Vintage Nantucket Basket, by Mitchy Ray (1877 – 1956), circa 1920s

Vintage Nantucket Basket, by Mitchy Ray (1877 – 1956), circa 1920s

$1,500.00

Vintage Nantucket Basket, by Mitchy Ray (1877 – 1956), circa 1920s, a large open oval basket with heavy rattan staves, cane weave, solid oak bottom plate and carved swing handle attached to fairly long metal ears.

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SKU: FH - 59 EYY
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Vintage Nantucket Basket, by Mitchy Ray (1877 – 1956), circa 1920s, a large open oval basket with heavy rattan staves, cane weave, solid oak bottom plate and carved swing handle attached to fairly long metal ears. The basket is unsigned but clearly by Mitchy Ray.

This very old basket remains in quite good and strong condition. There are two minor breaks to the rim wrap, and no breaks at all that I could find to the weave. The craftsmanship is among Mitchy’s finest work: the staves are uniform, the weave even, and the handle more delicately carved and shaped than often seen. The basket has developed a deep, dark patina.

Measures: 6-1/8 in High x 13-1/4 in Long x 10-1/4 in Wide

Clinton Mitchell “Mitchy” Ray was an extremely important bridge in the preservation of the Nantucket basket tradition. He learned how to make Nantucket lightship baskets as a young boy with his grandfather Charles B. Ray, a highly regarded mariner and prolific basket weaver. Unlike his father Charles F. Ray and grandfather, Mitchy never went to sea. He is remembered as an Island character with a reputation of being wild in his younger years. He at one point saved a man from drowning at Surfside and earned a medal for his deed.

Mitchy worked various jobs and eventually became a full time basket maker, opening a small shop on Starbuck Court. He used the molds given to him by his father Charles F. Ray, and made utility or work baskets in various sizes, starting with the tiny “one egger” that he sold hundreds of (for around $1.50 each).

Mitchy’s early baskets were well constructed and adorned with a simple paper label; later he began adding the tag line “I was made in Nantucket, I’m strong and stout. Don’t lose me or burn me and I’ll never wear out. Made by Mitchy Ray.” As time went on and Mitchy aged, his very popular baskets were selling so fast that the quality declined.

Although Mitchy had never served aboard one of the lightships, he became the last craftsman making these baskets on Nantucket. When Jose Reyes arrived on-island after World War II, it was Mitchy who taught him how to make a Nantucket basket, saving the tradition and ensuring its continued evolution to this day.
(Biography adapted from The Nantucket Lightship Basket Museum).

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