I've just noticed some things in my book of The Woodchester Glass House.
Not relevant to this thread but anyway ...
It has no dustjacket.
On the inside front cover is a label 'Reference Department Public Library of Dundee', Class H, Number 397(?4)31.
On the right hand page facing ifc is a pencil written note '1st Ed, Scarce, £40'.
Hope it hasn't been stolen from the library!
And pertaining to the 'linen smoother':
On pages 9 and 10 referring to plates III and IV in the book where pictures are shown, there is a detailed discussion from the author about what other people have called these and then whether these are pestles, a block for mending lacework or linen smoothers.
He says 'This last appears the most probable'. Hmmm, so the author wasn't entirely sure what it was.
He doesn't provide any primary evidence that these mushroom shaped glass articles with handles are linen smoothers.
Given that in 1881, referring to the Viking linen smoother with no handle, the Society for Antiquaries said ' Miss Henderson of Stemstor, in Caithness, who was also present, remarked that an implement similar to this had been used long ago in their house for a similar purpose, viz., the smoothing or glazing of linen, and that she believed the implement was still in existence.' and that she had then gone and found the bun shaped glass smoother with no handle (pictured in the Antiquaries report), I am beginning to wonder where the fact has come from that these upside down mushroom shapes with handles were actually linen smoothers.
Also that the author of the Antiquaries report said they, the dented bun shaped items with no handle, were still in use in Norway.
Are these upside down mushroom shaped items actually linen smoothers? or is it just that they have a mushroom bottom that looks very like a viking era linen smoother?
George Hamilton from the museum makes a very interesting point as an addendum at the bottom of his letter to the Society of Antiquaries. He says
'[It may be added that the early specimen from the viking grave (to the description of which we owe our knowledge of the three specimens of the modern implement) has never had a handle, at least of glass]
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