Having been powerfully engaged as a child by the Solomon Islands tomako Footnote 1 in a gallery at the Ulster Museum that was used, between the 1970s and early 2000s, for ethnographic collections,Footnote 2 I was disappointed not to see it when visiting in 2015: it had been walled in to make space for temporary exhibitions on Irish and Northern Irish themes. In the concertedly decolonial 2022 exhibition, Inclusive Global Histories, the canoe is revealed again. This article argues that though its disappearance for the intervening period stemmed from a pragmatic decision to facilitate other displays,Footnote 3 this was not the first time that the tomako's importance had been overlooked.
The World Cultures collection at National Museums Northern Ireland (hereafter N.M.N.I. or National Museums N.I.), of which the canoe is part, is an essential source for the study of material culture in Ireland from the wider British Empire, and its 2022 redisplay is part of a staged engagement with local and source communities. Given the critical importance of the global museum decolonisation movement, a fresh consideration of the collection's history before the twenty-first century is timely. This article reviews the collection within the context of the three museums that have housed it: the Belfast Museum on College Square North (1831–1910), Belfast Public Museum/Belfast Municipal Museum/Belfast Art Gallery and Museum on Royal Avenue (1888–1929), and Belfast Museum and Art Gallery/Ulster Museum in Botanic Gardens (1925 to the present). In the course of this historical overview, the article investigates how curators within the institution understood, represented and displayed the collection.
Although planned from 1909, when Belfast Corporation acquired the collections of the Belfast Natural Historical and Philosophical Society, the Belfast Museum and Art Gallery (now the Ulster Museum) did not open until 1929. Therefore, while the impressive new building afforded space to reflect curatorial interest in Irish imperial collecting, the eventual displays were also shaped by attitudes moulded before the First World War, and by the Easter Rising and establishment of Northern Ireland. An evolutionary perspective on the collections was followed by a turning away from the global, and increased emphasis on art and local history.
The Solomon Islands tomako is the largest and among the most significant items within the collection, and its history helps to shed light on these developments. This article provides the first sustained study of the canoe, and argues that its centrality to the gallery now containing Inclusive Global Histories — one built around it in 1925 — reveals complex interpersonal relationships between nineteenth- and twentieth-century collectors, curators and photographers. Concentrating on the period since it arrived in Belfast in 1898, the canoe offers a case study for understanding how colonised global regions have been regarded in Northern Ireland's civic life.
I
The Northern Ireland Museums Council's Survey of Museum Collections (2007) is the most recently published source that assesses the size of ethnographic collections north of the Irish border. Providing a snapshot of all holdings in the museums that were at that time endorsed by the UK Accreditation scheme,Footnote 4 the Survey included the four sites that were then part of National Museums N.I.: the Ulster Museum, Ulster Folk and Transport Museum, Ulster American Folk Park and Armagh County Museum.Footnote 5 A primarily quantitative study intended to establish ‘what is in these collections, how they are currently being cared for and what improvements are required to ensure that they may be fully enjoyed in the future’, the Survey found that 3,180 ethnographic items were held by N.M.N.I., 610 by local authority-owned museums and twenty-two by independent museums.Footnote 6 National Museums N.I. has since revised its own number to 4,500.Footnote 7 As, therefore, the largest global human history collection in Northern Ireland, this is vital as a source for understanding how and why the Irish accrued collections from other parts of the British Empire, and how these were regarded once they had arrived in Ireland.
The primary sources for this article include the N.M.N.I. photographic collection;Footnote 8 archives connected with the Belfast Natural History and Philosophical Society (B.N.H.P.S.), Belfast Town Council and Belfast Corporation; records in the United Kingdom National Archives; and historical newspapers. It brings together these sources to explain gaps in the publication of the collection and of the canoe. The most prolific writer on the collection has been Winifred Glover, the Ulster Museum's curator of ethnography from 1978 to 2012. She started work at the Ulster Museum in 1967 as secretary to the keeper of antiquities, Laurence Flanagan, who encouraged her to pursue her interest in the ethnographic collection which was not then being actively curated by others. Footnote 9 The research underpinning this article draws on her unpublished correspondence, and on interviews and correspondence with her. Secondary sources include Glover's exhibition catalogues, articles and chapters;Footnote 10 Noel Nesbitt's widely cited A museum in Belfast (1979);Footnote 11 and Jonathan Jeffrey Wright's chapter on the B.N.H.P.S. as the collection's founding institution.Footnote 12
In her publications, Glover described the social networks on which collectors relied, noting in her exhibition catalogue, Polynesia, for example, that most ‘were Ulster men and women who either collected “in the field” or were related to those who had themselves travelled among the Islands’.Footnote 13 A preponderance of her writing and public talks focused on biographies of these individuals, in particular on the global traveller, Gordon Augustus Thomson (1799–1886), and the colonial settler in Port Phillip (Melbourne), John Lewis Von Stieglitz (1809–1868):Footnote 14 the collecting practices of both are now the subjects of reframing in Inclusive Global Histories.Footnote 15 Including a Hawai'ian feather cloak from King Kamehameha III, and a barkcloth atua from Rapa Nui that, along with two others in the Peabody Museum, is one of only three in the world,Footnote 16 the collection contains highly culturally-precious items. The canoe is the largest, and unquestionably one of the rarest, of these, but aside from brief mentions in Glover's writing and a few other sources cited herein, has been overlooked up until this point. The following historical overview helps to explain why this is.
