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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 250
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This was represented as a trade axe used during colonial times in the US.
Length overall is 8.5". Thoughts? |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Room 101, Glos. UK
Posts: 4,204
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Looks more like a replica roman legionary dolabra pick axe.
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2012
Posts: 127
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This was represented as a trade axe used during colonial times in the US.
Length overall is 8.5". Thoughts? I think you will find that it's a slate roofing hammer. The blade for cropping them to length when needed and the point for making the clout holes. |
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#4 |
(deceased)
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Portugal
Posts: 9,694
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So let's see how it develops in the Miscellania Forum.
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2023
Posts: 50
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Represented by who?
Have you read through this? ~ https://www.furtradetomahawks.com/fa...pros---17.html If you click on the menu there's 31 pages of hawk/hatchet information. . Last edited by C4RL; 6th July 2024 at 06:50 AM. |
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#6 | |
Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 250
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https://www.antiquesandthearts.com/n...-guthman-dies/ Good guy. Wrote an interesting article on fakes that I am still trying to locate. Found the illustration below (thanks for the reference). Looks like they are pretty darn close. Mine weighs 6.5 oz. |
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#7 |
EAAF Staff
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Upstate New York, USA
Posts: 923
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I am, unfortunately, suspicious of the manner in which this axe head was made, as it appears to be a product of a more modern casting process rather than hand forging. Axes, like spears, can be so difficult because the same forms reoccur in many times and places.
I bought what was supposed to be a frontiersman's belt axe (for disassembling game, etc.) at a country auction at a genuinely old house in upstate New York. I sent images to Mr. Miller, whose fur trade tomahawk site is linked above, and he suggested it was instead a reworking of a small claw hammer. XRF was very consistent with that interpretation. The estate was that of a former re-enactor who dabbled in blacksmithing. |
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