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Updated 03/10/2003 23:46
Ship 25 Figurehead Contest
Submit your design for the figurehead for SSTV Landship
Tuckahoe
To
view the Landship, click here
Submit contest entries to skipper@ship25bsa.org
Here is some figurehead information to help you get started

The following information is courtesy of the First
Day Cover Store website:
Of all woodcrafts, those used in shipbuilding rank among the oldest and
the most vital to progress in America from colonial days onward. Some of
the finest examples of a shipbuilder's artistic expression could be
found in the figureheads which graced the bow of a ship. Master
figurehead carvers favored the use of cedar and white pine for their
work. The characteristic workable softness of these woods allowed
craftsmen to produce impressive figures. The figureheads these craftsmen
carved performed no useful function, yet rarely was a ship lacking one.
The tradition of ship's figureheads dates back to the early
Mediterranean explorers, the Phoenicians. These expert mariners used
figureheads of favorite gods to safeguard their ships. Later, the Viking
raiders had crude figureheads on the bows of their ships as they
ransacked Europe. The custom of creating and placing figureheads below
the bowsprit was continued by shipbuilders in the New World, and after
the Revolution, in the new United States. Early American figurehead
carvings featured slightly larger than life-sized animals and women, but
as the United States became a proud, independent nation, heroes of the
Revolution and American folk heroes were also skillfully carved. These
new figureheads added a simple dignity to an American ship while
recording and symbolizing the growth of the new nation.
The following information is courtesy of Captain
Blood's website.

History of the Ship's Figurehead
Ship figureheads have a long and fascinating history dating to
pre-Christian times, when Chinese, Egyptian, Phoenician, Greek and Roman
mariners navigated the Pacific and Indian oceans and Mediterranean Sea.
According to the Illustrated Oxford Dictionary (1998), the noun
"figurehead" is defined as: "A carving, usually a bust or
a full-length figure, at the ship's prow." The 1981 edition of the
Encyclopedia Americana defines the word as: "A sculptured image
decorating the stemhead of a ship."
These descriptions are exact as far as post-Christian prow
embellishments are concerned, but the Encyclopedia Britannica(1972
edition) takes the term much further back into nautical history.
This source credits the Chinese and Egyptians with having originated the
practice when seafarers of those two ancient civilizations instituted
the custom of painting oculi (eyes) on the bows of their vessels,
believing that these adornments would enable the ships to find their
way.
The Phoenicians not only adopted the primitive eye motif for their trading
vessels at an early date, they later adorned the prows of their galleys
with carved wooden likenesses of deities, animals, birds, and serpents.
The Greeks
also adopted the eye motif, as surviving decorations on their pottery
vases prove. The prow adornments of the vessels of the ancient world
grew increasingly more complicated.
Athenian naval vessels of the classical era were frequently adorned with
full-length wooden carvings of Athena, the goddess for whom the city is
named.
When Rome took over dominance of the Mediterranean, its warships and
galleys were decorated with fierce prow fires drawn from its own
pantheon, an assertion proven by surviving sculptures dating from Rome's
imperial heyday. The Carthaginians, Rome's most serious early rivals,
used carved figures of the god Ammon Jupiter to head up their warships.
The figureheads of these ancient people were linked to the superstition
that these sculptured images were guardians of the vessels they adorned
and were also supposed to frighten enemies, as well as give a religious
significance to the exploits in which they were engaged.
The same motive was later endorsed by the Vikings, Danes and Normans
during the early Christian era. The prows of vessels in which these
cultures engaged in their far-flung operations rode high out of the
water and were frequently tipped with intimidating dragons, sea serpents
of fierce animal heads. Since the Vikings are credited with having been
the first navigators to explore North American waters, it is likely that
the figureheads on their vessels were the first ones to appear in the
New World.
The sailors of these early northern European vessels firmly believed
that their wooden icons were endowed with magical powers. Seafarers of
later eras turned their backs on this type of idol worship, but remained
fiercely superstitious concerning the protection of the figureheads on
their vessels, believing that any damage to these icons meant certain
disaster.
Shipbuilding, both for mercantile and military purposed, remained fairly
static until the Renaissance, between 1400 and 1600, when nations and
city-states throughout Europe began vying for nautical supremacy. At
that time, England, France, Spain, Portugal and Holland, as well as the
Italian city-states of Genoa and Venice, began jockeying for power, and
the increasingly lavish and sophisticated vessels that were launched
from their dockyards continued to stress the importance of intimidating
figureheads.