II
The histories of the canoe, and of the N.M.N.I. World Cultures collection as a whole, involve the entanglement of objects in multiple Irish institutions and lives. The collection began to be assembled through the founding, in 1821, of the Belfast Natural History Society (renamed in 1842 as the Belfast Natural History and Philosophical Society),Footnote 17 which between 1831 and 1910 ran the Belfast Museum on College Square North. The ethnographic items in the society's collection initially resulted from its appeals to its networks of ‘travellers, merchants, officers of the Army and Navy to assist in securing specimens to stock the Museum’.Footnote 18 Wright's analysis of how the society's displays were conceived and arranged helps compensate for an absence of surviving interior photos: in short, this was a practice of ‘representing global ‘others’ … inextricably bound up with the expansion and exercise of imperial power’.Footnote 19
The subsequent founding collection was in the town council's museum, which opened in 1888 in the Belfast Public Library building on Royal Avenue (now the Belfast Central Library). The name of this institution was in flux at the turn of the nineteenth century: it can be found in original sources as the Belfast Free Public Library Art Gallery and Museum; the Belfast Art Gallery and Museum; the Belfast Public Museum; the Belfast Municipal Museum; and the City of Belfast Municipal Museum. To create further confusion, the institution was re-named as the Belfast Museum and Art Gallery following its move to Botanic Gardens in 1925‒9.Footnote 20
Describing how in nineteenth-century British cultural institutions, natural and historical sciences were synthesised so as to read ‘the evidence of things themselves that stretched the known and the unknowable past back beyond the reach of writing’, Tony Bennett argues that the distant past and the anthropological present were conflated as ‘pasts beyond memory’.Footnote 21 In the Royal Avenue building, the town council intended to deploy the work of people in distant places for meeting local ends, setting out to exhibit ‘the manufactures of foreign countries … thereby bringing before the eye the work of the artisans of other countries, and stimulating the industries of our own’.Footnote 22 As shown (from 1906) by the Quarterly Notes of one of its curators, Arthur Deane (discussed below), this municipal museum centred at first on art and on geological and zoological specimens.Footnote 23 It was also the recipient of personal collections, including the well-known and sizeable collection of natural historical, archaeological and ethnographic items given in 1891 by Canon John Grainger;Footnote 24 a collection of spinning wheels donated by John Horner in 1907–08, ‘ranging from the primitive machines of India … to the most elaborate kinds in use in Europe to-day’;Footnote 25 and, in 1919, from Thomas Edens Osborne, ‘the largest collection known’ of bicycles.Footnote 26
John Horner, an engineer (who would later join the Public Art Gallery and Museum CommitteeFootnote 27 and become a frequent donor to, lecturer at, and writer for it) was also on the executive committee, chaired by the lord mayor, that in 1895 organised the Industrial Exhibition at Belfast's Linen Hall.Footnote 28 This was apparently a more ambitious exhibition than a previous one in 1876,Footnote 29 and alongside the Harland and Wolff Chairman, Viscount Pirrie, Horner was in charge of Section B, ‘Scientific and Mechanical Appliances’. His fellow B.N.H.P.S. members, William Gray and Robert Young, composed Section E, which included ‘natural history and geography, fossils, minerals, shells, plants, stuffed and otherwise preserved animals, aquaria, antiquities, ancient armours, manuscripts, printing, maps, and drawings’. From comparisons with other sections (A ‘Fine Arts’, C ‘Economic Products’ and D ‘Textile Fabrics’), it is clear that in the 1895 Exhibition, natural history, archaeology and items grouped as ‘antiquities’ were aggregated as ‘the rest’, being listed above only the ‘suggestions for improving … workers’ houses’ contained in Section F.Footnote 30
The 1909 newspaper account that described how John Horner's spinning wheels ranged from the ‘primitive’ in India to the ‘elaborate’ from Europe was, therefore, indicative of a continuous conceptualisation by Belfast's turn-of-the-century civic leaders of the material culture of living cultures on the other side of the world as being cognate with both extinct local cultures and with items extracted from the natural environment. As Raymond Corbey and others demonstrate, nineteenth-century British display practices, as represented in the 1851 Great Exhibition in London and in regional industrial exhibitions (such as that in Belfast), ranked artefacts according to their positioning on supposed evolutionary spectra that relied on typological systems of classification such as that popularised by Pitt Rivers. These tended to compare rural and working-class European artefacts and the products of colonised regions at a disadvantage in relation to those of western elites.Footnote 31 As the following shows, the typological and evolutionary approach pertaining to the Belfast Industrial Exhibition was comparable to that shown in the displays at the Royal Avenue museum.
In 1909, the B.N.H.P.S. confirmed a 1907 decision to transfer its collection to public ownership under the auspices of Belfast Corporation, although this was contingent on the corporation's undertaking to house the collection in a new museum. In the meantime, the municipal authorities would rent the old Belfast Museum building from the B.N.H.P.S. and use it to store the society's collections. The municipal curator (1907–42), Arthur Deane, was the corporation's primary negotiator of the arrangements.Footnote 32 In addition to this role, Deane became a long-standing honorary secretary of the B.N.H.P.S. (1919–45), and its president (1947–50). It is from his account of the society that much of our knowledge about its first century comes.Footnote 33 In 1910 he recruited a new assistant curator, J. A. S. (Sydney) Stendall, to work in the old museum building to compile a catalogue that would amalgamate the B.N.H.P.S. collections with those of the corporation's museum.Footnote 34 Deane also oversaw the building of the new civic museum in Botanic Gardens that is now the Ulster Museum and the move of the combined collections to that place. He stewarded the planning and fitting out of the new museum building, and was the most senior staff member when it opened in 1929.
Noel Nesbitt describes Deane as having been, at the start of his career while at the Art Gallery and Museum on Royal Avenue, ‘anxious both to build upon the new independent foundations of the [municipal] Museum and to bring its new image to the notice of the public’. He did so through a variety of initiatives, from relabelling exhibits and making the museum ‘brighter and tidier’, to introducing a display of live bees to attract children, to publicising the museum through handbooks and issuing his aforementioned Quarterly Notes.Footnote 35 Through the Quarterly Notes, Deane published lists of the museum's accessions: in the earliest, in 1906, he recorded, under the division of ‘Ethnography’, a sansa (thumb piano) from Congo and a stringed instrument from Lagos, alongside other items grouped under ‘Irish Religion’ and ‘Antiquities’.Footnote 36 By 1907, Deane was distinguishing ‘Ethnology and Antiquities’ as a separate division from ‘Art’, ‘Natural History’ and ‘The Local Collections’. This section comprised ‘weapons’, ‘clothing’, ‘domestic appurtenances’, ‘boats’, ‘musical instruments’ and ‘Peruvian and Egyptian antiquities’. He also included John Horner's spinning wheels in this list.Footnote 37
