maps, jewelry and even some vintage clothing. But the item that I walked away from the fair with was a tiny little brass antique, small enough to fit into my pocket – and it’s adorable!

A Victorian-era Brass Pen-Cleaner

And here it is!

Made of brass, and filled with…most likely plaster…and topped with a stiff-bristled brush, this Victorian-era paperweight-and-pen-cleaner dates to around 1890-1910. At one time, fuzzy little devices like these could be found on well-appointed desktops all over the world, but while most people today will still know what an inkwell, a pen-tray, a letter-rack or stamp-box are for, and would recognise most of them in sight – the purpose of the pen-cleaner or ‘nib-wiper’, as they’re also called – has been largely lost from the public imagination of what constitutes a well-stocked Victorian-era desk.

What is a Pen Cleaner For?

Along with string-caddies, stamp-moisteners and blotter-pads, pen-cleaners were yet another desktop staple that used to be found on every well-appointed desk back in Victorian times. Their purpose was to remove the excess, or leftover ink from the nib of your pen. This saved you from fishing around for tissues or paper-towels, saving time, and reducing waste.

In the 1800s, the rise of the mass-produced, punch-pressed steel dip-pen made writing much easier and cheaper. Pens could be easily purchased in boxes of dozens each, which would last for weeks between uses. However, to make the pens so cheap, the steel that was used in their manufacture was usually cheap, brittle and prone to rusting. Constant contact with water-based ink caused the nibs to rust easily. In order to prolong the usefulness of their pens, writers had to keep their pens dry and clean between uses.

It’s for this reason that pen-wipers or pen-cleaners were invented. They were a simple, convenient way to remove the ink from the tip of your pen after writing, to stop the pen from rusting, if it had been used hard, and put away wet – since putting away a wet pen would literally cause it to start rusting.

Pen-cleaners ranged from the mundane to the fantastical. Cheap versions could easily be made from scrap cloth, more elaborate ones could be made of brass, or even silver. They came in all kinds of styles – chairs, boxes, animals…they were circular, rectangular…they came as part of desk-sets, along with inkwells and blotters…and their sole function was to remove ink from the tip of your pen.

In the 1890s and 1900s, with the rise of the fountain pen, pen-cleaners remained a popular desktop accessory, since they could still be used to wipe away the excess ink from the nib and feed of a pen, once it had been refilled in an inkwell. Again, this reduced, or even entirely eliminated the need – to find tissues to clean the pen.

Why Did I Buy It?

For one, it was very cheap. For two, it was in good condition, and for three, I’ve always wanted one!

I love collecting weird, whimsical, obscure antiques. Antiques which come with a story, or which require an explanation of some kind. It makes them more interesting if it’s not immediately obvious what they are.

Yet another reason why I bought it was because I’d been chasing after one of these for years, and I was thrilled to finally lay my hands on one. On top of that, I knew that it’d get a lot of good use out of me, and me, out of it, because of my daily use of fountain pens. I still need something to clean my nibs on, after all!

What Happened to Pen-Cleaners?

Pen-cleaners died out in the second half of the 1900s when people started using ballpoint pens. Like rocker-blotters and inkwells, all these other accessories were no-longer required to maintain or use a ballpoint pen, and so the pen-cleaner also saw a decline in use, until they eventually just faded into obscurity. There is a growing community of fountain pen collectors and users in the world today, though, so who knows? Perhaps the pen-cleaner might be due a revival, as a green, and convenient way to clean ink off of pen-nibs, without wasting so much paper?

Learning a Trade: Guilds and Guildhalls

 

If you visit any major European city – for example – Brussels, or Amsterdam, London, or Paris, and you go to the “old city” or the “ancient quarter” in the very heart of the metropolis, chances are, you’ll stumble across all kinds of amazing, beautiful buildings. Among these buildings – are guildhalls.

Beautifully-faced guildhalls in the Dutch city of Antwerp.

Guildhalls are all over Europe. Almost every major European city was bound to have at least one – usually – several, sometimes all clustered in one place, sometimes, spread out around the city, but they are there, if you know where, and how to find them. During my trips to Europe, I was fortunate enough to see the Guildhall in London, and some of the beautiful ones in the Netherlands when I visited Amsterdam. But then, you might ask – what is a guildhall? What makes it so special? And for that matter – what the hell is a guild?