This
assertion can easily be supported by referring to the countless
seascapes, drawings, engravings and other iconographic evidence that
played an important part in the artistic output of the same nations and
city-states at that time. Catholic countries and city-states frequently
adorned the prows of their great gallons and merchantmen with religious
figures.
Of particular note were the vessels of the Spanish Armada, the great
fleet of warships dispatched in 1588 by Philip II of Spain to subdue
Protestant England and return it to the fold of the Catholic faith.
Surviving paintings, drawings, engravings and tapestries depicting the
action show that most of the Spanish galleons had elaborate prow
decorations that depicted Christ and the Virgin Mary, as well as
numerous popular saints whose invocations to the Almighty on behalf of
the Catholic cause, it was thought, would guarantee an overwhelming
victory to the Spanish enterprise.
As for the prow decorations of the small English ships that eventually
spelled defeat for King Philip's mighty galleons, their stemheads,
according to surviving iconographic sources, were singularly bare of
ornamental carvings.
But that does not mean that the English warships of the same period were
without elaborate figureheads and other carvings. For instance, Sir
Francis Drake made the first English circumnavigation of the globe in a
vessel that sported a gilded deer on its prow, thereby causing the ship
to be named the Golden Hind.
Later, during the reign of Charles I, English ship carpenters and wood
carvers created the Sovereign of the Seas, one of the most highly
decorated vessels in the history of shipbuilding. Graced with a
ferocious gilded lion at its stemhead, it and the other carving and
gilding of this fabulous vessel cost around 7,000 British pounds, quite
a sum considering the total cost of the vessel was around 40,000 pounds.
Up until the middle years of the 18th century, the figurehead was the
crowning wooden adornment on any warship or important mercantile vessel.
Though figureheads increasingly became less decorative as time went on,
that did not mean that the men who sailed the ships ceased feeling that
the wooden sculptures on the prows were more than merely ornamental.
For
instance, there are numerous records concerning how the figureheads of
new vessels were consecrated by the superstitious with hefty splashes of
wine to guarantee that they would give the vessels good luck when they
were "launched into their element"--to quote a widely used
nautical term of the period.
The came the golden age of figureheads, which lasted from around 1790 to
1825. That's when most of the warships and merchant vessels of Europe
and North America sported elaborate prow adornments.
The high water mark of figureheads was reached during the clipper-ship
era dating from the early and middle years of the 19th century. The
graceful bows of these streamlined ships presented an excellent
opportunity to display figureheads to their best advantage.
By the late 19th century, however, figureheads on most vessels gave way
to simpler and less expensive billet heads (i.e. scroll carvings
resembling the end of a violin). This change took place because the
carvings were expensive and easily damaged, either by rough weather or
in battle.
In this way, a tradition extending backward to the ancient Chinese and
Egyptians has run its colorful course. But for those of us who love the
sea and museums devoted to nautical things, we wistfully muse that if
the wooden lips of these fascinating survivors of an earlier era could
talk, the long and thrilling maritime odysseys of the world would by
marvelously enriched.
The following information is courtesy of the Ancient
Mariner website:
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Historical Information:

From the earliest times the stems of vessels have been decorated
with some form of figurehead. Such adornments have fallen out of
general use, but until comparatively recently the seaman attached
great importance to the figurehead of his ship.
Ship's figureheads are something of a craze. There are many people
who delight in the picturesque features of figureheads and their
connection with the past, but few people realize how much they
meant to the old-time sailor and what an important feature the
figurehead was in sea life. Yet investigation into shipping
history reveals its value.
In 1778, the Channel Fleet, finding itself helpless against the
French through incompetence and corruption at the Admiralty, was
in full retreat before a force that it could apparently have
beaten. A boatswain's mate in the Royal George slipped over her
bows carrying on his arm his hammock, which he lashed over the
eyes of the figurehead representing King George II, a courageous
monarch. In answer to an officer on the forecastle head he
replied, " We ain't ordered to break the old boy's heart, are
we? I'm sure that if he was to turn and see this day's work, not
all the patience in heaven would hold him a minute."
