If you ever want to invade Australia, do it in early January, when it seems like almost the entire country is on holidays.
When I was working, I never got into the holidays-in-January thing - it always seemed like an excellent time for major hardware and software upgrades - there was no one there to notice if you went over time, and then you could have time off in early autumn when the weather was still pleasantly warm and most places were fairly quiet - apart from the Labor day weekend that is.
Now I'm retired, we still prefer to go away in early autumn, so I've been down at Lake View, working on the displays of early medical instruments, and my nemesis, the Victorian hat box
This one was made of leather and designed to carry a top hat - one a little like the one worn by Churchill at the Sidney Street siege in 1911
this particular hat box came with a provenance, which is good, but unfortunately the provenance was wrong, not only did the supposed maker of the hat box die in 1814, when the hat box was supposed to date from 1825 or thereabouts.
I suspect that, like most other leather hat boxes for top hats it in fact dates from the 1850s when the top hat was popularised by Prince Albert,
Unfortunately the hat box is too fragile to open up to look for a maker's mark inside, so its date of manufacture will remain a mystery for now.
The original ownership of the box is not in doubt, and I suspect the story of its provenance has been garbled as it passed down through the family.
Interestingly, despite its original owner being Australian, and someone who died in 1909, it has a fragmentary Great Western Railway luggage label to Oxford on it
And that's another little puzzle.
The original owner was a wealthy grazier, who like many nineteenth century members of the squatocracy, never really considered themselves Australian and retired back to England to die.
However the puzzle is that stylistically, I would guess the use of a sans serif font would date the label to the 1920s, and not the Edwardian period.
I doubt that anyone would have gone to the trouble of sending a hat box, or indeed other personal effects back to Australia, so I am guessing that the original owner never took it with him and passed it on to a family member, and the GWR sticker is the result of one of the original owner's descendants taking the hat box with them on a trip to England.
But it’s not all been puzzles and fonts.
Up on the Athenaeum we've been working on the historic book collection and working out a methodology to improve the data quality, something which I find both intellectually demanding but strangely stimulating, but then I've always been a bit odd...