Deane's categories of either ‘ethnology’ or ‘ethnography’ were not at this point fixed, and whether or not he applied the terms to international collections appears to have been subject to his whims, or perhaps to the available space in his publications. In September 1908, for example, he listed, under ‘Antiquities’, an arrow from North America, a war club from New Guinea, a war-spear from Admiralty Island, a shepherd's pipe from Palestine, and a bomb shell from the Franco-German war, alongside locally collected items including a sepulchral urn from Magheralin, samples of flax, worked flint from Larne, Toome Bridge and Mahee, an anvil stone and flint from Dundrum, and ox, horse and goat bone fragments found in Ballykinlar.Footnote 38 In 1909, ‘Antiquities’ included an African mat donated by Horner and a boomerang from Queensland from Stanley Wright.Footnote 39
The Quarterly Notes therefore show Deane separating items from imperialised global regions into whatever groups appeared reasonable to him at the time and also reveal his view that they contributed not so much to a discrete or separate discipline, but more to a bricolage. Other museum publications in this period demonstrate that he was collecting items from outside of Europe reactively but concertedly, for his acquisitions continued during the early years of the First World War. The City and Council Borough of Belfast's Public Art Gallery and Museum Committee that he served reported seven, 174 and thirty-six ‘ethnology’ accessions in 1913‒14, 1914‒15 and 1915‒16, and thirteen and seventy-nine under ‘ethnology’ and ‘ethnography’ respectively in 1916‒17. None were mentioned in the four-year report for 1917‒21.Footnote 40
Given that a grasp of Deane's worldview might be pivotal to understanding how, in this critical period in Irish history, those working in the Belfast Art Gallery and Museum conceptualised ethnographic collections, it is frustrating that he left so little first-hand testimony in the public record — only two letters, one of them covered in soot, suggesting that a bonfire was made of the rest.Footnote 41 Glimpses of him are retrievable in newspapers. It may have been he, for example, who in 1929 contributed the promotional ‘Critic's Impression’ to the Times that spoke of ‘the “middle ground” between art and industry’ that had been achieved in the newly opened Belfast Museum and Art Gallery in Botanic Gardens. ‘The ethnographical collection [wrote the author] is one of the best that the writer has seen. There is the finest collection of spinning-wheels in the world.’Footnote 42
Because Horner's spinning wheels had been arrayed in the Industrial Exhibition in evolutionary perspective, it is interesting that this review of the new museum juxtaposed them with (or included them in) the ethnographic collection. That Deane regarded the collection, most of it dating to the (recent) nineteenth century, as archaic is evident in newspaper articles with his byline that compared cultural practices in prehistoric Britain and Ireland with those of the present-day on the other side of the world. For example, he wrote in 1930 that the new museum ‘record[ed] the customs and habits of our ancestors, as well as the customs of races in all corners of the earth’.Footnote 43 As has been shown, Deane had distinguished his ‘Antiquities’ and ‘Ethnology’ collections by subscribing to the same imperialistic traditions that had produced the Great Exhibition in 1851. Although his mental categorisations appear to have fluctuated, his interest in the works of people from colonised cultures was clearly underpinned by a belief that they represented ways of life long since surpassed in Europe. In 1909, he began to spatially translate these attitudes through his plans for the new Belfast Museum and Art Gallery.
In that year, following the B.N.H.P.S. confirmation that it would donate its collection, the Corporation's Library and Technical Instruction Committee ‘advertised for sites centrally situated … holding in view the primary object of diffusing useful information to cultivate the public taste’. On the counsel of a Mr Matheson K.C., a site in the corner of Botanic Gardens was selected and in 1912 the committee issued a ground plan as part of a design competition. In May 1913 Deane set out the accommodation that would be required, zoning the display areas as ‘Zoology’; ‘Geology and mineralogy’; ‘Botany’; ‘Children's room’; ‘Ethnographical gallery [including weapons and implements; domestic utensils; clothing; personal ornament, etc.]’; ‘Egyptian and Peruvian antiquities’; ‘Irish antiquities and ethnology’; ‘Belfast room’; and ‘Spinning wheels and hand looms’. In addition, there would be a large ‘Fine and Applied Arts’ area, to be divided into sections including ‘Textiles and embroideries’; ‘Metalwork and woodwork’; ‘Pottery, glass and enamels’; ‘British Oil Paintings’; ‘French Oil Paintings’; ‘British water colours’; ‘French water colours’; ‘Patterson collection of paintings’; ‘Old Masters’; ‘Local artists’; ‘Sculpture (Greek)’; ‘Loans gallery’; and ‘Students’ copying room’.Footnote 44 These divisions were modelled on those of the Warrington Museum (where Deane had previously worked),Footnote 45 and of the Victoria and Albert and British Museums: in a scrapbook he compiled in 1908‒09, postcards of their galleries, organised along similar lines, surround a plan of the site for the new Belfast Museum and Art Gallery in Botanic Gardens.Footnote 46
John Burnett (LL.D.) was commissioned to assess the sixty-nine submissions (which were displayed in the Ulster Hall in May 1914) and selected the Edinburgh architect, James Cumming Wynnes.Footnote 47 When invited to comment on Wynnes's plans, the first director of the National Museum of Wales, William Evans Hoyle, suggested that ‘it would seem more logical to group all the natural sciences together at one side of the building and applied art at the other, with ethnography and archaeology between them’.Footnote 48 Wynnes responded, but no discernible steps to develop the building were undertaken between 1914, when the city accountant advised that ‘it would be impossible during the war to obtain the necessary loan for the erection of the building’, and 1920, when the committee met to discuss Wynnes's plans again.Footnote 49
As well as delaying the building of the new museum, the First World War distracted Deane from collections research. In this period, he concentrated on ‘exhibits of economic problems of the day … food value and the economy, and infant care and child welfare’.Footnote 50 He turned to providing utilitarian guidance on ‘How Plants Grow’ (Summer 1916); ‘Weeds and how to combat them’ (Spring 1917); ‘Hints to plotholders and others’ (Summer 1917); and ‘The seed and the young plant’ (Spring 1918). From Autumn 1919, Deane recruited outside authors for his Quarterly Notes: the majority covered domestic appliances, metalwork, local biography and art.Footnote 51
Although under Deane's direction Sydney Stendall had been appointed in 1909 to incorporate, at least on paper, the B.N.H.P.S. collections, they were not moved from the old museum premises until well after the war. In 1922 Deane noted that they were
still stored in the building known as the Museum, College Square [number] 11. To display the material housed there would place Belfast in the front rank of the Museum Movement. It contains in addition to type and rare specimens, abundant material to illustrate the Geology Botany, and Ancient History of Ulster … together with a large collection of Ethnographic objects impossible to procure to-day’.Footnote 52
The first mention of ethnographic exhibits during the period when the Botanic Gardens museum was being planned comes in the committee's 1923‒5 report, which records that, in the museum on Royal Avenue, ‘Two cases have been arranged illustrating the ethnography of Australia and New Zealand. Three other Ethnographic exhibits – Polynesia, Melanesia and S. Africa have been completed and are ready for exhibition.’Footnote 53 This entry dates the photo (fig. 1), taken by Robert Welch of the ethnographic displays in the Royal Avenue building, an image that makes visible Deane's typological approach to the collections and his association of them with Horner's spinning wheels: the mounted antlers confirm, if it were needed, the colonial backdrop to the collection. As will be explored below, the reason why these items could be newly arranged in 1925 was that the Solomon Islands canoe had been removed from the same area of the gallery a month previously.
