View Single Post
Old Yesterday, 06:30 PM   #8
CutlassCollector
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Scotland
Posts: 378
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard G View Post
Is it possible the boarding axe and fire axe the the same thing? The difference being if bought by a navy it is a boarding axe, if bought by a fire brigade it is a fire axe, and possibly if bought by an army it becomes a sapper's axe etc.
Best wishes
Richard
Yes, of course, they are closely related. From the early days of sail, ships needed axes in combat (or storm damage) primarily for cutting rope, clearing debris, dragging fallen rigging over the side and were often used as weapons.

Fire brigades started to appear, in the UK anyway, around the start of the 19th century not long before the rise of steam ships. Fire axes are used for breaking doors down, smashing windows, clearing debris and opening up holes in the roof to let smoke out.

The blade of a boarding axe is thin and primarily designed to cut rope. Fire axes evolved to have heavier blades more for smashing rather than cutting. Sapper axes are generally much heavier and larger and often have a hammer poll rather than a spike. These were used for making or destroying fortifications on a battle field.

So, yes in some ways they are interchangeable. It is amazing just how many variations and types of axe there are!
CutlassCollector is offline   Reply With Quote