At a time when the least insubordination in the Fleet was punished
by the cat-o'-nine tails' this reply produced no ill result for
the tar. The officers knew of, and no doubt sympathized with, the
feeling on the lower deck throughout the Fleet, and probably
thought much the same themselves. Regarded as the finest in the
Navy when the ship was built in 1756, this figurehead represented
George II in heavily gilded Roman armor, with a red cloak and
helmet-crest, mounted on a rearing white horse. Every man in the
ship loved and took a pride in it, and interference by the
afterward was apt to be dangerous.
It was a wise captain who knew when to tauten up his men by
referring to the figurehead, but it required courage for a frigate
captain to make this speech in the late eighteenth century:"
Now, I tell you what it is, my lads. Unless you are off those
yards and the sails are hoisted again before any ship in the
squadron, by the Lord Harry, I'll paint the figurehead black!
" The threat gave his ship the best time in the exercises.
Then there is the incident recorded by Captain Marryat in Peter
Simple, one founded on fact, as were most of his novels, when the
crew of the Rattlesnake, disgusted with the cowardly retreat of
Captain Hawkins, cut off the figurehead of the serpent with its
fangs.
Not only had the figurehead a sentimental significance for the
crew, but it was also an object of superstition. HMS Atlas, a fine
three-decker, was launched during the War of American Independence
in 1782. Because of an error in design, the figurehead,
representing Atlas supporting the World on his shoulders, was too
high to permit the bowsprit to be fitted, so part of the globe had
to be cut away. That part included the American colonies, and the
sailors regarded its removal as an omen. In comparatively modern
days a sailing ship that generally ran regularly to Sydney was
ordered to Brisbane for one voyage, and when passing Sydney met
with a succession of baffling head winds. Old shellbacks in the
crew carefully blindfolded the figurehead with tarpaulin until
they were safely past their usual port. As another instance of the
way in which the nineteenth-century merchant seaman regarded the
figurehead, the blue streak painted round the hull as a sign of
mourning for a dead owner was carried over the figurehead only as
an exceptional tribute to a kindly master who was loved by his
forecastle hands. When this was done it attracted full attention.
The enthusiasm of the sailor was apt to outrun art, both in the
design of the figurehead and its coloring. To the student this
only serves to increase the human interest, although to those who
do not know the circumstances the work may seem merely garish.
Scroll work and "fiddle" or "billet" heads -
the former curling inwards, the latter outwards - were at one time
only tolerated in conjunction with a figure. The scrollwork was
generally in the form of the trail boards which connected the
figure with the hull of a ship and which could provide the
graceful curve that made all the difference. To the sailor they
were just "gingerbread," and nothing more, it was the
figure that counted.
The origin of the figurehead is one of the many nautical
mysteries, but it goes back far in to the past. It seems to have
been founded in a mixed desire to conciliate a deity and to
terrify an enemy; the idea of decoration probably came far later.
Probably the earliest known form of figurehead is found in the
prehistoric ship of ancient Egypt. The ends of Egyptian ships came
up in a graceful curve, taking the form of a lotus stem- perhaps
the origin of our technical phrase "stem"- surmounted by
a leaf. The earliest known Roman ships had figureheads, as had
those of the Phoenicians. At a later date the carving of the heads
on Viking ships was grotesque in detail, but their setting was
remarkably graceful with the sweep of the rail. The ships of the
Norman conquerors of England were similarly fitted.
For a period in the Middle Ages the figurehead was eclipsed, as a
necessity for every ship to be able to fight and the fitting of
the forecastle platform left no room for the figure to rear itself
proudly as it did in the long ships. Where it could be fitted at
all it took the form of a rather mean serpent's head or a similar
object placed under the platform. More often the desire for
decoration had to be satisfied by the use of hull paint and by the
shields (pavises) of the knights who were fighting on board. Later
wooden reproductions of the shields called pavisades were placed
in permanent position round the rail and satisfied the desire for
decoration.
Curiously enough, the tradition of the figurehead does not appear
to have been affected in the least by this period of suppression.
