This iron jew’s harp was found by archaeologists at Hyde Park Barracks, in the underground deposits of the northern long room of the ground floor, originally a sleeping ward for convicts. Found alongside other convict-era objects, a small scrap of blue-striped convict shirt fabric was attached to the corrosion, hinting at its original owner. The jew’s harp is one of the oldest of musical instruments, and is played by holding it between the teeth, and plucking the flexible ‘tongue’ to produce a note. Players did not need to be trained musicians, but several convicts whose trade was listed as ‘musician’ are known to have spent time at Hyde Park Barracks, including John Stapleton (arrived 1830 on Forth), Jeremiah Bann (arrived 1830 on Royal Admiral) and fiddlers William Constantine (arrived in 1820 on Asia) and John Concart (arrived 1826 on Mangles).
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