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Niagara
Falls
might seem to be a strange place for a large and important collection
of Egyptian mummies. But it was not quite so strange in the
late 1850's, when Colonel Sydney Barnett, the son of the Museum's
founder, Thomas Barnett, went to Egypt to purchase the Egyptian
antiquities that would begin the collection.
Since Napoleon's attempt to conquer Egypt in 1798, Egyptian
mummies, coffins, statues and jewellery had been entering Europe
and North America, inspiring artists and architects. Many cemeteries
in the first half of the nineteenth century were built with
Egyptian style gates. The decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphs
by Jean Francois Champollion in 1836 excited the Western world.
American writers and philosophers such as Ralph Waldo Emerson,
Henry David Thoreau, and Edgar Allen Poe, wrote on Egyptian
themes. The Crystal Palace display in London in 1851 had whetted
the public's appetite for even more Egyptian materials. In Niagara
Falls, two monuments had already been constructed in Ancient
Style.
First, between 1850 and 1851, E.W. Serrell built a suspension
bridge over the gorge at Lewiston, with Egyptian style pylons.
Then, between 1852 and 1853, J.A.. Roebling (whose son, Washington
Roebling, would later build the Brooklyn Bridge) spanned the
Niagara River below the falls with a double-level suspension
bridge built in Egyptian style. What could have been more reasonable
than to create a dazzling display of Ancient Egyptian materials
in the beautiful Niagara Falls Museum on Table Rock overlooking
the Falls, in sight of the Egyptian pylons of the bridge?
During the late 1850s, negotiations began, and by 1861, Colonel
Barnett, with the help of Canadian doctor James A. Douglas,
was able to bring the first six mummies from Egypt. Dr. Douglas'
help was required to circumnavigate Mehmet Ali's 1835 ban on
export of Egyptian antiquities. Enforcement had been erratic,
but after 1861, under the direction of Auguste Mariette, the
Egyptian Museum in Cairo had been established, and Mariette
was determined to keep Egyptian antiquities in Egypt Colonel
Barnett's assemblage was one of the last private collections
to leave Egypt.
The coffins reached Canada in 1861, by which time the American
Civil War had begun (The first shots had been fired at the Egyptian
style bridge in Harper's Ferry!) People in the USA and Canada
were increasingly concerned with contemporary issues. Nevertheless,
the mummies were formally unwrapped by William Rooth in the
presence of two local businessmen, Charles Patten and George
Simpson. As yet, no notes from those proceedings have surfaced.
What interesting reading they would make today!
Few people in North America could read hieroglyphs well in 1860,
so it is not surprising that the names on the coffins were misread,
and the mummies mislabelled Antiquities dealers in Egypt were
not always scrupulous, and coffins were sometimes sold with
bodies that did not belong in them, and with exaggerated stories
about the historical identification of the mummies. The most
presentable mummy in the Niagara Falls Museum, a fine gentleman
with red hair and beard, has long been advertised as "General
Ossipumphneferu, North America's oldest and most perfectly preserved
mummy." Alas, he is neither, but his true story, and that
of the other mummies and coffins, is just beginning to be known.
Anthropological studies of the bodies were done by Dr. Wolfgang
M. Pahl of the Tubingen Institute of Anthropology, under the
direction of Egyptologist Dr. Arne Eggebracht in 1985 At that
time, the mummies were all x-rayed, some, to prevent damage,
still in their coffins Laparoscopy was used to determine the
state of internal organs, but no tissue samples were taken.
The coffins are being studied by Gayle Gibson, an Egyptologist
who teaches at the Royal Ontario Museum, and who is President
of the Society for the Study of Egyptian Antiquities.
Some of the recent findings about the Niagara Falls mummies
and coffins are outlined below The purchaser of this unique
collection will have the pleasure and privilege of completing
these studies and bringing these forgotten mummies into the
modern world.
On display since 1861, the Niagara Falls mummies have sometimes
resided on the Canadian side of the River, and sometimes on
the American. They have become part of the mystique of the Falls.
A visit to see the natural wonders of Niagara is incomplete
without a side trip to the Museum to say hello to these ancient
witnesses.
I have endeavoured to establish an institution commensurate
with the importance of the young but great country to which
any Canadian might point with pride, an institution that should
rank with other great institutions of the world, although they
are government affairs raised and supported by whole nations
while mine is only the effort of a humble individual."
- Thomas Barnett, Founder, Niagara
Falls Museum
Thomas Barnett was born in 1799
in Birmingham, England and founded the Niagara Falls Museum
in 1827. He died in 1890.
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Please
direct inquiries regarding the Egyptian Museum Collection to:
Anthony Hirschel, Director
Dr. Peter Lacovara, Curator of
Ancient Art
The Michael C. Carlos
Museum, Emory University
571 South Kilgo Street Atlanta
Georgia 30322 (404) 727-2719
GOLDEN
CHARIOT LTD
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5V
1E3
William R. Jamieson, Director,
Research and Development
Contact us at:goldenc@inforamp.net
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