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-   -   Interesting Provenance (https://parkerguns.org/forums/showthread.php?t=10351)

edgarspencer 04-23-2013 08:54 AM

2 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Dean Romig (Post 104962)
Very pretty little boat Edgar.

If the registration numbers were not there I would still know it is a Maine boat by the snow tires on the trailer... :cheers:

They're just trailer tires, but, come to think of it, I did buy them in Maine.
First pic was the last day out, last fall. The next pic was the next morning.

Bill Murphy 04-23-2013 10:14 AM

The vessel "Iolanthe" that Keller, Harvey McMurchey, and John Parker shared ownership in was referred to in several ways, but in the description of the wreck of the boat in 1895, it was described as a schooner with five smaller duck boats tied to her, breaking loose from the anchor chain with 250 fowl and 135 decoys aboard. The vessel and guns were saved, but the five boats and fowl and decoys were lost. I don't know whether the "fowl" were live decoys or dead ducks. John Parker was in charge of the boat at the time. Maybe Drew would link the account described in the December 14, 1895 edition of Sporting Life. I used "keller, decoys" as search words.

Dean Romig 04-23-2013 10:56 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Perhaps Keller's sporting launch was much like this one.


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David Holes 04-23-2013 11:24 AM

That boat and big bore are both impressive. Them other shotguns look dainty, compared.

edgarspencer 04-23-2013 11:26 AM

The only Iolanthe listed in the 1894 Lloyds Register was 255' and homeported in Liverpool. That same vessel is still listed in 1896, so it's not that one.
The term 'Schooner' evokes images or large coastal ships, and yachts, but the term refers to the rigging, the foremast being shorter than the main. There are plenty of small (under 30') schooner rigged boats.
Iolanthe must have been a popular name, because there are three listed in the 1938 Lloyds.

Bill Murphy 04-23-2013 12:24 PM

Iolanthe was/is a Gilbert and Sullivan satirical opera of the time. In fact, it is still popular, being played in my home town of Rockville, Maryland as late as last month. There is more than one spelling of the word, apparently causing the word search on la84foundation to not hit on the spelling used in the 1895 account of the wreck. There is suspicion on my part that "Iolanthe" was the nom de plume of one of the owners of the rig when writing for the gun rags of the time. I don't know which one that would be.

Harold Lee Pickens 04-23-2013 12:26 PM

How about some pictures of the gun?

Drew Hause 04-23-2013 12:37 PM

1st column
http://www.la84foundation.org/Sports.../SL2614012.pdf

edgarspencer 04-23-2013 12:42 PM

IIRC, Iolanthe comes from Greek mythology. Something to do with fairies (the little ones with wings)

Steve Leffler 04-23-2013 02:33 PM

Here are a couple pictures.

http://i100.photobucket.com/albums/m...psaf7b710c.jpg

http://i100.photobucket.com/albums/m...ps1f75fe1b.jpg

http://i100.photobucket.com/albums/m...ps15d1122f.jpg


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