This shows the hold the figurehead had over the seamen's minds,
for there was no reading and little or no illustration to keep it
alive. As soon as the development in this ship design superseded
the old built-on forecastle by its incorporation as an integral
part of the ship, and the bow became more important in the desire
to improve the balance of the canvas, the figurehead seems to have
returned at once in all its former importance and more. By Tudor
days it had reached a high level, and the influence of the
Mediterranean galley on the fighting ships of Northern Europe
resulted in finishing off a ship's bow with a square bulkhead,
leading forward to a big "beak." This formed the above
water ram in a vessel propelled by oars and was ideal for the
purpose of an elaborate figurehead. In these earlier types the
figurehead did not stand alone. Its decoration was a part of, and
carefully in keeping with, the wreaths round the gunports and the
elaborate decoration of the stern, which, to the marine artist,
although not to the seaman, was regarded as being of more
importance than the bow. The French in particular were successful
with this combination and were inclined to look down on British
artists.
In the reign of Henry VIII the lion became the general British
figurehead, and, with few exceptions, remained popular until the
end of George II's reign. It was borne by such famous ships as the
Great Harry, Elizabeth's Victory and Sir Richard Grenville's
Revenge, in the early days of the beak bow. In these vessels the
figurehead took the form of a heraldic lion couchant or gardant.
When the English throne James I introduced the Scottish lion
rampant, with a Royal Crown. Cromwell eliminated the crown, but
Charles II restored it. He began also the custom of varying the
figurehead for all first-rates, although the lion remained for
ships of all other types.
By Stuart days the beak head had become modified, breaking away
from the galley tradition, so that the lion rampant at the end of
a false stem gracefully curved became part of what was known as
"the sweep of the lion." The decorated trail boards were
given an elegant curve that remained unaltered for many years,
even if it was far less suitable for many of the heads which were
later fitted to it and had a tendency to put them in a strained
attitude. Some prominent exceptions to this lion figurehead are
worth noting. James I's ship the Royal Prince, built in 1610, had
a figurehead of Prince Henry, which was regarded as a pleasing
innovation. The Sovereign of the Seas of 1637, the most famous
fighting ship of her day, whose decoration had accounted for
one-sixth of her total cost, had a wonderful head of King Edgar
trampling on seven kings, with a rather incongruous backing of
Cupids and statues of the Virtues.
The rich decoration of the ship had such a hold on popular fancy
that even Cromwell was unable to enforce his order that all ships
of the navy should be painted a "sombre black." He had
to leave her in her original state. She earned the nickname of
"The Golden Devil" from her Dutch enemies. Cromwell's
order cut down the decoration of the hulls and sterns, but he
appreciated the value of the figurehead and copied the scheme of
the Sovereign of the Seas when he built the Naseby. King Edgar's
figure on the horse was replaced by Cromwell's figure trampling on
the fighting men of six nations. Other commonwealth ships were
given some-what similar heads, but after the Restoration these
were cut off and sold as firewood, being ceremoniously burned on
Coronation night.
To judge from contemporary prints, and from the example preserved
in Holland as a relic of the Medway raid, these
seventeenth-century heads were masterpieces of the carver's art.
This might be expected, when artists such as Grinling Gibbons were
willing to carve them. The increased variation in the big ships
introduced by Charles II added interest. William III's 100-guns
Britannia was the first to carry the Royal Arms as a figurehead,
with elaborate scrolls and heraldic devices, a fashion, which
later became popular.
In the mid-eighteenth century the lion went out of fashion for
ships of the second rate and below, and its place in British ships
was taken by full-length figures. These were not always an
improvement. About this time classical names became more common in
the Navy. They were often borne by French prizes whose
particularly gallant resistance had earned them a compliment of
their names being retained on the British list. In such ships
appropriate heads were often charming, but other vessels were
given effigies of princes, politicians, or even actresses whom it
was desired to compliment.
In the smaller types, fiddle or scroll heads were generally
considered sufficient in official circles, but their captains
often went to the expense of replacing them with something more
decorative and inspiring. The heads of French ships were generally
more artistic and appropriate than the British. The Spaniards were
noted for wonderful and elaborate groups of religious figures.
In the eighteenth century the Admiralty made several efforts to
abolish the figurehead because of its cost. In this it failed, but
much was done by pointing out to the common sense of the sailor
that a heavy figurehead projecting over the bow of the ship was a
serious handicap to her sailing qualities. To lighten it without
impairing its sentimental value, the figurehead was frequently
carved out of softwood, which gave it a much shorter life and
robbed us of many examples. Similarly, the Admiralty attempted to
restrict the colors to gilt or white, but since the bluejacket
preferred something in more than natural colors, the authorities
were tactful and often turned a blind eye.
