The Wolf Scalp Bill- Bowie Knife Duel

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The Wolf Scalp Bill- Bowie Knife Duel

Postby Chanchu on Sat Jun 20, 2009 11:26 pm

The Wolf Scalp Bill Bowie Knife Duel-

http://www.mudthang.com/bowie_original.htm

"The Duel Without Seconds: From The State House Of Arkansas
The eyewitness account of a Bowie Knife duel."

Lurid prose from an 1850 journal- a account of a bloody melee in the State House of Arkansas..
Makes you damn glad political's don't carry Bowie's anymore :D
Last edited by Chanchu on Sat Jun 20, 2009 11:59 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Wolf Scalp Bill- Bowie Knife Duel

Postby klonk on Sat Jun 20, 2009 11:39 pm

That's sort of the way the legislative branch always functions. I wish my party would figure that out.
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Re: The Wolf Scalp Bill- Bowie Knife Duel

Postby Andy_S on Mon Jun 22, 2009 2:59 am

Tremendous.

How long were these bowies, that they could slash a chap's arm off?

And I have never heard of knives carried in sheathes "next to the heart." Does this mean they were in the belt, but the knives were so large, their hilts reached the chest?

Pity we don't see anything much from the pre-revolver days in Westerns. A battle like this is, surely, contains greater potential for cinematic drama than a gun fight?
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Re: The Wolf Scalp Bill- Bowie Knife Duel

Postby Chanchu on Mon Jun 22, 2009 5:34 pm

http://nitenhome.com/FortressSC.jpg

http://www.themartialist.com/images/sastre04.jpg

http://www.camererknives.com/images/bowie.jpg

Andy they could be very long and they can really cut, I don't know really know anything about them just done some reading lately. The blades were any where from 6 inchs to a foot long or more. Personel protection weapon of choice in the American south before repeating pistols.

Sheaths were leather with a frog stud on them when placed in the belt or sash the frog would stop it from sliding through belt or sash kept it in place by friction. sometimes worn with the hilt high up under a waist coat. Lots of people got chopped up, laws were enacted to Outlaw bowie knifes etc....
Schools of bowie knife fighting are said to have existed but that may not be true dunno...

" Bowie Knives
The Bowie Period in American History was a turbulent one. It was born on a sandbar on the Mississippi River near Natchez, Mississippi in 1827. A political duel became a free-for-all. James Bowie, who was an observer at the duel, was shot and stabbed through with a sword cane, but he managed to dispatch his major opponents with a Bowie knife, even though his wounds were so grave that his life hung by a thread for weeks afterwards. The infamous Sandbar Fight, as it was later called, took the imagination of the country by storm. Newspapers far and wide copied the stories from the Natchez papers and soon every man wanted a knife like Bowie’s - a Bowie knife. American cutlers (many of them surgical instrument makers) and Sheffield, England cutlers began to make Bowie knives to fill the market demand. The Bowie Period only lasted about forty years - from the Sandbar Fight to the end of the Civil War. When pistols became reliable and plentiful the size of the knife shrank. By the 1870s and 1880s, the Bowie knife was used as a hunting knife much more than as a primary defense arm.

The Bowie was made in a period of hand labor; the industrial revolution had not touched the cutlery trades. All the work on the old knives was by hand, with an artisan’s craft skills that were learned during a long apprenticeship to master forgers, grinders and cutlers.

The Historical Bowie Series from CAS Hanwei covers both Bowies made in different American States and Bowies made in Sheffield for the American market. Each piece in the series is crafted with a forged high-carbon steel blade, nickel silver fittings and natural grip materials, as were the originals. Each sheath is crafted in top-grain leather and a belt frog, where applicable, is included. Every effort has been made to replicate accurately the details of the original pieces, so as to provide heirloom-quality Bowies to the collector. "

http://www.collectibleswordsusa.com/His ... c-333.html

A movie with Bowie knife action would be as bloody as the chanbara movie "baby cart and demon" Maybe Tarantino has one in the works that would be cool. ;D
Last edited by Chanchu on Mon Jun 22, 2009 5:42 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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