In 1926 coverage of the Belfast Museum and Art Gallery's development, the Belfast News-Letter stated that, although ‘the property of the citizens of Belfast’, the museum would be one ‘to which the people of the whole of [the newly established] Northern Ireland will look for light and leading’.Footnote 54 The institution's educational horizons are suggested by how, on its opening day, 2,672 visitors saw, on the ground floor, displays of pictures donated by Thomas McGowan showing the growth of Belfast; on the first floor, applied arts, Irish antiquities, an ethnographic room and two rooms of natural history specimens; and on the second, galleries showing sculpture, oil paintings, watercolours and an art collection gifted by Sir John Lavery.Footnote 55
This was similar to the division of exhibits Deane had planned for in 1909. Deane explained in a 1929 account of the new museum building that ethnographic items were positioned between Irish Antiquities and Applied Art, and that Edens Osborne's cycles (displayed, as photos below show, on top of the ethnographic cases), ‘rang[ed] from the boneshaker up to modern types’.Footnote 56 Therefore, on this ‘middle ground’ floor, in contrast with the representations of Belfast and the art displays on the other levels, extinct and extant cultures were visually presented as interconnected on an evolutionary spectrum.
Given the potential of this approach to essentialise human cultures, Deane's view of eugenics is relevant.Footnote 57 This was a field with which he had contact through his membership of the B.N.H.P.S. In 1926, while Deane was its secretary, the society's president, E. J. Elliott gave a lecture in the museum on ‘The Races of Europe’.Footnote 58 Deane himself wrote in 1924 that ‘Ireland is noted for the material remains of successive races’ and that ‘in [French] palaeolithic art there was no attempt at grouping or composition to form what we now call a picture, such as we find in the rock-drawings of the South African bushmen’.Footnote 59 Here, he was comparing the European art of 20,000 years ago with that of Africans made as recently as the nineteenth century.
That the new museum cast the colonised as subordinate can be further inferred from a photograph taken by Robert Welch of a case dubbed in newspapers as ‘The Ascent of Man’. This shows skulls in an evolutionary hierarchy. They are arrayed around branches representing a tree, divided by a taped line above which are shown ‘living races’. At the pinnacle of the tree is an especially white (in colour) skull representing ‘white and yellow races’: skulls labelled ‘negroid’ and ‘Australian aborigines’ are lower down (fig. 2). Although after 1929 the impressive new edifice afforded more space for the display of non-Western cultural items, this clearly did not yet correspond with equality for the people who had made them.
At the new museum, Arthur Deane illuminated visitors on the lifestyles of people that he associated with the ethnographic collections, through showing a variety of films on subjects including ‘kangaroo hunting’, ‘Fiji islands’ and ‘Sierra Leone’.Footnote 60 But while he had oversight of the museum's displays and of its education programmes, he was a botanist by background, not an anthropologist or natural historian,Footnote 61 and it is likely that the primary creator of the ‘Ascent of Man’ case was not Deane, but Sydney Stendall. Stendall was an avid nature conservationist and communicator:Footnote 62 after his death, Deane's son and a fellow ornithologist, Campbell Douglas Deane, stated that ‘few people have done as much … to popularise natural history and make it understandable to the masses’. Given Stendall's involvement in cataloguing the B.N.H.P.S. collections, he must have known them well and he was also instrumental in arranging the displays upon the move to Botanic Gardens.Footnote 63 That Stendall had composed the ‘Ascent of Man’ case is also suggested by his friendship with its photographer, Robert J. Welch. When Welch died in 1936, Stendall was one of three executors to the will that saw Welch's photographs transferred to the Belfast Museum and Art Gallery.Footnote 64 Photography was Welch's occupation and conchology was his primary passion, but obituaries penned by his extensive network of friends show him to have been a polymath and, as Robert Lloyd Praeger noted, ethnography was one of many interests.Footnote 65 Welch was a member of the B.N.H.P.S., Belfast Naturalists’ Field Club and the Royal Society of Antiquaries,Footnote 66 and, thus, it was surely he who as ‘R. J. W.’ wrote to the editor of the Northern Whig in February 1928 that ‘the fine collection of ethnographic objects would give any museum a good standing in the world’.Footnote 67 As well as the ‘Ascent of Man’ case, Welch took several photographs showing how the collection was displayed.Footnote 68
Stendall wrote of the ‘Ascent of Man’ case in 1929 that, ‘There is a series of British mammals and ancestry cases dealing with the elephant, horse, and man, the last being graphically illustrated by an ancestral tree with skulls of various cultures correlated with types of implements connected with each culture.’Footnote 69 He was interested in human remains and evolution: in 1932, for example, he chaired a Belfast Naturalists’ Field Club lecture on ‘palaeolithic man’ by the Manchester osteologist, J. Wilfrid Jackson, who had recently returned from an Egypt Exploration Society dig in Luxor.Footnote 70. Also in 1932, Stendall gave a talk at the museum, ‘commencing with the Evolution of Man case’, on ‘primitive man's work down the ages, with information on “survivals” of various sorts to our own times’.Footnote 71 In 1934, Arthur Deane invited the Association of Engineering and Shipbuilding Draughtsmen to the museum and Stendall acted as their guide.Footnote 72 Decades later, as head of biology at Ashfield Comprehensive School, Stendall authored a textbook on The science of man that categorised ‘races’ into Caucasoid, Mongoloid, Negroid and Australoid.Footnote 73
If the inference that Stendall curated the case is correct, Deane supported his interpretation, resisting conservative local pressure to change it, in a defence of the museum's (supposed) scientific credentials. Between June and September 1930, the Belfast branch of the British-Israel World Federation raised concerns, later championed by Alderman Robert Pierce, that the exhibit ‘shows man's development from the lower animals … and thus discredits … the Bible itself’ (the intervention resulted in the tongue-in-cheek headline in the Belfast Telegraph: ‘Museum Exhibit Critic Wishes Card Removed: Abraham not a Gorilla’).Footnote 74 Deane's argument that the case's removal would ‘result in a futile attempt to sidetrack Belfast progress and leave us open to ridicule in the scientific journals of the United Kingdom and the rest of the world’,Footnote 75 persuaded the Libraries, Museums and Art Committee that it should remain intact.
Clearly, then, the attitudes of both leaders of the new museum to ‘other’ ‘living races’ was, at the least, hegemonic. This was epitomised in 1925, when they removed the Solomon Islands canoe from its gallery space in the Royal Avenue museum to Botanic Gardens. The choices made in fitting this large and fragile object into its new setting were shaped by practical considerations, and also by burgeoning tensions between support for imperialism far away and the rise in anti-imperialist discourse in Ireland. As this article will conclude, the presence of the tomako in the past has prompted practical and creative conundra both in the Belfast Art Gallery and Museum in Royal Avenue and the Belfast Museum Art Gallery (now Ulster Museum) in Botanic Gardens, and in the present raises questions about museum decolonisation.