I am so glad you asked. Let’s find out together!

What exactly is a Guild?

“I say, Jeeves! What an extraordinary talent! Could one inquire as to…”
“I’m not at liberty to divulge the ingredients, sir”.
“No! Of course not! Secrets of the guild, and all that, eh?”
“Precisely, sir!”

– “Jeeves & Wooster”

A guild is defined as an organisation, or group of people, with shared interests, goals, crafts or skills, which is formed in order to protect their mutual interest, provide support to each other, and to further the improvement of their craft or interest – whatever that happens to be.

Using this definition – how far back can guilds be traced?

Believe it or not, but – thousands of years!

The first guilds – of a sort – were established in Ancient Rome, but the system of guilds that most people think about today were largely created in Medieval (476 – 1350) or Renaissance times (1350 – 1600), and they were established all over Europe, to such an extent that almost every major city was bound to have several of them – and believe it or not – guilds are still being established today – the London Worshipful Company of Art Scholars was created…in 2010!

What is a Guild For? What does it Do?

The purpose of a guild is to regulate a trade or profession, to guard and record trade or craft secrets, and to keep the trade alive. Within a particular community (say – a city), guilds regulated and certified the work done by various craftsmen or professionals within the community. In an age when knowledge was passed down from father to son, mother to daughter, master to apprentice, when records were hard to keep, and literacy was minimal – the best way to ensure that the best of the best interests of a trade or skill or profession were being both protected, regulated, and taught – was to consolidate all this knowledge into one organisation – a guild!

And this trade or profession could be literally anything – writers, weavers, tailors, silversmiths, blacksmiths, accountants, barbers…London even has a guild for taxi-drivers! Guilds existed to preserve a craft or profession’s secrets, skills and histories, and to maintain standards of professionalism, as well as to oversee the continued improvement and education of those who wished to participate in that particular craft or profession, regardless of what it actually was. The closest modern equivalent to a medieval guild is like a modern trade union, where paid-up members receive benefits and have a say in how their trade or profession is regulated, and what it will, or will not do.

How Does a Guild Operate?

When a guild was formed, it first required somewhere to call home – a guildhall, or a guildhall stand-in, if a purpose-built guildhall did not yet exist. The next thing it required was a register – a list of all its members – who they were, what their positions and skills were, and what ranks they held. In older times, these registers were laboriously written longhand by a scribe, and every update or addition required that a whole new document be created from scratch.

The next thing that a guild needed was to establish a body and hierarchy of members. Guilds were broadly broken up into craft guilds, and merchant guilds; craft guilds are the most well-known, and to enter a craft guild required a lengthy training process. This is covered below…

The Apprentice

If you wanted to be part of a guild, you needed to have a trade or craft, and join the guild which catered to that trade or craft. To earn the right to be a craftsman or tradesman, you needed to complete the necessary training and education – known as an apprenticeship. An apprentice was a novice, a student, a pupil of the craft or profession which he hoped to make his life’s work. A newbie, as we’d call it today.

Apprentices almost always started as teenagers, usually between 13-15 years of age. To be made an apprentice, or to carry out an apprenticeship, the hopeful craftsman first had to find someone to teach him the tips and tricks of the trade. To do this, he would visit the guildhall of his selected trade, and seek out someone who would be his mentor – a master craftsman who required an apprentice, and who would offer him a position. If the apprentice accepted, then a document – a Certificate of Indenture – was drawn up.

An apprentice’s Certificate of Indenture.
Note the wavy ‘indented’ line at the top of the page.

Depending on the craft or trade that the apprentice wished to enter, he might find the act of finding a master to teach him, to be easier than he might expect. It was very common for the children of master craftsmen to follow in the professions of their fathers. In this instance, the apprentice’s own father would train them in their chosen profession. In this way, generations of craftsmen could all work within a single family, and many famous craftsmen throughout history, entered their professions this way. Paul Revere, of Revolutionary War fame, was apprenticed to his father, who was a silversmith. John Harrison, the famous clockmaker, was apprenticed to his father, who was a carpenter. But just because you got to join the family business didn’t mean that you could escape the strictures of the day – you still had to fill out your certificate, sign it, and agree to it.

