E.J. Morris - Camel
Catalog #011 160×120×23cm
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A carved wooden dromedary camel in a walking stance, attributed to the E. Joy Morris Carousel Company of Philadelphia, c. 1896–1903 (reported). The figure presents an elaborately layered saddle blanket — deep green scalloped cantle, mauve mid-layer, and cream primary field with silver-painted trim, a central trefoil motif, and gold fringe — topped by a small carved eagle head at the cantle peak. The body is painted in warm golden-amber tones with carved teardrop markings representing short-coat texture across the flanks, and the neck carries a deeply carved flowing mane. The owner describes this as a Morris figure (reported).
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The camel was purchased from what the owner identifies as the "Orski" collection (phonetic; spelling unverified) in approximately 2020 or 2021 (reported). Mark and Lauren assisted with the acquisition (reported). The owner reports that the figure had originally been acquired by the Orski collector from Rusty Donohue, a documented carousel art dealer based in Oxford, Maryland (reported). At the time of purchase from the Orski collection, the camel had reportedly never been removed from its original shipping crate since the collector first acquired it from Donohue (reported).
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The chain of custody as reported by the owner runs: Rusty Donohue (dealer, Oxford, MD) → Orski collection → current owner, c. 2020–2021. Donohue is independently confirmed as a prominent carousel figures dealer specializing in Americana, with a documented track record of buying and selling at major auction houses (sourced: Maine Antique Digest advertisements, 2017–2023; Antiques and The Arts Weekly, 2018). The Orski collection name did not surface in any specialist carousel publication, auction record, or collector archive during research; the spelling is a phonetic approximation from a voice transcript and may not be correct. Machine of origin is undocumented.
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Edward Joy Morris (1860–1929) established his carousel company in Philadelphia in 1895, manufacturing complete machines including platforms, mechanisms, and figures. His carving shop was led by Charles Leopold, a master carver previously employed as foreman at a major competing Philadelphia workshop, who was hired away around 1897 (sourced: Americana Insights, 2023; VintageCarousels.com). Under Leopold's direction, the Morris shop began producing what period sources describe as the most ornate figures of any American manufacturer (sourced: Americana Insights, 2023). Another carver who worked briefly for Morris before moving on to a major rival workshop was responsible for later innovations in menagerie figure design elsewhere (inferred from sourced Cernigliaro biography).
Morris sold his inventory of approximately 200 completed figures and his manufacturing business in 1903 for roughly $30,000 to the partnership that became the Philadelphia Toboggan Company (sourced: CarouselHistory.com; VintageCarousels.com). Many Morris figures were subsequently placed on early PTC machines and misidentified as PTC-carved until 1989, when research corrected the attribution (sourced: VintageCarousels.com; Potter & Potter Auctions lot description). This dual-attribution history — Morris/PTC — is now standard in the specialist literature.
Morris built somewhere between two dozen and "well over 20" carousels during his brief career, depending on the source (sourced: CarouselWorkshop.com; The Abandoned Carousel). Several were large menagerie machines. The last complete Morris carousel, a three-row menagerie with 48 figures installed at a Connecticut amusement park c. 1902, included three camels among its complement of exotic animals. That machine was auctioned in October 1989, with the full complement fetching over $638,000; individual exotic figures commanded between $6,000 and $60,000 (sourced: CarouselHistory.com, Quassy Lake history). Whether the present figure descends from that machine or another Morris installation is not established.
Menagerie figures from Morris carousels surface infrequently on the private market. A comparable Morris/PTC camel — described as a large outside-row figure, professionally restored in 1990 — is currently listed by a specialist dealer at $6,950, reduced from $8,000 (sourced: AntiqueCarousels.com). Morris saddle decoration is noted in the specialist literature as characteristically "playful" (sourced: CarouselWorkshop.com); the layered saddle blanket, trefoil motif, and carved eagle-head cantle ornament on this figure are consistent with that documented house style.
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The surface is uniformly glossy and even across both sides, consistent with a professional restoration or full repaint rather than surviving original park paint. No visible structural damage, cracking, or filler is apparent in the photographs. The carved teardrop fur texture, mane strands, and eagle-head cantle ornament are crisp and well-defined — no loss of carved detail is visible. Glass or painted inset eyes are intact. A formal condition assessment has not been completed; the figure's reported history of remaining crated and unhandled from the time of the Orski acquisition through the owner's purchase would be consistent with the clean, undamaged condition observed. Condition rating: Good to Excellent (inferred from photographs; pending formal assessment).
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Medium Attribution to E. Joy Morris is owner-reported and consistent with documented Morris characteristics (walking menagerie pose, ornate layered saddle, eagle secondary carving, Philadelphia-school proportions). The dealer provenance through Rusty Donohue is credible and independently documented. However, no specific machine of origin has been established, no maker's marks or documentary provenance chain prior to Donohue have been identified, and the Orski collection has not been independently verified. The dual Morris/PTC attribution history adds complexity — the figure could have been carved during Morris's active period (pre-1903) or placed on an early PTC machine from Morris inventory.
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Owner interview transcript (voice recording, transcribed; date of recording not specified)
Photographs: DSC_2328, DSC_2331, DSC_2332, DSC_2333, DSC_2336, DSC_2337 (dated 8/20/2025 per whiteboard)
VintageCarousels.com — Carvers and Manufacturers reference page
CarouselHistory.com — Quassy Lake Carousel History article
Americana Insights (2023) — "Daniel Carl Müller: The Artist as Carousel Carver" essay
AntiqueCarousels.com — E. Joy Morris/PTC camel listing and manufacturer page
CarouselWorkshop.com — E.J. Morris Prancer listing and manufacturer description
The Abandoned Carousel — PTC #15 article with Morris background
Potter & Potter Auctions / Lot-Art — E. Joy Morris horse lot description
Sotheby's — E. Joy Morris carved zebra catalog entry (Lot #314, 2014)
Maine Antique Digest — Rusty Donohue Americana Antiques advertisements (2017, 2021, 2023)
Antiques and The Arts Weekly — Eldred's Americana sale report (2018), confirming Donohue as active carousel buyer