It was during the French wars between the middle of the eighteenth
century and the fall of Napoleon that the figurehead attained its
greatest sentimental height. The whole fleet at Trafalgar noted
the fact that King George III led his ships into action as the
figurehead of Collingwood's flagship, the Royal Sovereign. It was
regarded as an excellent omen when she got into action before the
Victory. When the famous Captain Death built his privateer, the
Terrible, perhaps the best known under the British Flag, he
selected a skeleton as the figurehead. Surcouf's French corsair
Revenant carried a corpse. The original figurehead of the Victory
may be seen today in the restored ship in Portsmouth Dockyard.
Not all the figureheads made such an appeal, and many ships were
cursed with figures of purely political interest. The British Navy
did not alone suffer, as a witness the history of the United
States frigate Constitution. This vessel has a similar sentimental
interest for Americans as the Victory has for us, and is
affectionately nicknamed "Old Ironsides."
Her figurehead Was originally that of Hercules, signifying the
strength of the union and the power of the law. In 1807 it was
changed for one of Neptune, and during the war of 1812, when the
ship won her proudest bays, she had a billet head only. In 1833,
during Andrew Jackson's candidature for the Presidency, his
portrait was fitted into the old ships as a figurehead, but so
great was the outcry against it and so threatening the situation
that a special guard was placed over it. The malcontents, however,
contrived to saw the head off one night and make off with it. The
1,000-dollars reward offered for information was never claimed,
although the perpetrator later revealed himself. The ship carried
this mutilated figure for more than a year when, the outcry having
died down, the portrait was secretly replaced.
SPECIALIST CARVERS
The abolition of the beak bow after Trafalgar, where many
casualties were caused by its faults, reduced the opportunity of
the figurehead and it became much simpler, especially in its trail
boards and supports; but the interest was taken up by the Merchant
Service. Until the end of the Napoleonic wars East and West
Indiamen carried figureheads, but other merchant ships had more
than a scroll or a fiddle. With post war improvement at sea, more
attention was paid to the external features of the ships,
especially those which had a public appeal. The fine lines and
long swan bows of the clippers gave a good opportunity, and every
advantage was taken of them.
There was far wider variety of choice with merchantmen than with
men-of-war. Perhaps the most popular form was a female figure with
outstretched arms, her draperies blowing aft and merging into the
lines of the hull. One of the first protests against this type was
made by Captain Rossiter, an American, who, in building the
Atlantic packet Queen in the 'forties, installed a full-length
portrait of Queen Victoria, but insisted that her draperies should
hang down. He said he would not have his ship looking as though
she never encountered anything but a head wind. About that period
merchant ships' figureheads attained a high standard, and
specialist carvers got good prices for their work. The figurehead
and its trail boards were almost the only decoration to the ships
hull-aft there was no more than a scroll-and the carvers had wide
scope for their ingenuity.
The clipper ship Styx had a full-length figure of the Devil on her
bow. La Hogue, of 1855, reverted to the lion rampant, which also
appeared on her owners' house flag. The Nightingale had a
beautiful portrait of Jenny Lind, the "Swedish
Nightingale." This figurehead unfortunately remained in
position when the vessel had degenerated into a particularly
unscrupulous slaver. John Willis, the ship owner, was a Scotsman
and a fervent admirer of Burns, so that when he bought the East
India Company's frigate Punjaub and converted her into the clipper
Tweed, he installed a beautifully carved head of "Tam o'
Shanter." Her consort, the famous Cutty Sark, had the figure
of Nanny the Witch, with her hand stretched forward to seize the
tail of Tam o' Shanter's horse.
All Corsar's ships had the flying horse, which was appropriate in
the Pegasus only. Many shipowners installed their own portrait or
that of one of their family. With the Norman Court that was
justified, for the young member of Thomas Baring's family, who was
honored, was a beautiful and graceful girl to whom the carver did
full justice. But when an owner decided to honor Samuel Plimsoll,
the sailor's friend, in the ship named after him, and when Mr.
Bates christened a vessel the Bates Family and decorated her
accordingly, the effect was less happy.