The certificate – colloquially known as one’s “indentures” or “indenture papers” – was a contract between the Master Craftsman, and the Apprentice. It stipulated in black and white what the Master owed his apprentice, and likewise, what the Apprentice owed the Master. Both parties would sign the indentures (there was always at least two) and then it was certified by a legal official such as a notary, judge, or a member of the guild.

Silversmith Paul Revere Junior,
holding a silver teapot

The document was then sealed, dated, and finally – torn in half. The wavy, curving lines that were made along the break in the paper was what gave the document its name – the line wasn’t straight – it was never straight – it was always ‘indented’ – wavering, irregular and erratic. This is why the documents were known as ‘indentures’. This was done deliberately so that it would be impossible for either party to create a fake agreement later on, changing any of the terms or conditions previously agreed upon, since both documents had to be presented at the same time, and they both had to match up along the same wavy, indented line when they were put together.

Apprenticeships lasted a very long time – the usual length of time was seven years. In this way, an apprentice completed his apprenticeship when he was in his early twenties. In that seven years, an apprentice was expected to learn, and be taught, all the skills and tips and tricks of his chosen trade or profession. Apprentices typically did all the grunt-work. Looking after tools, doing the simple, unskilled jobs, cleaning the workshop, lighting the fire, understanding how the implements and tools were used, and how various techniques and finishes were applied or carried out.

Near the end of their apprenticeships, to prove that they were paying attention, and actually knew what they were doing, apprentices had to pass, what we would today, call a ‘practical examination’. In this, they had to prove their skills to their master by creating what was called a ‘journeyman piece’ – this piece would incorporate all the various skills, techniques and methods that they had learned throughout their apprenticeships, and the better it was, the more likely they were to progress in their profession. Tailors had to make clothes, carpenters might make furniture, a cabinetmaker might try to build a chest of drawers, a silversmith might try to make a silver beaker or tumbler, and so on.

The point of the journeyman piece was to show that he had attained the necessary skills to move up to the next rank – that of a journeyman craftsman. If he had, then he had successfully completed his apprenticeship, and could move on upwards…

The Journeyman

The next step up for the budding craftsman was to be a journeyman. A journeyman was any craftsman or skilled tradesman who had successfully completed the contract of his indenture, and was now considered to have mastered the basics of his craft. The next thing he had to do was to gain experience. Experience was gained by working as an employee of a master craftsman. Not an apprentice – who was a student – but as an actual paid worker.

The word ‘Journeyman’ comes from the French ‘Journee’ – meaning ‘day’ – a craftsman had now advanced from being an apprentice, to being a day-labourer – someone who was literally paid per-day of work by his employer. Journeymen were more free in their work than apprentices – they could have their own families and private lives, they could own their own property and come and go from work each day as they pleased. This was in contrast with an apprentice, who typically lived with his master in his master’s house, with the master expected to feed, clothe, and house, as well as train and educate his pupil.

While journeymen were apprentices who had successfully completed their apprenticeships, they were not yet considered fully-fledged artisans in the sense that they did not have the right to employ someone else to work under them, however, a journeyman – again, unlike an apprentice – had the right to demand payment for their day’s work.

If, or when, a journeyman decided that he had had enough of working for ‘the man’, then a journeyman could, if he had the skill, apply to become a master craftsman. Just as an apprentice had to complete a journeyman piece to become a journeyman, a journeyman had to complete a masterpiece in order to become a master craftsman. However, while a journeyman piece was judged by a master, a masterpiece was not judged by another master – but by several masters!

See, the only way to actually join a guild was to prove to the master craftsmen of that guild that you deserved the privilege, and had the skills, to make it worthwhile to accept you as a member. So if you wanted to try and become a master craftsman, then your masterpiece was submitted – not to one master – but to several masters! And if they all agreed that your masterpiece really was a masterpiece – and that you had shown that you had exceptional skill – you would be granted the title of master!

The Master Craftsman

As a Master Craftsman, you were now able to carry out your desired trade as you wished. This meant that you could open your own business, hire apprentices, set your own prices, and decide what, when, why, where, and how you worked. However, there were still restrictions.