III
Apparently based on the Belfast Art Gallery and Museum's Stock Book, Winifred Glover stated that the Solomon Islands canoe is thirty-nine feet long although, as discussed below, it is recorded in some sources as 40 feet long, and is likely to have been longer in its original condition than now.Footnote 76 The prow is incised with the head of a crocodile and it is topped with a finial of a carved wooden double human head.Footnote 77
The exact location from which the tomako comes has not yet been proven. After the death of the donor, John Casement (1854–1910), Commander of H.M.S. Rapid at the time the canoe was captured, his wife, Maria (Mya) Young (1861–1943), gave the museum a canoe prow carving.Footnote 78 Due to the connection between the canoe and the carving (via Casement), Winifred Glover projected that the two go together.Footnote 79 The art historian, Deborah Waite, identifies the carving as having come from the island of Choiseul,Footnote 80 and this was why in 1994 Glover, having corresponded with Waite, published the canoe as having also derived from there.Footnote 81 However, a later correspondent with Glover suggested that Casement captured the canoe at Mbili, and that the people of Mbili may in turn have captured it on a raid in Marovo Lagoon. This suggestion was based on a finding that Mbili was the last stop recorded on the log of the Rapid on her route between the islands of Gavutu and Nggatokae in 1897.Footnote 82 In 2000, in a statement that raises further questions about whether the canoe and the carving were ever joined, Deborah Waite identified the canoe as coming from Roviana.Footnote 83
Tomako were once ‘the most valued possession’ in the Solomons.Footnote 84 One in the British Museum is similar to that in Belfast, but it is dated to over a decade later (1910) and was commissioned for use by Ralph Brodhurst Hill, then district officer in the Solomon Islands. This has been described as ‘the largest water craft in the collections’, ‘one of the admired highlights in the Ethnography galleries for 40 years’ and a ‘highly significant cultural heritage object’.Footnote 85 Lord Leverhulme purchased this canoe from Brodhurst Hill in 1913 and brought it to Britain, and the museum in turn acquired it from the Lady Lever Art Gallery in 1927. For the British Museum canoe, unlike the one in Belfast, there is specific provenance: elders on Vella Lavella told the Western Solomons government employee, Graham Baines, that the maker was Jiosi Angele, at Njava.Footnote 86 The British Museum has another comparable canoe, from Roviana, taken by Sir Cecil Rodwell, governor of Fiji (1918–24) in 1920,Footnote 87 and there are further examples in Cambridge, the Vatican and Melbourne.Footnote 88 With the intervention of missionaries and others, tomako continued to be built and used for racing between islands during the twentieth century, and since 2012, they have appeared in substantial numbers at annual festivals in the Solomons.Footnote 89
Therefore, the ‘Belfast’ canoe is rare and is of significant contemporary interest and its limited publication hitherto is notable given that it is among the earliest surviving examples. Winifred Glover's 1994 Realms of the Pacific exhibition catalogue states that the canoe was brought up the coast of Ireland to Belfast ‘lashed’ to the steamship S.S. Pladda, in 1896.Footnote 90 (The Pladda, owned by the Clyde Shipping Company,Footnote 91 is shown by contemporary newspapers to have travelled up and down the west coast of England and Scotland and on the east coast of Ireland). In the same publication, Glover suggests (based on the log of H.M.S. Rapid which she had consulted at The National Archives) that the canoe may have been captured on 10 August 1897.Footnote 92 Both cannot be true and so clarification is required.
Given that John Casement was the donor, it is most plausible that he was responsible for taking it from its rightful owners. From 1 November 1895 Casement, a Royal Navy commander (and from 1908, rear admiral), captained H.M.S. Rapid at the Australia Station.Footnote 93 The Belfast Art Gallery and Museum's stock book records the donation date as 4 April 1898, and the entry reads:
Native War Canoe from the Solomon Islands, 39 feet long by 3ft 6 in. beam; also Ten Paddles for same. The plans are stitched together with split rattan, after being chopped to shape by means of stone hatchets. This canoe was fighting in a ‘head hunting’ (cannibal) expedition in 1896.Footnote 94
Based on this entry, Winifred Glover states that ‘the reason given for taking the canoe was that the natives had been head-hunting’.Footnote 95 Whether or not Casement took the tomako as a result of its involvement in head-hunting is still unproven, but tomako were used for raids between islands and for head-hunting expeditions.Footnote 96 As Aoife O'Brien shows, after the establishment of the British Solomon Islands Protectorate in 1893, Charles Morris Woodford (1852‒1927), a naturalist and (from February 1897) first resident commissioner to the Solomons, and Arthur Mahaffy (1869–1919), district commissioner in the western Solomons, collected canoes and other sacred objects in order to disrupt cosmological beliefs and confront traditional practices. Mahaffy was the Dublin-born son of the Trinity College, Dublin classicist, John Pentland Mahaffy, and many of the items he collected are now in the National Museum of Ireland.Footnote 97 Collecting was also, in Mahaffy's case, a means of pursuing a prolific hobby; for Woodford, it was also a way to amass social capital in the metropole.Footnote 98 Woodford's Colonial report for the year 1897‒8 mentions the Rapid in the context of its visit to the Solomon Islands Protectorate,Footnote 99 but makes no reference to head-hunting. This is striking given that he did mention, in his 1898‒9 Annual Report, that Captain Freeman of H.M.S. Mohawk had investigated and arrested, at Simbo, ‘an important chief of that island for the blood-thirsty murder of 10 native women during a head-hunting raid’ and that ‘The arrest, and subsequent detention pending trial … has produced a most excellent effect among the natives of the western portion of the Protectorate where the practice of head-hunting prevails’.Footnote 100
H.M.S. Rapid's log makes no reference to the canoe's capture in 1896, but there are two references to a canoe (or canoes) in 1897. The first entry, on 26 April, was made during a trip from Gera to Guvatu. This referred to communication with a canoe in the morning, and in the afternoon Charles Woodford came on board, after which Woodford's whaling boat was sent ashore.Footnote 101 David Lawrence explains furthermore that Woodford had previously, in March 1897, been travelling on the Rapid on an anti-head-hunting raid:
In March 1897 Woodford left Suva with his police and a 27-foot open whaleboat on HMS Rapid, her last patrol duty of a 12-year attachment to the Australia Station. This was to be her ‘most exciting cruise’ … The Rapid took Woodford to Gavutu and then, accompanied by Woodford, made the annual visit of a British man-of-war to the Solomon Islands where the sailors avenged the deaths of traders at Rendova, New Georgia, Nggatokae and Vella Lavella. The warship then met with the Burns Philp steamer, the Titus, at Gavutu … on board were whaleboats that traders were now selling to local people to replace tomako. The crew of the Rapid also took away a large wooden carving said to be ‘a hideous wooden god with shining and monstrous eyes’, most likely a beku carving of an ancestor or chief, and a war canoe seized from Vella Lavella. Both were given to the British Museum.Footnote 102
If, as the article states, a Vella Lavella canoe was given to the British Museum in 1897, this cannot be the same one as that (mentioned above), dating to 1910 and made for Brodhurst Hill. Furthermore, the mention of Woodford's whaling boat, the fact that this incident took place on Rapid and the route of the Rapid described suggest that this March 1897 reference may relate to the ‘Belfast’ canoe. The Sydney Morning Herald article on which Lawrence's article draws gives more detail on the Rapid crew's activities on this voyage than does her log book. They burned settlements and held chiefs hostage, and seized three canoes, two of which they destroyed. It describes the retained canoe as ‘about 40 ft in length’Footnote 103 — one foot longer than the canoe donated by Casement, which was damaged by storms at sea by te time it reached Belfast (see below). Furthermore, it is possible that the ‘hideous wooden god with shining and monstrous eyes’ to which the extract alludes, that Casement had on board, is the aforementioned canoe prow carving, which has shell eyes, given by Casement's widow to the Belfast Museum and Art Gallery.
