Posts: 5,981 Location: Birmingham, Alabama
Fri 23 Apr, 2010 8:00 am
Early American Crossbows
I raised this subject in a another thread and didn't want to hijack, so I'll post these here for general research/educational purposes. These are "mountain crossbows"--used in South Appalachia possibly as far back as the 18th c. Details vary, but they tend to have a traditional rifle-like stock and a broad wooden prod. The photos are from the book "Guns and Gunmaking Tools of Southern Appalachia (a must-have if you want to see everything from finished flintlocks to homemade rifling machines, swage blocks to powder horns).
http://www.myArmoury.com/books/search.php?Key...ndex=Books
The first below shows a man in his 80s using the all-wood bow he made for a regional museum. This informant clearly remembered his grandfather using a similar bow, and reported that the crossbow was essential for survival in some mountain communities where supplies of shot and powder were scarce. He reported that poplar was commonly used for the tiller, "black haw" for the prod (or red cedar "if you get the right mixture of red and white" and hickory for the "arrie".
The second image shows the oldest bow in the author's collection, possibly dating to the 18th c., found in the 1930s in "the old Dutch (German) settlement" of Greene Co., Tennessee.
The last image is a more recent bow with applied metal ornaments.
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