Ethnographic Arms & Armour

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-   -   Boarding Axe? (http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=30445)

mgolab 22nd January 2025 06:31 PM

Boarding Axe?
 
2 Attachment(s)
Just picked this one up and waiting for it to come in. Seems hand forged. I wonder if it is a boarding axe.

weight is 2 pounds

It is 10 inches by 4.5 inches

M ELEY 25th January 2025 09:05 AM

Wow, Mark! You might just have something there. The early-type boarding axes did look just like yours. You will note similar examples in Neumann and in Gilkerson (the axe drawn from an artwork dating to the mid-18th. The problem, as always, with boarding axes is with the provenance. If unmarked (which most if not all of the early types were), it becomes a guessing game of whether it is a boarding ax, trade ax, tomahawk, etc. What we can say for certain is that it is early, 1700's, appears hand-forged and of the type used for early boarding types. It has been surmised that the early trade axes coming to the Americas from Europe were all trade axes, but sailors found them an excellent shipboard tool, leading to the boarding ax pattern. Please post more pics when it arrives!

mgolab 28th January 2025 11:23 PM

2 Attachment(s)
hand forged for sure. a few markings as circled. Not sure is the "x" is an out of service mark? Perhaps also a number on the collar.

too large for a spike tomahawk. I am curious whether this is an early boarding axe.

CutlassCollector 29th January 2025 02:16 PM

Nice old axe.
There is not much to add to Mark's comments. It is very hard to tell if it is not a known government issue.
The size and weight fit well to a boarding axe.

Boarding axes and fire axes are closely related. Both the British and French fire hatchets - when firefighters all had their personal small axes - are direct descendants of their naval counterparts, but are generally smaller and machine made. They are sometimes mistakenly sold as boarding axes.

Unfortunately the markings are not clear enough to give us a better hint.

mgolab 29th January 2025 03:39 PM

Thank you for the feedback, CC

Yes, the axe is hand forged and not machine made.

I am curious about the marking by the eye, "I H" or "H"?

mgolab 30th January 2025 07:42 PM

1 Attachment(s)
not sure if I found something relevant in terms of a marking or just pitting? Interesting that it is close to the faded marking


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