The second reference to a canoe in the Rapid's logbook is the 10 August 1897 entry used by Glover in 1994, which records that, while sailing from Gavutu to Gatukai (Nggatokae) and Ugi (Uki Ni Masi), members of the crew landed for an expedition, returning at 10.30 in the morning with a canoe, which was hoisted onto the ship. Having proceeded a distance, at 11.07 the log records, ‘Stopped. Hoisted out canoe. Landed 3 natives’.Footnote 104 Glover did not mention the canoe having been hoisted out again, a mark perhaps of uncertainty over the salience of this log book entry: the detail provided by the Herald article suggests that March 1897 is the more likely date. It is possible though that neither of the two references in the H.M.S. Rapid log book, nor the occasion described by Lawrence, are the correct candidates: in fact, if the (otherwise unsubstantiated) note in the Museum's stock book stating that the canoe was captured in 1896 is true, then Casement could have had it on board prior to any of these dates and, as the log book suggests, he could have been using it regularly for transport to shore.
In summary, more research is needed to ascertain exactly when the canoe was taken, and from where. However, it can be surmised that the claim in the stock book that it had been used for head-hunting — presumably based on a testimony at the time of the donation — is true. It can also be speculated that, for Casement as for Mahaffy and Woodford,Footnote 105 the item symbolised personal success and that donating it to the Belfast Museum was a lasting means of securing his naval reputation in Ireland.
IV
John Young (1826–1915), the donor of the tomako to the Belfast Art Gallery and Museum on John Casement's behalf in April 1898, was father to Casement's wife, Maria, and resident at Galgorm Castle, County Antrim. It is probable that Casement himself was on the Rapid at the time of the donation since he was not granted leave until October 1898.Footnote 106 Frederick Freeman, the above-mentioned Commander of H.M.S. Mohawk, had relieved Casement on the Australia Station on 13 October 1897. Casement, still in command of Rapid, left the station in December 1897,Footnote 107 sailing via Port Said, Malta and Gibraltar to Devonport where he arrived in late March 1898, before being paid off at Plymouth on 21 April.Footnote 108 It seems unlikely, therefore, that Casement would have been able to travel to Ireland before giving the canoe to the museum in early April. Research is still needed to find dates and ports for the removal of the tomako from the Rapid upon her arrival in England and for the tomako's journey to Ireland on board the Pladda (if indeed it was on Pladda that it was transported). Why Casement (or Young) decided to give it to the museum in Belfast is a further mystery. Perhaps, as the Sydney Morning Herald article suggests, Casement had offered it to the British Museum first, or perhaps his father-in-law could not, or would not, accommodate it in Galgorm. Records of any relationship between Casement, or Young, and the Belfast museum's staff are elusive; and there is as yet no reason to believe that the donation had been solicited.
Handwriting evidence from the diary of Charles Elcock, suggests that he authored the 4 April 1898 stock book entry registering the canoe into the collection.Footnote 109 Primarily a microscopist and foraminifera specialist, Elcock, whose watercolours in the Whipple Museum in Cambridge show his enthusiasm for Irish archaeology (and for the Grainger collection),Footnote 110 was curator of the Belfast Art Gallery and Museum from 1896–1905; and, like Deane, had previously worked at the Warrington Museum.Footnote 111 On the same day as he registered it in the stock book (4 April 1898), Elcock recorded in his diary, ‘war canoe presented by Capt Casement per Hon. Jno.Young delivered this pm. — considerably damaged in a storm en voyage’.Footnote 112 An apparently later annotation to the stock book entry, undated but also in Elcock's handwriting, claims again that
The Canoe was damaged by storms en route, and the broken parts were stitched together after arrival here, the stitches being (mainly) covered with putty; the places of the missing pieces of pearl were painted in white, so as to clearly distinguish our work from that of the natives. Nearly 1000 pieces were missing.Footnote 113
On 20‒25 May, Elcock recorded that a man called Bob was ‘mending the canoe’.Footnote 114 He clearly planned that it would be displayed, for by 22 September, he was ‘fixing railing’ around it.Footnote 115
The discovery in the same year of an ancient canoe during works to install a new double track railway line in County Armagh led Elcock to write to the directors of the Great Northern Company (a draft dated 3 August 1898 survives):
Gentlemen I have seen through the kindness of your Electrical Eng[ineer] A. Wakeman, the ancient Irish dug-out canoe found near Portadown which was recently found & as such will make a valuable addition to the Irish antiquities etc. assembled to the city by the late Canon Grainger & hereby ask if you would present same to this museum.Footnote 116
On 12 August the Great Northern Railway Company donated the ‘dugout canoe found in excavations at Portadown’, and on 9 December Bob was mending it.Footnote 117 At the bottom of the draft letter, Elcock scribbled what appears to be a design for a stand on which this canoe would be placed. After this, the tomako is not mentioned in any of Elcock's surviving diaries. However, the two canoes would be displayed together for decades on the same stand — the very recent one from the Solomon Islands above, with the prehistoric one from Ireland below.
