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#1 |
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Thanks again Mark for the comments. I found the attached image, No. 42, on the right, from the old book Armouries in the Tower of London. I though it bears some resemblance.
I gently cleaned the axe up a bit and, interestingly, the cutting edge and spike, appear to be forge welded in steel. The rest of the head what appears to be iron. Curious piece, in my opinion. |
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#2 |
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Also not sure whether this is a faded maker's mark. Hard to tell.
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#3 |
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Yes, definitely looks more like a weapon with that thinness of blade, lightness helps with speed.
Fire axes/hatchets tend to be chunkier designed to break through doors or open up the roof to let smoke out. So, not a fire axe after all. Normal, of course, to have a steel insert for the blade. Unusual that the spike maybe steel as well. Sorry, can't help with the maker's mark. |
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#4 |
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Thanks, David, for coming in on this one. Although uncommon, there are spike tomahawks that will occasionally be found with both a steel bit AND a steel spike, like this early one from my own collection. This one dates pre-1800, has very thin 'walls' around the eye and possibly an original haft-
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#5 |
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It makes sense that a piece of steel might be used for the spikes on some of these types. Just as the bit was inserted to make the cutting edge stronger, a steel spike would'nt blunt or bend as easily.
The axe under discussion is probably a spike axe, like the kind carried by frontiersmen, trappers and militia. I think the only difference between it and the one I possess is that the steel inserts were not 'blended' better and thus stick out a little more. It's also possible someone polished the heck out of this one, removing any natural patina that might have been there once!! |
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#6 |
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Thanks Mark. I think that analysis makes a lot of sense.
What is throwing me off are the langets. Could this piece be a re-purposed British/American Colonial blacksmith made boarding axe that fell into Native American trade? I know that we have seen examples of early boarding axes where the spike was removed and repurposed as a belt axe. I suspect the spike was much longer at one stage and in its current state, the head is already 6 inches. Anyway just a thought. |
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#7 | |
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I agree, langets do seem to confuse the issue and perhaps a modified boarding axe for private purchase may be a possibility. Integral side langets much harder and time consuming for a local blacksmith to make. |
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#8 | |
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Interesting and I was not very aware of that, good to learn something new. I will look at my own collection with a new eye to see if there are any steel spikes. |
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