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COLUMN: How a mummy made it to Iredell
Museums’ prized possession the focus of Thursday program
Posted: Saturday, September 19, 2015 3:09 pm
The Iredell County
Public Library will host a special program titled “The Mummy Treasure of
Al Faiyum” at 7 p.m. Thursday. The event will spotlight Iredell
County’s own 3,000-year-old Egyptian mummy in the collection of the
Iredell Museums.
Museums
Executive Director Melinda Herzog will present the program. The mummy
will not be present as it is being prepared for an upcoming public
viewing at the museum, but Herzog will give a history on the mummy and
give an update on the museum’s plans to put the mummy back on display.
No one knows the
name of the 22nd dynasty Egyptian lady, but local lore has it that the
school children of Iredell County named her Margaret years ago, so
“Margaret the Mummy” is the name she goes by today. The first question
that pops into your mind when you first hear about Margaret is, “How on
earth did an Egyptian mummy end up in a local museum in Statesville?"
Well, it basically goes like this.
About 125 years
ago, Egypt was visited by an American Baptist missionary traveling to
Luxor. While there, he made a desert excursion and found a tomb with a
mummy. Naturally, he takes the mummy out of the tomb, packs it up and
brings it back to the United States. He then donates the wrapped corpse
to the museum at his alma mater, the Crozer Theological Seminary in
Upland, Pa. Today we and certainly the Egyptian people would consider
this grave robbing, but in the 1880s Europeans and Americans were
regularly going on tours to Egypt and thought of taking mummies or
artifacts from Egyptian tombs as nothing more than souvenir collecting.
The practice of
robbing tombs for mummies was nothing new. In the 1500s doctors and
pharmacists would grind up the limbs from a looted mummy into powder to
dispense as medicine. How the Egyptians came up with the idea of
mummifying their dead came naturally. In antiquity Egyptians would
sometimes bury their dead in shallow graves in the desert. Later, the
Egyptians found that the dry sand and air had “preserved” the bodies.
They went on to develop body mummification into a science that normally
took 70 days. They practiced mummification for over 3,000 years and even
mummified cats, birds, bulls, and other animals.
In the 1950s,
the Crozer decided to close its museum and began seeking new homes for
its collection. Richard Casanova was an author and paleontologist living
in Statesville in 1957. He was also on the board of trustees at Iredell
Museums and heard about the Crozer museum closing. It was Casanova who
negotiated the donation of the mummy to Iredell Museums. On July 13,
1957, the R&L carried a front-page photograph of technicians Shirley
Alexander and Nancy Boger at Iredell Memorial Hospital X-raying the
Museum’s new mummy which they referred to as “Mummy George.”
When Iredell
Hospital radiologist Dr. Irvin E. Shafer checked the X-rays, he found
that the mummy was actually a woman which he estimated to be between 35
and 45 years old. You might wonder why Casanova thought it was a good
idea to bring a mummy to Iredell Museums. You have to remember that when
the Arts and Science Museum started in 1956, it literally had no
collection and no building. The R&L reported on April 4, 1956, that
an Arts and Science Museum had been formed on April 3 and that plans
were made to seek a charter. After considering the Vance House and the
Recreation Center as locations to put a museum, the board reached a
10-year lease agreement with the city of Statesville to use the Old Pump
Station site outside of Statesville.
We now had the
Arts and Science Museum organization with directors and bylaws and a
museum building, but nothing inside for people to see. This happened in
Caldwell County when they created the Caldwell Heritage Museum in
Lenoir. They had an organization and a building, but nothing inside.
Realizing that visitors wanted something to see the museum supporters
brought things from home to put in the museum. There was a matchbook
collection, a model car collection, a camera collection, and even a
collection of Oriental art and clothing brought back from China by a
veteran. It was the same with the Arts and Science Museum. Ms. Margaret
might not have had an Iredell County connection, but without her to
bring visitors in we might not have a museum today.
Joel Reese is the local history librarian at the Iredell County Public Library in Statesville.
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