V
The earliest definite photo found so far of the ‘Belfast’ tomako is also the first of any item in the ethnographic collection and was taken in April 1908 by Robert Welch. This photograph (fig. 7) was taken below the sloping ceiling of the top floor of the Belfast Public Museum (Belfast Art Gallery and Museum). In it, the canoe stands in front of a reproduction plaster triptych, below which stands a glass case containing a ‘Bengal Tiger’, apparently surrounded by live plants. The divestment from the canoe of apposite cultural references is all the more apparent given that the details surrounding it have been bleached out for a postcard that was circulated by the museum that June (fig. 8): this gives it, to a contemporary eye, an atmosphere of isolation.Footnote 118
For the photo, two individuals held a white sheet to form a blank backdrop for the postcard. One, whose feet only can be seen, is possibly Welch's assistant, William Alfred Green (1870‒1958). Although later an important photographer in his own right, Green was apprenticed to Welch between 1905 and 1910 — in another reminder of how close museum networks were in Belfast at the time, he was great-nephew to Elcock's wife, Harriet.Footnote 119 At the other end of the sheet stands a blurred figure: this could be Deane, who had succeeded Elcock as the museum's curator by the time the photo was taken.Footnote 120
The postcard caption describes the tomako as:
WAR CANOE, length 40 feet, from the Solomon Islands; took part in a Cannibal Expedition in 1896. Made of planks chopped into shape by stone hatchets, and fixed together by split rattan; inlaid with peak and decorated with ‘poached egg’ Shells (ovula ovum) and bone pendants, similar in form at both ends.
The typeface on the reverse of the postcard helps to date a label on the canoe (fig. 9) to the same period. This label records similar information (although sets the length at 39 feet), but with the addition that the donor was Captain Casement of the Royal Navy (‘R.N.’). The inclusion of his name on the label, which is still on the canoe, is important, because as explored below, mention of it waxes and wanes.
Two contemporaneous photos (see fig. 10),Footnote 121 taken in the museum's Grainger Room by William Green, are later, since Green did not set up his own studio until 1910,Footnote 122 and because in the foreground of one, the 1908 canoe postcard is pinned on a pillar. Surrounded by Grainger's antiquities, the tomako sits in front of Horner's spinning wheels.Footnote 123 That Deane regarded it primarily as a curio is suggested by how he had allowed it to become squeezed between the surrounding cases. Did he feel, now that the museum was filling up with other things, that it was getting in the way?
The differences between Welch's 1908 postcard photo and those of Green a few years later show the tomako in the process of being reconsidered as the B.N.H.P.S. collections began to be incorporated, and as others, given by influential museum contacts, were added. Furthermore, photos taken by Welch, from 1925 onwards in the new Belfast Museum and Art Gallery, show that process continuing: there, the canoe began to be used less as an abstracted witness to Irish imperialism, and more as a tool in the active generation of ideas about the ‘other’.
The continuous position of the canoe in the new Belfast Museum and Art Gallery (now the Ulster Museum) was made possible by the fact that, as Glover later reported, the gallery in which it stands, by her time dubbed the ‘boat room’, was built around the canoe. She noted that to facilitate its removal to the new site, ‘the prow and stern pieces were cut off and the canoe re-assembled and repaired in a room in the Museum that was specially built for it. This is now [1994] the permanent Ethnography Gallery although it is still popularly known as the Boat Room.’Footnote 124 Glover drew on images, taken by Robert Welch, of the canoe in that space while it was under construction. In the first (fig. 11), from 1925, the room lacks plaster, flooring and windows.Footnote 125 In a May 1928 image (fig. 12) these have been added, and glass cases, still unfilled, have been installed.Footnote 126 In October 1929, the Belfast Telegraph advertised ‘the ethnography room in the new museum. In the centre is the only head-hunter's war canoe ever brought whole from the Solomon Islands’ (see fig. 13).Footnote 127 But by 1939 (fig. 14), the ethnographic collections had been removed in favour of a Royal Irish Constabulary uniform, archaeological axes and Irish harps.Footnote 128
Returning to the damage to the canoe, based on the photographs, it is discernible that some post-dated its transit from the Solomons. A 1925 Belfast Telegraph article by Robert Welch, publicising the development of the new Belfast Museum and Art Gallery in Botanic Gardens, featured his photo of that date (fig. 11). He stated,
In the photo, the first of the exhibits to be housed in the new building may be seen the great war canoe captured from a raiding party by Captain Casement, R. N. and brought home in one piece — not cut in two as usual for ease of carrying. It is the finest war canoe in Europe.Footnote 129
The 1908 photo taken by Welch for the postcard (fig. 7), when compared both with Green's c.1910–15 image (fig. 10), and also Welch's from 1925–9 (figs 11–14), suggest that the canoe was shortened in Deane's time. Whereas in 1908 the end of the canoe appears flat in section before rising to the finial, in the later photos the same end has a more steeply-curving crescentic form. The canoe, therefore, may have been shortened, possibly while it was being moved out of the upper floor gallery in the Belfast Art Gallery and Museum building on Royal Avenue (of which more below).
In addition, while Elcock's diary recorded ‘Bob’ fixing the canoe shortly after the museum received it (in 1898), and his stock book entry had noted the addition of white paint, this is not reflected in the earliest Deane-era photo (1908), in which the canoe seems uniformly dark in colour. However, white paint does appear in the 1925–39 photos. This suggests the possibility of further damage to the tomako, possibly that occurred when it was being moved to Botanic Gardens under Deane's direction. If this happened, it is surprising (given Deane's usual diligence) that he did not make sure that it was recorded. A possible explanation is that he regarded the tomako as less of a priority than the local and art collections.
