Sam Houston’s walking stick on display at library
Special to The Daily News
Published March 3, 2011
GALVESTON — The Rosenberg Library Museum is displaying Gen. Sam Houston’s ivory walking stick as the March Treasure of the Month.
This cane, which dates to about 1840, originally belonged to Houston (1793-1863) and was then gifted to his nephew, Galvestonian Maj. M.H. Royston.
The elaborately carved cane, crafted from a single tusk of elephant ivory, was donated to the library in 1954 by the estate of Maj. Royston’s daughter, Miss Maude Royston.
Walking sticks, canes, staffs or sticks have been in use since man first needed assistance climbing over rocks or walking long distances. The walking stick’s heyday was during the Victorian period of the late 18th and 19th centuries, but these staffs have been treasured practical and decorative items for several centuries.
King Tutankhamen, Henry III, Napoleon, Louis XIII, President George Washington and Queen Victoria all had impressive cane collections.
Symbols of the staff are seen on ancient Greek amphorae and Egyptian wall paintings; they are associated with priests, bishops, kings and shepherds. Canes are referenced in the Old and New Testament, and staffs known as “bourdons” were used by pilgrims and Crusaders who traveled to the Holy Land during the 11th century through the 13th century.
Walking sticks could be crafted from simple materials or by elaborate methods, using elephant or walrus ivory, porcelain, whale bone, rhino horn, exotic woods, serpent skin, tortoise shell, cloisonné, gems, glass and precious metals.
The walking stick falls into four different categories of use and design, including ethnic design, folk art, decorative and gadget canes.
Ethnic canes reflect cultural customs from around the world, and canes from Africa, Asia and Native American tribes are widely praised. Scrimshaw canes, or canes carved by sailors on the whaling ships of the 19th and 20th centuries, are made from whale bone and teeth and are the most popular folk art canes.
It was said during the 17th century that an aristocrat could easily spend 40,000 francs a year in decorative canes, and jewelers and smiths across Europe were kept busy with orders.
Gadget canes are canes that serve dual purposes or hide treasures or weapons. These canes could include binoculars, seats, music stands, hammers, swords, razors, spikes, guns, maps, spears, flasks, fans or cosmetics and mirrors.
Walking sticks became symbols of authority and status over time. By the 16th century, these staffs were part of everyday fashion and were meant to be “worn,” not merely just used.
The type of walking stick and its materials indicated rank and status, and it was held that gentlemen carrying a cane could not be expected to perform manual labor. By the Victorian era, canes were in such demand that plantations were established to grow the reeds. The cane-manufacturing hubs of Vienna, Hamburg, Berlin and London employed thousands.
The walking stick’s popularity waned in the early 20th century because of improved abilities to mass-produce the canes, making them less attractive as fashionable items.
The unique and elaborate canes of the past are now major collectibles, and antique fairs and shops cater to those looking for particularly striking walking sticks.
General Houston’s ivory cane is featured for the month of March as a tribute to the 175th anniversary of Texas Independence, celebrated Wednesday. Coincidently, Wednesday also was Sam Houston’s birthday.
Houston was the first and third president of the Republic of Texas and a U.S. senator for the state before the Civil War.
Texas’ War for Independence from Mexico lasted from Oct. 2, 1835, to April 21, 1836.
Houston is most revered for his defeat of Santa Anna at the Battle of San Jacinto on April 21, for which he was then referred to as “Old Sam Jacinto.”
The Republic of Texas was declared with the adoption of the Texas Declaration of Independence on March 2, 1836.
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At A Glance
WHAT: The Treasure of the Month
WHEN: It can be viewed Tuesday through Saturday during library computer lab hours, 9:30 a.m. to 5:45 p.m.
WHERE: Mezzanine level of the Rosenberg Library, 2310 Sealy Ave., in Galveston
INFORMATION: Contact the Library’s Museum Office at 409-763-8854, Ext. 125
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