See, to be a master craftsman, you had to follow a sort of ‘Code of Conduct’, and to ensure that you did follow this code, a lot of cities insisted that any craftsman or skilled labourer working within the bounds of the city had to register themselves with the guildhall of their specific craft. So, you might be a master silversmith, but you couldn’t work as a silversmith in a city without first registering yourself as a silversmith at the city’s silversmithing guildhall.

Registering with your specific guild meant that you had to follow specific rules and regulations. While you were free to do what you wanted, more or less, you were also prevented from doing certain things – for example – you couldn’t talk about your profession – guilds existed to protect the interests of their members – and these interests included any trade or industrial secrets, processes or methods which their members carried out – so you couldn’t divulge secret recipes, or special methods or experiments – to anybody outside the guild. Punishments for doing so were surprisingly severe, and usually included some form of public humiliation.

While this might sound extreme, being a master craftsman or merchant registered with your particular guild also came with a lot of perks – paying your membership fees ensured all kinds of benefits, and guilds operated specifically to benefit their members. The very word “guild” comes from the German word “Gelt” and the Old English word “Gield” – meaning “Payment, or money”.

In this way, guilds were a sort of insurance firm or benevolent society – they provided financial assistance to help master craftsmen start up their own businesses, provided poor relief if they lost their business, shared trade secrets, and regulated working conditions.

Unsurprisingly, guilds could become extremely powerful – so much so that they could, if they desired, not pay, or pay very few – taxes – especially if the guild handled a trade or craft that was particularly important.

The Decline of the Guilds

Guilds and their guildhalls remained prominent through much of the Middle Ages (476AD – ca. 1400), the Renaissance (1400-1600) and much of the Early Modern period (ca. 1600-1800). However, by the time of the Vcitorian era, guilds started losing a lot of the prominence, power and influence that they had once held for over a thousand years. Many factors led to their eventual downfall.

Guilds carried out a lot of functions – they regulated prices, training, education, keeping of records, and countless other things – but they were also – in a sense – monopolies. If you wanted to trade as a particular craftsman or merchant within a particular city – you had to join the city guild dedicated to that craft or area of merchandise – no ifs, no buts – no join, no sell. Simple as that.

A lot of traders and craftsmen started seeing this as being detrimental to their trade – after all – why should a guildhall determine how much you can sell your stuff for? Why should it be a law that you HAD to join the guild just to trade within the city boundaries? Fair enough, they kept records and oversaw apprenticeships, but craftsmen and artisans started feeling that some guilds were simply getting too powerful for their own good, and shifting attitudes in the Victorian era saw guilds gradually decrease in power over the next hundred years.

By the mid-1800s, guilds had lost much of their power. Changing attitudes about work, and how trade and industrial secrets should be protected, sapped the guilds of their authority. Political changes such as the French Revolution of 1789, and the “Year of Revolutions” (1848), caused the guilds in many cities, sovereign states and city-states across Europe to be dissolved, and their functions taken over by modern companies and businesses, with laws enacted to cover the areas once protected or regulated by the guild system.

Guilds Today?

Guilds as we tend to think of them – as in, the Medieval European guilds, do not exist anymore. Guildhalls remain as historical landmarks and heritage protected buildings, but the organisations they housed are largely lost to history. Some organisations call themselves guilds, although this is mostly as a professional courtesy or nostalgic throwback, rather than having any actual resemblance to medieval guilds.

In London, there do still exist a number of “Worshipful Companies”, which operate similar to guilds, but the number of institutions that exist today, which are most like real medieval guilds are fast disappearing, if indeed they still exist.

Antique Tortoiseshell Dining Trousse

 

Chopsticks have always fascinated me. They’re simple, elegant, portable, robust, and compact. And, once you’ve mastered the use of chopsticks – almost anything can be used as chopsticks – I remember Jackie Chan in one of his early movies, where his character was trying to have lunch in his office – unable to find any actual chopsticks to eat his noodles with, he gave up and used a pair of pencils, instead!

Although these days, it’s common in many Asian households to have an entire drawer-compartment overflowing with chopsticks, and the only problem you face is trying to match them up when you need a pair to eat lunch with, in times past, chopsticks were highly-prized personal possessions, and it was common for people to each have their own pair. In some countries – such as Japan – this is still the case. At a time when chopsticks were hard to come by, once you owned a pair – you carried it with you everywhere!

