Beardmore Relics

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By Elijah Wakefield

Beardmore Relics

What are the Beardmore Relics

There has been controversy over the existence of the Beardmore Relics, a collection of Viking Age artifacts found near Beardmore, Ontario, Canada, in the 1930s. The collection consists of a Viking Age sword, an axe head, and an item of unknown purpose (perhaps part of a shield). Although the authenticity of the fragments is not generally disputed, the "discovery" is commonly regarded as a hoax.[1] The Royal Ontario Museum purchased the relics from the man credited with finding them in the 1930s. For about twenty years, the relics were conspicuously displayed by the museum; however, in 1956–1957, the museum was forced to take them down following a public inquiry. Around this time, the son of the supposed discoverer confessed that his father had planted the relics. [1]

Discovery

James Edward Dodd

In the early 1930s James Edward Dodd, a prospector and conductor from Port Arthur, Ontario alleged to have discovered Viking weapons which later became known as the Beardmore Relics and is the man who is credited with the discovery of the Beardmore Relics. His adventure began when he came across rusty iron relics on a mining claim near Beardmore, northeast of Nipigon, which he brought home and sold to the Royal Ontario Museum a few years later for $500 which would be about $7,000 today. [2] There was much speculation, accounts, and stories regarding the validity of these relics, however, one of the most incriminating testimonies was one in which Dodd's adopted son came forward and and stated that Dodd actually found the relics in the basement of their home in Port Arthur, Ontario and later transported them to Beardmore and laid them in a spot that he had been digging previously. Several months later, he came forward with the same relics which he hid and claimed that he had uncovered them. Eventually, a man came forward with allegations that would further corroborate the nature of the relics as being a hoax. A man by the name of J.M Hanson claimed Dodd was given the relics as security on a loan of $25 by a Norwegian named John Bloch. The relics were then left in the basement of a Port Arthur house that James Dodd later rented. However, it is said that J.M Hanson wasn't completely sure if the relics he saw were the same as the ones displayed in the Royal Ontario Museum. [2]

Context

Pseudoarchaeological Significance

In 1936, Toronto's Royal Ontario Museum purchased Norse artifacts from prospector Eddy Dodd, who said he'd found them during a mining expedition in Beardmore, Ontario. As proof that the Vikings had been in the northern part of the province, the museum displayed the relics. [3] The relics led to a sense of nationalistic pride for northern Ontario because at the time the relics offered alluring evidence that at least one Viking, possibly more, travelled into the heart of the continent 400 years before Columbus. [4] For almost 20 years the relics were prominently displayed in a glass encasement in such a fashion that if you visited, it'd be difficult for your to miss them. In 1956, great controversy arose about the relics and they were removed from display for decades. Although the majority of people agreed that the artifacts were authentic, the crux of the people's concerns was whether the relics had actually been discovered or if they had been planted in Northern Ontario. Most people believed that the relics were planted and consequentially, the Royal Ontario Museum fell under scrutiny and suspicions of whether or not one of their "greatest discoveries" was a deliberate hoax. Dr. Charles Trick Currelly was the first director of the Royal Ontario Museum who once admitted "Any success I have had as an archaeologist has been due to the most amazing blind luck". This quote attributed to Currelly could be interpreted as him having a care-free attitude and allowing artifacts to be exhibited without sufficient examination.

Did the Vikings venture through the Great Lakes?

References