Continental owners were particularly fond of themselves or of
their business friends in frock coats and top hats, with
incongruous results. There were many British examples of this
also. When James Baines, owner of the Black Ball Line of clippers,
ordered the ship James Baines of Donald Mackay of Boston, he
insisted on his own figure being carved. As he was a red - headed,
snub - nosed, pugnacious - looking little man, the effect was
unflattering and led to some coolness with Mackay. As a peace
offering, Baines named the next ship Donald Mackay and offered the
builder the chance of appearing on her bow in a top hat. The offer
was not accepted and she went to sea with a finely carved
Highlander in the Mackay tartan.
Donald Mackay, as befitted a man whose life was wrapped up in the
ships which he built, was far more particular over the figurehead
than most of his American colleagues, although the traditional
American stem, with its particular shape and angle, would not
always permit the figurehead to sit gracefully. The Flying Cloud
had an angel blowing a trumpet, the famous Great Republic a huge
American eagle with outstretched neck. The Champion of the Seas
had a particularly happy sailor's figure in the "No. 1
Rig" of that day - blue jacket, tarpaulin hat, check shirt
and trousers, with a shiny black belt and a huge brass buckle. It
will be noted how many of these heads had outstretched arms, which
were generally unshipped and stowed away below as soon as the ship
got to sea to avoid risk of their being damaged. In some companies
the trail boards also were removed. Killick, Martin and Company
made this its rule after one had been washed off an outward -
bound clipper in the English Channel. It was deposited on the
Sussex coast, leading to the belief, which could not be
contradicted for many months, that the ship had been lost.
While the figureheads of merchant's ships were being developed and
were attaining a high standard, it was proving increasingly
difficult to retain them in men - of - war. The first ironclads
were built with clipper stems and were given remarkably fine heads
- those of the pioneer Warrior and the Black Prince, of 1860, cost
£2,000 each - but the ram bow soon became fashion and it was more
difficult to fit an attractive figure. The Union Jack or Royal
Arms, with a long scroll abaft them, elaborate in the 'sixties but
getting smaller and smaller in each successive class, took the
place of a figure. Even this was abolished by Admiralty Order in
the 'nineties.
The latter days of the nineteenth century saw the clipper stem
disappear in warships and in nearly all merchant - men. With it
went the figurehead. Some efforts have been made to restore it or
find a substitute. When the U.S. battleship Massachusetts was
built in the 'nineties the State of that name presented her with a
fine figure of Victory in relief, which was fixed between the
thirteen - inch guns on the face of the fore turret. When the
Hamburg - Amerika Line built the Imperator, later the Berengaria,
in 1912, as the biggest ship in the world, it gave her a huge and
incongruous eagle figure on the top of her straight stem. The
figure was soon removed.
Nowadays the figurehead is almost confined to the few surviving
sailing ships, still fewer clipper - stemmed steamers, and a fair
number of yachts. But the modern cruiser's curved bow, gradually
getting near to the old clipper stem, is offering a chance of
revival and there is talk of putting figureheads into French and
Italian men - o - war. One or two of these already have eagles
with spread wings, which are more effective than the municipal
coat of arms, which appears in the eyes of German ships.
It is the old examples, however, which are treasured. In the
Scilly Isles there are many figureheads taken from ships that have
come to grief there, although many of them have rotted and
disappeared. A well - known firm of Thames shipbreakers has its
wall on the riverbank decorated with some fine examples of
figureheads. The Royal Dockyards at Portsmouth, Devonport and
Chatham have fine collections, in the open and in their museums,
and there are many examples mounted on the walls of shipyards
round the coast, or in marine stores.
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Figurehead links:
Martin Jeffery - Ship's
Figurehead Carving - step by step instructions from an Australian
expert
Martin
Jeffery - The Pirate Figurehead - how the expert carved a Pirate
figurehead
Martin
Jeffery - Two Ship's Figureheads - two more examples
Martin
Jeffery - Main Page - Maritime Carving - Mr. Jeffery's home page
Photos of several
reproduction figureheads in fiberglass - get some visual ideas
Ship's
Figurehead Carving Message Board - get help and ideas from other
carvers
The Richard Hunter Archives
- website of a world-renowned authority on the subject
Detail
photos of the figurehead of the ship Barbara
The Hartmann
Figurehead Post Card Collection - great views of modern figureheads

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