The white painted figurehead from the 'Hannah Nicholson' depicts a female clad in modest Victorian dress. She has a locket around her neck, clutches a book to her chest with her left hand and holds a posy in her right. A tiara rests on her head.
Figureheads, carved wooden sculptures which ornamented the bow of a sailing ship, embodied the 'soul' of the vessel and were believed to offer the crew protection and safe passage on the seas. They were also used to identify a ship, reflecting its function or paying tribute to a person connected with the vessel. The plight of the figurehead after the wreck demonstrates how these objects were coveted and acquired by those outside the maritime trade. Female figureheads were believed to stave off storms at sea. During the latter part of the 19th century, there was an increasingly common trend for figureheads to represent the wives or daughters of the ship's owner.
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