August 12, 2014
Encasing the Parthenon Marbles in sand as bomb protection considered during first World War
Newly released information reveals that one of the way that the British Museum considerd protecting the Parthenon Marbles during the First World War was to fill the room where they were housed with sand. The idea was ditched, because of worries that the walls of the room would not be able to hold the weight of the sand. In the end, the sculptures were instead protected with sandbags in the gallers.
Not that many years later, in the Second World War, when the risk of bombing was far greater, they were instead transferred to disused London Underground tunnels for safety.
From:
Art Newspaper
British Museum’s battle on the home front during the First World War
Archive reveals how air raids threatened the collection and King George V intervened to stop the building being requisitioned
By Martin Bailey. Museums, Issue 259, July-August 2014
Published online: 30 July 2014The British Museum’s curator of Oriental prints and drawings wrote what became one of most famous war poems in the English language. Laurence Binyon penned the lines of “For the Fallen” in September 1914 that are inscribed on thousands of memorials: “They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old / Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn / At the going down of the sun and in the morning / We will remember them.”
Binyon volunteered for military service in 1915. He told the museum’s director: “I know I am not the best material [he was 45], but it does seem as if every man would be wanted before the end.” Binyon worked as a hospital orderly in eastern France in 1916.
The museum’s archive reveals the impact of the First World War on the institution and its staff. On the centenary of the outbreak of hostilities we have delved into its files from the war years. Many of the staff volunteered or were enlisted, 11 of whom were killed. They left behind colleagues who did their duty protecting the collection from the summer of 1914 until the end of the Great War.The museum was vulnerable to zeppelin and airplane raids on London. The dome of its round reading room made it a particularly distinctive target. Among the treasures requiring special protection during air raids were the Elgin (Parthenon) Marbles. In October 1914 there was a plan to fill the Elgin room with sand to entomb the sculptures, but the government’s office of works warned that the building’s structure “would not stand the strain”. Instead, a few months later the pediment sculptures were moved down to the basement. The frieze panels, along with important Assyrian reliefs, were protected in the galleries with sandbags.
Three years later King George V intervened to protest against a government proposal to allow the air ministry to requisition much of the museum. In an impassioned appeal Frederic Kenyon, the museum’s director, warned the government’s office of works that “the museum would then become a legitimate target for enemy attack”. The King shared Kenyon’s fears. The royal intervention against David Lloyd George’s government is revealed in a letter from Windsor Castle.
The war cabinet had decided to requisition the museum in December 1917. The museum’s director was also worried that civil servants smoking in a suite of offices in the upper galleries would create a fire hazard. The air ministry canteen would be installed in the basement casts gallery, to isolate food smells and contain fire risks. Kenyon attended the war cabinet on 8 January 1918 to put his case. The secret minutes reveal his alternative solution: “Kenyon said a suggestion that the Bethlehem Hospital, more commonly known as the Bedlam Lunatic Asylum, should be used; but the war cabinet felt that this would hardly be suitable accommodation.” After Kenyon’s appeal, the government backed down, revoking its requisitioning.Lord Stamfordham, George V’s private secretary, wrote four days later, expressing his relief at the reversal: “The King’s telegram appealing against the cabinet’s original decision had, I hope, some effect.”
The museum had remained open to visitors, but in March 1916 the galleries were shut because of shortage of staff and reduced government funding (the saving was £8,500, equivalent to more than £500,000 today). At the same time air raids on London were increasing, so there was growing pressure to move objects to safer locations. Although no bombs actually fell on the museum, in September 1917 one did hit the Bedford Hotel 200 yards away, killing 11 people. In February 1918 the trustees and staff decided to store its movable treasures in the underground railway the Post Office was building to link London’s main sorting offices. One station was just 300 yards away.
Among the antiquities stored on a station platform were the Elgin frieze, the Rosetta Stone, 118,000 Babylonian and Assyrian tablets and the entire coin collection. But the underground was damp and some fragile material had to be stored elsewhere. Prints and drawings, for example, were secretly dispatched to the National Library of Wales in Aberystwyth.
- Just how well protected are items in the British Museum? : October 9, 2006
- Parthenon Marbles talk in Duveen Gallery at British Museum : December 11, 2014
- The Elgin family busts in Ottawa : October 26, 2011
- The magic is lost when an artefact is taken from its geographical context : January 19, 2010
- The marbles should not be returned, because of Greece’s past record : January 26, 2006
- Poor security keeps Iraq museum closed : June 19, 2005
- Greece states that it will drop ownership claims on Parthenon Marbles : January 6, 2011
- Greece considered buying back Elgin Marbles soon after gaining independence : March 20, 2012
Dot1541 said,
08.12.14 at 8:04 am
RT @elginism: Blog post: Encasing the Parthenon Marbles in sand as bomb protection considered during first World War http://t.co/aKcMR7EH2D
E_tabby said,
08.12.14 at 8:07 am
RT @elginism: Blog post: Encasing the Parthenon Marbles in sand as bomb protection considered during first World War http://t.co/aKcMR7EH2D
alekat247 said,
08.12.14 at 8:09 am
RT @elginism: Blog post: Encasing the Parthenon Marbles in sand as bomb protection considered during first World War http://t.co/aKcMR7EH2D
Anonomouse1981 said,
08.12.14 at 8:38 am
RT @elginism: Blog post: Encasing the Parthenon Marbles in sand as bomb protection considered during first World War http://t.co/aKcMR7EH2D
Nihil_Novi_Net said,
08.14.14 at 8:39 am
Encasing the Parthenon Marbles in sand as bomb protection considered during first World War – Elginism http://t.co/5kKrEpEs2n