Bowie knife

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Bowie knife specifically refers to a style of knife designed by Colonel James "Jim" Bowie, who lived in Texas, and originally created by James Black, though is commonly used to refer to any large sheath knife with a clip point. Bowie knives are commonly used as hunting knives.

An early Bowie of the type made for Resin Bowie and commissioned by the Bowies to Searles and Constable. This is a copy of the Fowler Bowie currently displayed at the Alamo.
An early Bowie of the type made for Resin Bowie and commissioned by the Bowies to Searles and Constable. This is a copy of the Fowler Bowie currently displayed at the Alamo.
A typical James Black/Musso pattern S-guard bowie knife, with its hallmark large blade and unique shape. This knife became popular because of its utility as a weapon and as a tool for camping, fishing and hunting.
A typical James Black/Musso pattern S-guard bowie knife, with its hallmark large blade and unique shape. This knife became popular because of its utility as a weapon and as a tool for camping, fishing and hunting.
A coffin handled Bowie Knife.
A coffin handled Bowie Knife.

Contents

[edit] Description

The historical Bowie was not a single design, but was a series of knives improved several times by Jim Bowie over the years. The earliest such knife, made by Jesse Clifft at Rezin Bowie's request closely resembled the Spanish hunting knives of the time and differed little from a common butcher knife. The blade as later described by Rezin Bowie, was nine and one half inches long, one quarter inch thick and one and one half inches wide. It was straight-backed having no clip point nor any hand guard with simple riveted wood scale handle. Rezin presented the knife to his brother because of a recent violent encounter with one Norris Wright. This is the knife that became famous after the sandbar duel of 1827. Bowie and Wright were attendants on opposite sides of the duel. When the principals quit the field, a fight broke out among the attendees and Bowie, though seriously injured by a rifle shot, killed Wright and drove his companions from the sandbar. Bowie and his knife, described by witnesses as "a large butcher knife," quickly attained celebrity and the Bowie brothers received many requests for knives of the same design. They commissioned more ornate custom blades from various knife makers including Daniel Searles and John Constable(Cumpston 2007.)

The version most commonly known as the historical Bowie knife would usually have a blade of at least six inches (15cm) in length, some reaching 12 inches (30cm) or more, with a relatively broad blade that was an inch and a half to two inches wide (4 to 5 cm) and made of steel usually between 3/16" and 1/4" thick (from 4.8 to 6.4 millimeters). The back of the blade sometimes had a strip of soft metal (normally brass or copper) inlaid which some believe was intended to catch an opponent's blade while others hold it was intended to provide support and absorb shock to help prevent breaking of poor quality steel or poorly heat treated blades common on imported Bowie knives. Bowie knives also often had an upper guard that bent forward at an angle (S-guard) intended to catch an opponent's blade or provide protection to the owner's hand during parries and corps-a-corps. Some Bowie knives had a notch on the bottom of the blade near the hilt known as a "Spanish Notch." The Spanish Notch is often cited as a mechanism for catching an opponent's blade, however, some Bowie researchers hold that the Spanish Notch is ill suited to this function and frequently fails to achieve the desired results. These researchers, instead, hold that the Spanish Notch has the much more mundane function as a tool for stripping sinew and repairing rope and nets, as a guide to assist in sharpening the blade (assuring that the sharpening process starts at a specific point and not further up the edge), or as a point to relieve stress on the blade during use. The version attributed to blacksmith James Black had the back edge of the curved clip point, also called the "false edge," sharpened in order to allow someone trained in European techniques of saber fencing to execute the maneuver called the "back cut" or "back slash." A brass quillon was attached to protect the hand, usually cast in a mold.

miniaturized bowie knife (hunting knife).
miniaturized bowie knife (hunting knife).

The English Sheffield knife making region was quick to enter the market with "Bowie Knives" of a distinctive pattern that most modern users identify with the true form Bowie. The Sheffield pattern blade is thinner than the Black/Musso knives while the false edge is often longer with a less pronounced clip.(ibid Cumpston 2007.) The shape and style of blade was such that the Bowie knife could serve usefully as a camp and hunting tool as well as a weapon. Many knives and daggers existed that could serve well as weapons, and many knives existed that could serve well as tools for hunters and trappers, but the Bowie knife was designed to do both jobs well, and is still popular with hunters and sportsmen even in the present day.

The curved portion of the edge, toward the point, is for removing the skin from a carcass, and the straight portion of the edge, toward the guard, is for chores involving cutting slices, similar in concept to the traditional Finnish hunting knife, the "puukko" (though the typical early 19th-century Bowie knife was far larger and heavier than the typical puukko). The blade is generally long enough and heavy enough that the knife can be used as a hatchet or machete, but not so heavy or long as to be cumbersome. Most such knives intended for hunting are only sharpened on one edge, to reduce the danger of cutting oneself while butchering and skinning the carcass.

