Shetland Museum

Once every few years I go to the Shetland Museum in Lerwick.  It is an excellent place to a) show visitors the history of Shetland and b) spend a few hours wandering around looking at the exhibits.

Vaila Mae is a replica of the nineteenth century Shetland sixareen Industry LK718

(forgive me if my narrative now looks like the contents of Wikipedia, because it most probably is and I have the brain of a hen!)

The historic displays start outside just next to where I park the car – this is one of the propeller blades from the RMS Oceanic – a transatlantic ocean liner built for the White Star Line (same time as RMS Titanic).  Salvaged from the sea between Mid Walls (end of my track) and Foula on “Da Shaalds o’ Foula” (hazardous underwater reef) where the ship was wrecked in 1914.

Laura Kay LK36, a traditional fishing boat designed and built in Shetland around 2008

Stourbrough Hill is the hill behind our house. I see it every day.  To think those beautiful ceremonial knives were found there! Incredible.

Stourbrough knife hoard, composed of 19 knives, each placed upright and bookended by sandstone blocks. The hoard was found in eroding peat near the summit of a hill.

St Ninian’s Isle Treasure – a hoard of Pictish silverware buried for centuries until the 1950s. It is the best example of surviving silver metalwork from the early medieval period in Scotland.

The Monk Stone – a Pictish altar, with carvings of Christian missionaries

Loom weights

Shetland’s oldest surviving document – 1299 AD – A record of a legal case concerning allegations of corruption by a local woman, Ragnhild Simunsdatter, against the Duke’s representative.

Reconstruction of a Shetland home from around 1750

Sixareen boat – clinker-built, they were crewed by six men who manned a single oar; giving them the name ‘sixareen’. These boats also had a square sail which would be used if the wind was blowing in the right direction.

“Rivals in the North” – (Edmund Miller) – commemorating the first air service to Shetland.

Ship’s bell from the Avanti Savoia, a steel barque built 1890 in Genoa, Italy.

The ever-famous Fair Isle knitwear.

And amazing fine knitted lace shawls.

 

Model of “the Swan” – The Fifie Swan LK 243 launched 1900. Still going strong and much loved by everyone.


Discover more from My Shetland

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

7 thoughts on “Shetland Museum

  1. Lew W Sherman

    As I’ve said previously, my Williamson ancestors came from Shetland in the early 1800’s. I came across your posts about 6 months ago and have followed you since because of your continuing story and your excellent pictures of what life is like in Shetland. I am in awe of the starkness of your land and yet there is much beauty, too. I am now trying to learn more of your history and am in wonder of the stone formations that are now several centuries old. One of my ancestors was a mason there, so I take some pleasure in seeing the unbelievably complicated structures that were built.

    Reply
  2. Judith

    Fascinating and well worth visiting. I’ve been museuming too. Last week my son and I went to Saltburn-by-the-Sea, Marske and Redcar in North Yorkshire where we matched up sketches that my father did a century ago (some to the day!) with the actual places. We were working out exactly where he had been, whether he was sitting on a stool and in one place that either the road had since been moved across a few yards or that he was sitting in the middle of the road. It was great fun.

    We also found the house my Proctor great-grandparents lived in at Saltburn and visited the Redcar Lifeboat Museum where they have the oldest lifeboat still in existence, the Zetland.

    Upstairs is a wall of photos of they call, “The Wall of Heroes” and I was surprised and delighted to find many who shared family surnames with our ancestors on my mother’s father’s side. A bit special!

    Reply
  3. Rebecca A Final

    SO MUCH history. And some truly beautiful things. The fishing boat build in Shetland – gorgeous. And that shawl … Wow. You truly have “history” there. Here something “old” is 1890 or 1920. Not old at all.

    Reply
  4. Jacqueline

    Great weather for your visitor, it’s nice to show your home at its best , isn’t it.
    Do you ever find relics on your land, or rather, in your land.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Frances Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *