basket -
Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University
Origin Baskets began being made on Nantucket Island by
Native Americans of the
Wampanoag Nation; these were generally of the splint type, and bear little resemblance to Nantucket lightship baskets. Nevertheless, these early baskets may have inspired later basket makers on
Nantucket and aboard the lightships. The earliest form of basket made by white settlers on
Nantucket, originated on
whaleships in the early 1800s. These baskets were made free form (without a mold) and are thus only vaguely similar to later lightship baskets. These baskets, however, do begin to show early principles of lightship basket design, often incorporating a solid wooden base and a rattan weaver. The inspiration is thought to be based upon barrel manufacture due to the similar nature of a solid base and wooden staves. The use of rattan in basket making is most likely due to whalers picking up the material while sailing in the South Pacific. The first true lightship baskets were made in the mid- to late 1800s aboard the lightship stationed on the
Nantucket Shoals. The first lightship station on the Nantucket Island Shoal was established in June 1854 and crewed by six men. Deployments aboard the lightship often lasted for 30 days and the crewmembers generally had little to do. The earliest lightship baskets begin appearing in the 1860s and are generally of more utilitarian form. The first purse style basket with a lid was made by Lightship Captain Charles Ray (1798–1884), and is relatively similar to the type sold today. Lightship basket bases, rims, and staves tended to be made on-island, with lightship crewmembers bringing these items on board the ship to do the actual weaving, and help pass the time. The molds were originally made from old cut-up ships' masts. According to the
Nantucket Lightship Basket Museum, some of these early lightship basket makers included: "Captain Davis Hall, Captain Andrew Sandsbury, Roland Folger, Thomas W. Barrallay, William D. Appleton, George W. Ray, Charles F. Ray, Joe Fisher, Charlie Sylvia, SB Raymond and Isaac Hamblin." Lightship baskets stopped being made on board the Nantucket lightships in 1900, when the government stopped allowing crewmembers to spend time doing so. The process continued on Nantucket Island. José Formoso Reyes began making the first true lightship basket purses in the 1940s, calling them "Friendship Baskets" after learning the craft from Captain Charles Ray's grandson Mitchel Ray. Charlie Sayles, Sr. is credited with creating the original Ivory Whale adornment for a basket top in the 1940s, a practice that is ubiquitous today.
Use Nantucket lightship baskets were originally designed as multi-purpose baskets to carry and store shopping, vegetables, and stray items about the home. Crewmen aboard the Nantucket lightships made most for sweethearts and spouses on Nantucket, or for sale. Baskets could generally be purchased between $1.50 for small basket up to $50.00 for larger or more elaborate pieces. Most baskets were sold to Islanders, although a tourist trade quickly developed. Lightship baskets began being used as purses in the 1900s and still are today. True Nantucket lightship baskets currently start at about $500 and can cost up to hundreds of thousands of dollars. Poorly made knock-offs, however, can be had for far less. After José Reyes invented the "Friendship Basket" lightship basket purses began being given as gifts, as signs of long-term friendship. After the development of the "Friendship Basket" it began to be common for girls to receive a lightship basket purse as a gift after graduating from
Nantucket High School. ==Types==