VI
The canoe's donor, John Casement (1854–1910), was from Ballycastle. He was a half-cousin to Roger Casement (1819–77), a Captain of the King's Own Regiment of Dragoons. This Roger was father to John Casement's better-known contemporary, Roger David Casement (1864–1916), the Irish revolutionary leader,Footnote 130 who was regularly in contact with the Youngs of Galgorm while attending Ballymena Academy; and, therefore, must have known John. As is widely known, following service as a British consul in French Congo, Roger the younger authored a report on abuses of indigenous peoples perpetrated under Leopold II, King of Belgium. Later, again as a consul, he investigated slavery and violent exploitation on rubber plantations in Brazil, Peru and Colombia.Footnote 131 It was for his subsequent report, advocating anti-slavery campaigns in Britain,Footnote 132 that Casement was awarded his knighthood, of which he was stripped when convicted for treason, and executed in 1916.Footnote 133
Despite the fact that the ‘boat room’ was built around it in 1925, ‘John Casement's’ canoe is not mentioned in the 1909‒22 plans (discussed above) as a central exhibit, and there is no direct record, from either Deane or Stendall, to show what they thought of the item. It is suggestive, though, that in his foreword to the Belfast Art Gallery and Museum's Quarterly Report on 11 September 1915, as a prelude to an essay from Stendall on birds’ eggs, Deane stated: ‘It is hoped that now more space is available in the Grainger Room by the removal of the long Solomon Island canoe, to arrange similar exhibits of Natural History.’Footnote 134 That year's report from the Art Gallery and Museum Committee stated that
Owing to the crowded condition of the very limited amount of available Exhibition space, [it had] decided to erect a shed at the rere of the building to store the long Solomon Island Canoe and some other large objects which occupied a good deal of floor space. By this means it has been possible to make a much-needed re-arrangement of some of the exhibits which has been appreciated by the visitors.Footnote 135
It seems an interesting coincidence — or not — that, at exactly this time in the Belfast papers, Roger Casement's name was beginning to become prominent. Two weeks previously he had been reported as having sought to raise an Irish Brigade in support of Germany.Footnote 136 It would be an overstatement to claim that, with Roger in the news, John Casement's association with the canoe was covered up. Deane's 1908 label recording John Casement as the donor remained stuck to the canoe, and John's name appeared when in 1925 Welch's Belfast Telegraph article celebrated its installation in the new museum. The donation by Casement was mentioned by Winifred Glover in her twentieth-century exhibitions and publications.Footnote 137 Even so, given the canoe's importance to its makers and its rarity and impressive size, the dramatization in its documentation of Casement's capture of it and its centrality to the history of the ‘boat room’ gallery, it is noticeable that neither what it meant as an act of imperial theft, nor Casement's connection with it, have ever been developed as part of its interpretation.
The laying of the foundation stone of the Belfast Museum and Art Gallery, first planned in 1909, was delayed until 1924.Footnote 138 The coming to fruition of Deane's building project, therefore, coincided not only with the First World War, but also with the Easter Rising, partition and the establishment of Northern Ireland, and this changed forever how ethnographic items connected with the British Empire, of which the canoe was the most prominent example, would be exhibited in Belfast.Footnote 139 Given that the Easter Rising in which Roger Casement was an agitator had precipitated an anti-imperial war and that the canoe given by his cousin John Casement celebrated, or at least commemorated, Irish involvement in the creation and administration of the empire, it can be suggested that the canoe presented an interpretative conundrum. In addition to these political considerations, there was also the legacy of the half-hearted display of the canoe during the 1910s in the Grainger Room at the Belfast Art Gallery and Museum on Royal Avenue. As the ‘boat room’ gallery at the Botanic Gardens building was created around it, the canoe may have been intended as a centrepiece for the ‘middle ground’ floor — perhaps even as the focus of a diorama, a popular approach in the period to the interpretation of colonised cultures.Footnote 140 But the photographic sequencing above shows that this never happened. Instead, the museum's references to John Casement appear to have diminished over time; and the canoe continued to be compared with the Portadown dugout (the two still being displayed together). As shown in the early twentieth-century photographs and right up until the opening in 2022 of Inclusive Global Histories, the items displayed around it were not only from Oceania, nor even only ethnographic, but were also Irish, British and European.
The exception to this trend was the long period during which Winifred Glover worked at the Ulster Museum. She stated in conversation for this research that, throughout her career, she was obliged repeatedly to defend the canoe's position in the gallery. Such challenges, she felt, were symbolic of the uneasy position of the ethnographic collections overall: it was also significant that this section had never been accorded an acquisitions budget.Footnote 141 In 2006, she stated in an internal memorandum that, having been carefully conserved following damage within recent history, the canoe was too fragile to be moved.Footnote 142 After 1908, no labels for the canoe appear to have survived until one made in 2009. By then, the canoe was described as an archetype:
The Solomon Islanders practised head-hunting as part of their religious customs. They considered the head to be the most sacred part of the body, with those of their enemies having particular power. Headhunts took place during times of celebration, such as marriages and the all-important yam harvest. Special canoe houses were erected to protect canoes when not in use.Footnote 143
As this article has shown, any lack of prioritisation of the canoe was due not to lack of staff commitment, care or knowledge, but more to the fact that its provenance and the Casement connection had been lost sight of since 1898. For a long period in the institution's history, attitudes toward ethnography overall were hegemonic, reactive and half-hearted; and over the nearly 130 years that the Solomon islands tomako has been in Belfast, interest in it has at times been intense, but on the whole indifferent. One exception to this was Welch, who repeatedly photographed the tomako and alluded to it in newspapers, describing it as the ‘finest war canoe in Europe’. However, the prestige accorded to it by the museum appears to have fallen during his time, as the twenty-six counties south of the border withdrew from the Empire. From the 1960s onwards, Glover researched and did her utmost to keep it in the public eye.
Meanwhile, National Museums N.I. has botanical specimens that Roger Casement collected in Congo and donated to the Belfast Museum, and displays the camera that he is thought to have used to record these activities.Footnote 144 It also displays the spectacles that he wore in Pentonville Prison where he was hanged and propaganda medals issued in Germany after his execution.Footnote 145 There is, too, a framed memo written in pencil noting a ‘pilgrimage’ walk to take place on 4 August 1916, the day after he was ‘cruelly murdered’.Footnote 146 In the Remembering 1916: Your Stories exhibition, staged as part of the Ulster Museum's contribution to the Living Legacies 1914–1918 programme, the latter was shown alongside a contemporary booklet, ‘Dublin and the Sinn Féin Rising’.Footnote 147 The tension between Roger's anti-imperial activity while a British diplomat in Congo and South America, and his revolutionary stance in Ireland, has been extensively explored. The British imperial actions taking place within his family circle, and among people well known to him, so vividly represented in the form of the Solomon Islands canoe, adds a further dimension to his life and work.
The way that the tomako poked its prow above the wall when I visited and photographed it in 2015 and 2019, reminds us that heirloom objects can raise awkward questions. Now, with increasing calls for a reassessment of colonial afterlives in Ireland, it is time to understand its multiple meanings in greater depth. Decolonisation calls for deeper, more considered engagement with colonised objects. This article has explored the Irish dimensions of the canoe's story, but work with Solomon Islanders on its specific provenance is needed. Whether the people from whose ancestors it was taken are from Choiseul, Mbili, Nggatokae, or Roviana — or somewhere else — this is their story to tell. For the time being, the tomako is still central to the gallery, from which it cannot be moved without being deconstructed again and risking further damage. The 2022 Inclusive Global Histories exhibition surrounding it conveys its potential role in decolonisation. The exhibition includes multiple speakers on video, and is distributed across three cases, themed, consecutively, ‘telling stories from our past’, ‘challenging our present’ and ‘shaping our future’. As this article has shown, the tomako has the power to do all three.Footnote 148