The Object at Hand
There was a time when a cane was the exclamation point to a true gentleman's attire, but canes have also been put to a remarkable range of uses, quite a few antisocial
- By Edwards Park
- Smithsonian magazine, October 1995, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Sword canes— like the one cantankerous Andrew Jackson wielded— flash through literature and life. Press a button on the shaft and the deadly blade springs from the tip. The Smithsonian has many varieties; one is made from a French bayonet. Naturally it would be prohibited in any state that outlaws the wearing of concealed weapons. Gun canes fired cartridges at the touch of a well-concealed trigger. But Shayt is most intrigued with a weapon known as the "life preserver." It was a club cane. When pulled from its swordlike shaft, a heavy coil of steel whipped back and forth, smashing anything in its way like a superlong blackjack. Crowd protection of another sort was provided in Tudor times by a combined walking stick and pouncet box that released a pleasant fragrance — to neutralize the smell of Elizabethan London.
Really utilitarian canes came along with the 19th century. Canes held microscopes, traveling kits (shaving gear for men and makeup for women), saw blades, pills and medicine, compasses, watches, sundials, and vials known as "nip sticks" — for bootlegged booze. Old-fashioned politics often called for noisy processions: many paraders carried canes with small charges that ignited when the bearer banged the cane on the ground. There were also spitting canes, their heads filled with water, that could squirt a jet of it at the tweak of a lever.
Warren Harding seems to have owned 25 canes, which even in his time probably made him a minor collector. His fancy black cane very likely supported him toward the end, on his last journey, a political tour as far as Alaska that ended with his death in San Francisco in August 1923. If that cane saw Harding's gradual collapse, it probably witnessed more intimate moments. One of the self-indulgent short-term President's peccadillos was his six-year dalliance with pretty Nan Britton. Their trysts, she said, occurred right in the White House, in a small room near Harding's office, "a place," Nan noted, "for hats and coats."
Not to mention canes. It's easy to picture two or three of them hanging there in the dark among the winter chesterfields and summer straw hats. If canes could only talk!
by Edwards Park
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Comments (2)
While the article was interesting, I saw no mention of canes as diplomatic gifts to Native American tribal officials as momentos of American sovereignty, much as the medallions that were distributed with likenesses of various presidents to "chiefs," and called peace medals.
One particular instance comes to mind; that of a "presidentil" cane given to the Acoma nation in New Mexico
that was highly prized as an integral part of their governor's trappings. Neighboring Lagunas appropriated the Acoma cane and held it for ransom. I think it was eventually returned to its rightful owners and resumed its venerated position of a valued gift that connoted friendship.
Posted by Terry G. Doolittle on September 3,2009 | 01:30 PM
At the museum where I volunteer we have a cane that's made of human bone. It's from the Phillipines and appears to be different sized bones cut and stacked on one another so it's bigger at the top and tapers as it goes down. Another piece is placed vertically on the top for the handle. It also has another black material placed in between each of the bone pieces, caribon or something if I remember correctly.
Posted by Amberly on August 30,2009 | 06:30 AM