Such was the case, when this trousse was made!

What is a Chopstick Trousse?

‘Trousse’ is a French word, which variously means “kit”, “case” or a type of compartmentalised container, used for storing implements, tools or utensils required for a specific task. This is a chopstick trousse, and its task is…eating!

Chopstick trousses were created back in the 1700s in northern China. Their use was encouraged after a law was passed by the Qianlong Emperor, which decreed that all Manchu-Chinese had to carry around a pair of chopsticks, and a knife, with which to eat their food. Manchurian and Mongolian dining habits and styles meant that a knife was an essential part of one’s eating utensils, since the knife would be used to slice or cut up one’s meat. The passing of this law was to ensure the preservation of Manchurian culture, since Manchus were a minority elite, ruling over the much larger Han Chinese population at the time.

A lot of people call these things Chinese or Japanese eating trousses. I’m not sure why, because they don’t come from Japan, and while they existed in China, they were never used by the Chinese. Japanese and Chinese dining customs don’t use knives – they didn’t then, they don’t now. Trousses like these were largely used by minorities.

The standard chopstick trousse comes with a single, thin, long-bladed knife, and a pair of chopsticks, which may, or may not be chained at the top (to prevent loss if they fall out). I have seen sets with two knives, and two sets of chopsticks, but the vast majority will have just the one knife, and one set of chopsticks.

The case, with the chopsticks and knife.

How is it Made?

Almost all trousses were made of wood – wood is easy to find, easy to carve and shape, and easy to stick together. This trousse is also made of wood. How trousses differed from each other, however, was in how they were decorated. Trousses could be embellished in any number of ways, from inlaying bone or silver, brass or nickel, leather, sharkskin, stingray, or in the case of my trousse – tortoiseshell.

The tortoiseshell – thin and flexible, would have been steamed – much like how you steam wood – to soften it – and when it was especially soft and flexible, the tortoiseshell was wrapped around the wooden body of the trousse, with a layer of glue in between, to adhere one to the other. A similar process would’ve been carried out to sheath the knife-handle in the same tortoiseshell.

What is it Made Of?

This trousse is made of wood (which makes up the body of the trousse and the handle on the knife), brass (the collar at the top of the trousse), tortoiseshell (the decorative overlay), silver (the chopsticks) and finally – the white collar and pommel on the knife are both made of bone. Bone was a very common material to make trousse accessories from – chopsticks, knife scales, hilts, collars and pommels were all made from bone. It was abundant, cheap, or free, easy to carve, and could be polished to a beautiful whiteness – and much easier to find than ivory!

Are Trousses Common?

Fairly common, yes. I suspect that millions of these things were made over the centuries, and that many were probably brought to the West by expats, explorers, missionaries or tourists traveling in Asia in the 1800s and 1900s. They range in price on eBay from $150.00 to over $300-$500, depending on age, condition, and level of decoration and detail. I don’t know exactly who collects these things, but there does seem to be an interest in them.

Repairing the Trousse

The trousse was pretty cheap when I bought it – this was largely due to the fact that it wasn’t complete at the time. The trousse didn’t come with its original chopsticks, which were probably bone, so I replaced them with my silver chopsticks which I bought about two years ago. On top of that, some of the tortoiseshell was also coming loose. I removed the tortoiseshell and glued it back on. Once it was secured, then I started working on another part of the trousse that needed my attention: the pommel at the top of the knife.

The point of the pommel is to protect the top of the knife handle. In this case, the pommel was missing, but I could tell from the hilt or the collar at the end of the blade next to the handle, that it would originally have been made of bone. I was able to secure some small pieces of bone, and, using a file, some sandpaper, glue and oil, I was able to shape the bone, glue it onto the top of the knife, file and sand it flat, polish it smooth, and shape it to the shape of the top of the handle.

Although it’s a tiny detail, just fixing this one element took several hours of filing, shaping, measuring, sawing, gluing, filing, and more filing, and finally, polishing, to get the new pommel not only to stay on top of the knife, but also fit in with the thickness and shape of the rest of the knife and its bone hilt, as well. It’s not 100% perfect, but at least the knife now looks much more complete than it previously had done.