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Das Auswanderer schiffe [jigsaw puzzle]

Image

Title
Das Auswanderer schiffe [jigsaw puzzle]
Subject
Education
German language
Voyages and travels
Australia--Emigration and immigration—History
Category
1. Settlement
Author
Prout, John Skinner
Keywords
childhood
Education
entertainment
Travel
Current holder
State Library of South Australia
Period of reference
1849 – 1850
Link
https://digital.collections.slsa.sa.gov.au/nodes/view/769
https://www.catalog.slsa.sa.gov.au/record=b2233184
Item number
CLRC Toys Box 169
Access rights
Digitised
Rights
Permission to use this item for any purpose, including publishing, is not required from the State Library under these conditions of use.
Country of origin
Germany
Language
German
French
English
Description from source
1 jigsaw puzzle (61 pieces) : paper on wood, colour ; 28 x 22 cm

Das Auswanderer schiffe [jigsaw puzzle] [realia] Vaisseau pour expedier les emigrans = A ship with emigrants

The wooden jigsaw puzzle from Germany around the mid-century depicts life aboard an emigrant ship of the period. Perhaps a little rosier in outlook than the reality it shows a schoolmaster with a group of students around him, conducting a lesson. They are watched perhaps, or it may be merely a convenient vantage point, by an older man seated on the upturned boat. At the stern of the ship another group of emigrants gathers around the galley waiting to collect their daily ration.

The picture appears to be based on one by J Skinner Prout published in the Illustrated London News 20 January 1849, page 40. Prout emigrated to Australia in 1840 and eventually established himself in Sydney as an artist, producing a number of illustrated guides: Sydney illustrated (1842-3), Melbourne and Tasmania. He and his family returned to England in 1850 and he published A voyage to Australia, and a visit to the gold fields in 1852.

Dissected puzzles were invented in the mid-18th century generally using maps and were used to encourage geographical learning. 100 years later more general prints were being used in puzzles for children. A scene such as this may have been intended to show that the long sea voyage to Australia could still be enjoyable and that the children's schooling would not be neglected.