pipe
pipe
pipe
This catlinite disc-shaped pipe has a hole in the underside. Archival research done by Royal Ontario Museum staff indicates this pipe was taken from the Beecroft Ossuary, in Nottawasaga Township, Simcoe County in the 1840s. The images have been removed because of this burial context. This pipe currently resides at the Royal Ontario Museum.
Petun
ROM record: Petun.
Royal Ontario Museum documentation
Read More About This Relative
Catlinite
Carved. There is a hole in the middle of the underside, which would have been used to hold feathers. Discoidal.
This pipe is very similar to one in the Oronhyatekha Collection.
From Annual Archaeological Report of Ontario for 1887. Provincial archaeologist David Boyle wrote: "It is perfectly symmetrical in form. The broad side is little fore than one-fourth of an inch in thickness. The back consists of a strong square-sided rib (the wide end of which is shown in the engraving) of the same depth or thickness all along, but having its two sides converge almost to a point at the lower end." See publication history below for full citation details.
Archaeological Reports of Ontario
Provenance
The pipe was taken from an ossuary in the late 1840s, located on the farm of Mr. Ed. Beecroft, lot 19, concession 8, Nottawasaga, Ontario.
Approximately 40 years later, it was given to David Boyle, who was curator of the Canadian Institute Museum (what became the Normal School Collection).
In 1933, the Normal School shut down and the collections were transferred to the Royal Ontario Museum.
Archival records, published Archaeological Reports of Ontario, and museum documentation.
Sketch & comment appear in the Annual Archaeological Reports of Ontario: David Boyle, "Notes on Specimens," in Annual Report of the Canadian Institute, Session 1886-87, being part of Appendix to the Report of the Minister of Education, Ontario, 1887 (Toronto: Warwick & Sons, 1888) p. 28-29.
Also appears in AARO 1888-9: 8; AARO 1907: 26 Plate 3
About This GRASAC Record
Unknown artist, pipe. Currently in the Royal Ontario Museum, NS28. GRASAC item id 25984.
Record created during a GRASAC trip to Royal Ontario Museum December 15 to 19, 2008, and updated by Cara Krmpotich on November 30, 2023 with information shared by ROM staff.
Present in the archaeology lab: Heidi Bohaker (HB), Ashley Casey (AC),Stacey Loyer (SL).
44.523, -79.933
AARO report and ROM documentation