21st Apr, 2026 10:00

Maritime and Scientific Models, Instruments & Art (FOUDROYANT)

 
  Lot 43
 

43

[M] A FLINTLOCK SHIP'S PISTOL FROM THE 1854-56 WEST AFRICA NIGER EXPEDITION STEAM YACHT 'PLEIAD'

A FLINTLOCK SHIP'S PISTOL FROM THE 1854-56 WEST AFRICA NIGER EXPEDITION STEAM YACHT PLEIAD

the lock signed E & W. BOND / LONDON, brass trigger guard inscribed PLEIAD, brass-mounted walnut stock with steel ramrod captured on muzzle stirrup -- 15¼in. (38.5cm.) overall

William Baikie M.D. (1825-1864) was born in Orkney and studied medicine at Edinburgh University. He joined the Royal Navy in 1848 and soon attracted the notice of Sir Roderick Murchison who secured Baikie the post of surgeon and naturalist to the Niger Expedition in 1854. One of Baikie’s most important observations was on the use of quinine to prevent malaria as no one on the expedition contracted the disease. During the expedition, the senior officer, Consul John Beecroft, died and Baikie took command. Ascending the Benue about 250 miles beyond the point reached by former explorers, he returned and reached the mouth of the Niger, after a voyage of 118 days, without the loss of a single man. The expedition was partly funded by Laird of Birkenhead -- the 266-ton screw yacht Pleiad was designed by William Laird Jr and built by John Laird of Birkenhead to meet whatever unknown challenges cropped up, and was well armed with a single 12pdr gun, four swivel guns, a number of Minie guns together with pistols, shotguns and trade muskets. Baikie also used it for his second expedition of 1857 but it was wrecked in rapids. Baikie determined to carry out the purposes of the Expedition. He first considered establishing a British Consular Agency at Kabba but faced opposition from the local king -- possibly because Baikie was against the slave trade, which still provided a generous income for some tribal leaders. Instead, he chose Lokoja as the base of his future operations, it being the site of the model farm established by the Niger Expedition of 1841, and abandoned on the death of most of the white settlers. After Baikie's death, the British government abolished the consulate (1866), but the trading post remained influential. The district where Baikie had worked so successfully was finally secured for the UK through private enterprise some 20 years later and Lokoja became the capital of the Northern Nigeria Protectorate. Baikie wrote up the 1854 Expedition in his Narrative of an Exploring Voyage up the ... Niger and Isadda published in 1856.

Sold for £2,976
Estimated at £700 - £900

(inc. buyer's premium of 24%)


 

A FLINTLOCK SHIP'S PISTOL FROM THE 1854-56 WEST AFRICA NIGER EXPEDITION STEAM YACHT PLEIAD

the lock signed E & W. BOND / LONDON, brass trigger guard inscribed PLEIAD, brass-mounted walnut stock with steel ramrod captured on muzzle stirrup -- 15¼in. (38.5cm.) overall

William Baikie M.D. (1825-1864) was born in Orkney and studied medicine at Edinburgh University. He joined the Royal Navy in 1848 and soon attracted the notice of Sir Roderick Murchison who secured Baikie the post of surgeon and naturalist to the Niger Expedition in 1854. One of Baikie’s most important observations was on the use of quinine to prevent malaria as no one on the expedition contracted the disease. During the expedition, the senior officer, Consul John Beecroft, died and Baikie took command. Ascending the Benue about 250 miles beyond the point reached by former explorers, he returned and reached the mouth of the Niger, after a voyage of 118 days, without the loss of a single man. The expedition was partly funded by Laird of Birkenhead -- the 266-ton screw yacht Pleiad was designed by William Laird Jr and built by John Laird of Birkenhead to meet whatever unknown challenges cropped up, and was well armed with a single 12pdr gun, four swivel guns, a number of Minie guns together with pistols, shotguns and trade muskets. Baikie also used it for his second expedition of 1857 but it was wrecked in rapids. Baikie determined to carry out the purposes of the Expedition. He first considered establishing a British Consular Agency at Kabba but faced opposition from the local king -- possibly because Baikie was against the slave trade, which still provided a generous income for some tribal leaders. Instead, he chose Lokoja as the base of his future operations, it being the site of the model farm established by the Niger Expedition of 1841, and abandoned on the death of most of the white settlers. After Baikie's death, the British government abolished the consulate (1866), but the trading post remained influential. The district where Baikie had worked so successfully was finally secured for the UK through private enterprise some 20 years later and Lokoja became the capital of the Northern Nigeria Protectorate. Baikie wrote up the 1854 Expedition in his Narrative of an Exploring Voyage up the ... Niger and Isadda published in 1856.

Auction: Maritime and Scientific Models, Instruments & Art (FOUDROYANT), 21st Apr, 2026

 

Page turning catalogue here

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Saleroom notice here

 Order of Sale:

Mercantile Sail 1-33

Mercantile Steam 34-97

Naval Sail 100-150

Naval Steam 155-229

Navigation & Instruments 230-253

 

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