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Bagpipe (Northumbrian pipes)

Probably by: James Reid (English, 1813–1874)
mid-19th century
Object Place: North Shields, England

Medium/Technique Ivory, cocuswood, silver, oak, leather, cloth
Dimensions Chanter length (without reed) 27.8 cm (10 15/16 in.)
Credit Line Leslie Lindsey Mason Collection
Accession Number17.1933
ClassificationsMusical instrumentsAerophones

DescriptionChanter and four drones. Leather bag covered with dark blue velvet. Three stocks, silver tips. Drones of ivory richly embellished with silver tips and long joint tubes of silver; inverted conoidal bores with very small taper and stopped at the ends; single reeds. Chanter of ebony, cylindrical bore, stopped at the lower end; seven fingerholes in the front, a thumbhole in the rear; seven silver keys mounted on knobs.
Cocuswood chanter pipes with silver keys, ivory drone pipes with silver mounts; bag covered with cotton velveteen with pleated silk trim.
ProvenanceFrancis W. Galpin (1858-1945), Hatfield Regis, England; 1916, sold by Francis W. Galpin to William Lindsey (1858-1922), Boston, Massachusetts; 1916, gift of William Lindsey, in memory of his daughter, Leslie Lindsey Mason, to the MFA. (Accession Date: October 5, 1916)

Sir John Fenwick's "The Flower Among Them," 1700s
Traditional
Performed by Neal Macmillan on Northumbrian smallpipes, made by Colin Ross, Whitley Bay, England, about 2000