With the new year upon us, our deer can breathe a sigh of relief after surviving the hunting season, my previously bloated woodshed is rapidly hollowing out, and right here within reach of my favorite recliner stands a slim stack of three recently purchased books to read.
The books represent the last of the itemized 2025 purchases that’ll accompany my annual income-tax package to the accountant in a few weeks. As much as I dread this annual bookkeeping chore, I have often told my wife that the hourly wage dwarfs anything I ever made as a newspaperman. So, I force myself to do it, and have learned to total each month on the fly to simplify the last step.
The task is not nearly as arduous as the old QuickBooks income-and-expense report I once annually compiled for our bed-and-breakfast statement.
My three new books cover an eclectic mix of topics that may help me solve lingering questions I’ve been exploring in recent months and years. One book focuses on the extinct passenger pigeon, long a personal fascination of mine. Another digs into the ancient, mysterious, Stonehenge-like standing stones on Scotland’s Orkney Islands. The third examines well-known historic-archaeological sites of French and Indian and Revolutionary War fame up and down the bloody, war-scarred, 18th-century Lake George-Lake Champlain corridor.
A.W. Schorger’s The Passenger Pigeon: Its Natural History and Extinction was published in 1955 and is generally accepted as the definitive scholarly work on the subject. I marked and bought it from a monthly snail-mail catalog I receive from a Peterborough, New Hampshire dealer whose offerings focus on sporting topics. It surprises me that anyone can still make a living in that genre, but he and his wife seem to be doing just fine, thank you.
I salute them, and have picked off some great stuff from their catalog, which, for sporting bibliophiles, always includes rare, antiquarian books about fly fishing, Tonkin-cane rods, fine European shotguns, wing-shooting, and related topics.
I bought the passenger-pigeon book as a useful library reference. To get a feel for it, I blew through the first 100 pages and learned about the spring and fall flocks that once darkened bright sunlit skies for scores of miles and left the forest floor beneath their clogged, chirping roosting sites covered with a foot-deep layer of dung that suffocated young understory.
Though Schorger’s is not the type of book the average reader would tackle cover to cover, if one is looking for scientific passenger-pigeon data, it’s all there between two cloth hard covers.
The other two new books awaiting me are written by archaeologists whose topics just so happen to send enticing tendrils into our verdant slice of the Connecticut Valley: Mark Edmond’s Orcadia: Land, Sea and Stone in Neolithic Orkney (2019), and David R. Starbuck’s The Great Warpath: British Military Sites from Albany to Crown Point (1999).
Though I have not yet read a word of Edmond’s book on Orkney’s megaliths, I did read Alex Ross’s griping December 1 New Yorker piece about the British archaeologist’s cutting-edge observations and interpretation of the mythical Scottish landscape. Ross’s article, titled “Written in Stone: In Scotland’s Orkney Islands, the Neolithic Age Dominates the Landscape,” brought me straight to a high, lonesome, thought-provoking, commercial wild-blueberry field crowning a special spot in the Heath highlands. There an ancient assemblage of mysterious standing stones, similar but smaller than those at Orkney and Stonehenge, point to the heavens.
I have been transfixed on every Heath visit by the stunning, panoramic view from a spot that drops off at about the same angle in all directions, suggesting a prehistorically special place.
Experiencing that local site sends me into deep reflection about its spiritual possibilities, and it stays with me for days. I keep revisiting the same thoughts, pondering the spiritual/ritualistic possibilities. Fascinating questions linger. Such as why were the vertical stones erected thousands of years ago? What did they mean? What was their function?
Talk about thick esotericism. Up there in the refreshing air of that natural hilltop chapel, it’s suffocating. When you consider that such stone monuments appear to celebrate the same beliefs on at least two continents, it suggests a worldwide spiritual cosmos uniting ancient man millennia before Columbus ever thought of the New World.
As for Starbuck’s book, it pulled me in due to its relationship to a fascinating, Revolutionary War powder horn a friend bought at auction a couple years ago. Illustrated with an interesting array of hand-carved images, not only was this horn buried deep in an otherwise uninspiring general-merchandise sale, it came with an unsettling written caveat admitting that the auctioneer couldn’t vouch for it 18th-century beginnings.
In other words, it could have been a Centennial phony, created a century after the Revolution, at a time when engraved powder horns were gaining popularity among collectors and pursued by some with deep pockets.
My friend was curious if I had seen the listing? No, I told him. I hadn’t. Though I had indeed opened the online preview, I had closed out of it before reaching the powder horn. Nothing for me, I thought. Nonetheless, he asked if I minded returning to the site for a quick evaluation as we spoke on the phone. He just wanted to know if it looked right to me.
I took a peek and, though no expert, believed it had everything a collector desired. Better still, upon spotting the name “T. Nash” inscribed in large letters across the center of a cartouche, I thought I knew who carried it. It may have been the combat accoutrement of Greenfield Meadows blacksmith and Revolutionary militiaman Tubel Nash (often spelled Tubal), with whom I was familiar after studying his old deeds from my neighborhood.
Upon a quick inspection of Nash’s Revolutionary War service record, I found that his deployments on the so-called Northern Campaign mirrored the years and sites on the horn. That, in and of itself, indicated to me that the horn was no fake. Think of it: what’s the chance that a counterfeiter 100 years down the road would research an obscure backcountry soldier’s military record to create a phony powder horn?
By chance, several weeks later at an antiques show, I happened to bump into a local expert. I asked if he’d mind evaluating photos? Sure, he said, email some to him. When I did so, he suspected mischief. I took his evaluation under advisement and decided to reserve judgment. Though I didn’t share his expertise level, in my mind it was real.
Tubel Nash (1754-1816) was an interesting Greenfield Meadows character and skilled craftsman. The son of Greenfield miller Daniel Nash (1715-90) of Nash’s Mills fame, Tubel apparently got restless after his father’s death. By 1801, he had moved to Conway. Then, nine years later, he sold his Conway property and took his family to Canton/St. Lawrence County, New York, where he died and was buried in 1816.
It seems to me most likely that the relic never left the Greenfield area with Nash. It probably remained here in the possession of family or friend and was passed down until recently hitting a dead end and going to auction.
I was hoping Starbuck’s Great Warpath would provide insight into the mysterious “Ft. No. 10” carved into the Nash horn; however, Starbuck offers not a clue about the location of what is most likely an obscure, vernacular fort reference understood by Connecticut Valley soldiers at the time. So, the search continues.
Stay tuned. I don’t give up easy.
![Syndicate this site using RSS [x]](http://tavernfare.com/wp-content/themes/mad-meg/images/rss.png)