Grizzly Bar said:What hawk style would have been most prevalently carried by a 1760-70s colonial fronteirsman?
For someone who has a shingling hatchet that was reshaped to a PC/HC shape and has a hammer-poll, I'm calling BS on this statement. I've driven hundreds of stakes in camp and on the trail with mine and splitting has not occurred. Maybe it's an operator issue...crockett said:A lot of those look like roof/shingle hatchets with a hammer head. That hammer head would have no use on the trail, if you try to drive in a wood stake- the stake splits.
Please provide the evidence to support your statement.crockett said:Most were sort of square heads- but that's really a hatchet.
Maybe you could put that in proper context?Elnathan said:There are a number of surviving pipe hawks that can be traced to whites.
There are a number of surviving pipe hawks that are in possession of whites
necchi said:Maybe you could put that in proper context?Elnathan said:There are a number of surviving pipe hawks that can be traced to whites.
Like;
There are a number of surviving pipe hawks that are in possession of whites
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