Origin: English
Period: Late Victorian
Provenance: Unknown
Date: c.1900
Length: 39”
Handle Width: 6.25”
Handle Depth: 1.5”
The wonderfully vernacular thornwood walking stick, the naturally knotted shaft retaining its organic, time-worn contour and topped with a simple T-form handle. To one side, the stick is neatly carved OLD GIBBETING FIELD, the lettering cut prior to varnishing and sitting comfortably within the surface, the whole having a mellow, gently polished tone consistent with late Victorian–Edwardian folk work, and surviving as a pleasing rural curiosity with a quietly macabre lean.
In very good, honest condition for its age, with expected handling gloss, small knocks and minor age-related inconsistencies to the surface finish. The carving remains clear and legible, and the varnish shows the soft burnish of long use without losses or restorations. Structurally sound and ready for display.
Such inscribed rustic sticks were popular from the late 19th century into the interwar years, often made by local craftsmen who embellished simple woodland-cut canes with references to nearby landmarks, folklore or former execution grounds. “Gibbeting fields” appear in village memory across Britain, frequently used as catch-all terms for places where criminals were once displayed in iron cages as a public warning. Whether tied to a specific site or to the broader folklore of rural justice, the inscription here belongs to that period fascination with the antiquarian, the macabre and the half-remembered customs of earlier centuries.
A characterful and evocative rustic walking stick, its carved inscription lending it an appealing narrative weight and touch of morbid curiosity so sought after today.