Skip to main content
Conservation Status: After Treatment
Prototype Experimental Helmet Model 2
Conservation Status: After Treatment
Image © 2020 Worcester Art Museum, all rights reserved.

Prototype Experimental Helmet Model 2

Manufacturer (United States, 1905–1975)
Date1917
Mediumsteel
Dimensions27 × 27 × 37 cm (10 5/8 × 10 5/8 × 14 9/16 in.), 2 lb (weight)
ClassificationsArms and Armor
Credit LineThe John Woodman Higgins Armory Collection
Object number2014.2
DescriptionSkull of a single sheet of fairly light steel, hand forged. There is a light sagittal ridge, and a blunted point on the peak. A thin band of very light steel has been hammered around the perimeter edge to finish it.
Label TextArmor began coming back into common use after 1900. Since the west no longer had a tradition of armor design, military leaders looked to history to provide ideas. This experimental helmet was produced for the U.S. Department of War during World War I. The designer was Bashford Dean, curator of armor at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, who based his design on medieval models. In order to create and assess the prototype, Dean turned to Worcester industrialist John Woodman Higgins. The collaboration between these two men set Higgins on the path to building America's second largest collection of armor. ProvenanceWorcester Pressed Steel Collection transfer from Higgins Armory, January 2014
On View
Not on view
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Worcester Pressed Steel
1918
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Worcester Pressed Steel
1918
Conservation Status: After Treatment
Southern German
1480–1490
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Northern Italian
portions 1500s, assembled and decorated in 1800s
Close Helmet for the Field
Caremolo di Modrone
about 1535–1540
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Northern German
1555–1560
Armet Adapted for Mortuary Use
Southern German
1505–1510
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Netherlandish
about 1620–1640
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Spanish
about 1450