A knife with sawteeth machined into the back side of the blade.
A knife with sawteeth machined into the back side of the blade.

Since the 1960s, Bowie knives with sawteeth machined into the back side of the blade appeared inspired by the Air Force survival knife NSN: 7340-00-098-4327. The sawteeth were intended to cut through the Plexiglas canopy of a downed aircraft. During the Vietnam war the US Army issued them to helicopter crews for the same purpose.

[edit] History

[edit] The Sandbar Fight

The first knife Bowie became famous with was allegedly designed by Jim Bowie's brother Rezin in Avoyelles Parish, Louisiana, and smithed by blacksmith Jesse Cleft out of an old file. Period court documents indicate that Rezin Bowie and Cleft were well acquainted with one another. Rezin's granddaughter claimed in an 1885 letter to Louisiana State University that she personally witnessed Cleft make the knife for her grandfather.

This knife became famous as the knife used by Bowie at the Sandbar Fight, which was the famous 1827 duel between Bowie and several men, including a Major Norris Wright of Alexandria, Louisiana. The fight took place on a sandbar in the Mississippi River across from Natchez, Mississippi. In this battle Bowie was stabbed, shot, and beaten half to death but managed to win the fight.

Jim Bowie's older brother John claimed that the knife at the Sandbar Fight was not Cleft's knife, but a knife specifically made for Bowie by a blacksmith named Snowden.

[edit] James Black's Bowie Knife

The most famous version of the Bowie knife was designed by Jim Bowie and presented to Arkansas blacksmith James Black in the form of a carved wooden model in December 1830. Black produced the knife ordered by Bowie, and at the same time created another based on Bowie's original design but with a sharpened edge on the curved top edge of the blade. Black offered Bowie his choice and Bowie chose the modified version (Johnson 2006. Knives like that one, with a blade shaped like that of the Bowie knife, but with a pronounced false edge, are today called "Sheffield Bowie" knives, because this blade shape became so popular that cutlery factories in Sheffield, England were mass-producing such knives for export to the U.S. by 1850, usually with a handle made from either hardwood, stag horn, or bone, and sometimes with a guard and other fittings of sterling silver (Ibid. Cumpston 2007).

Sheffield pattern blades are not quite as wide as the Black design but most variations carry a false-edged clip point.
Sheffield pattern blades are not quite as wide as the Black design but most variations carry a false-edged clip point.

Bowie returned, with the Black-made knife, to Texas and was involved in a knife fight with three men who had been hired to kill him. Bowie killed the three would-be assassins with his new knife and the fame of the knife grew. Legend holds that one man was almost decapitated, the second was disemboweled, and the third had his skull split open. Bowie died at the Battle of the Alamo five years later and both he and his knife became immensely famous. The fate of the original Bowie knife is unknown; however, a knife bearing the engraving "Bowie No. 1" has been acquired by the Historic Arkansas Museum from a Texas collector and has been attributed to Black through scientific analysis.

Black soon did a booming business making and selling these knives out of his shop in Washington, Arkansas. Black continued to refine his technique and improve the quality of the knife as he went. In 1839, shortly after his wife's death, Black was nearly blinded when, while he was in bed with illness, his father-in-law and former partner broke into his home and attacked him with a club, having objected to his daughter having married Black years earlier. Black was no longer able to continue in his trade.

Black's knives were known to be exceedingly tough, yet flexible, and his technique has not been duplicated. Black kept his technique secret and did all of his work behind a leather curtain. Many claim that Black rediscovered the secret to producing true Damascus steel(Ibid. Johnson).

In 1870, at the age of 70, Black attempted to pass on his secret to the son of the family that had cared for him in his old age, Daniel Webster Jones. But Black had been retired for many years and found that he himself had forgotten the secret. Jones would later become Governor of Arkansas.

The birthplace of the Bowie knife is now part of the Old Washington Historic State Park which has over 40 restored historical buildings and other facilities including Black's shop. The park is known as "The Colonial Williamsburg of Arkansas". The American Bladesmithing Society has also established a college at the site to teach new apprentices, journeyman, and masters in the art of bladesmithing.

[edit] Variations and collecting

Over the years many knives have been called Bowie knives and the term has almost become a generic term for any large sheath knife. During the early days of the American Civil War Confederate soldiers carried immense knives called D-Guard Bowie knives. Many of these knives could have qualified as short swords and were often made at home from old saw or scythe blades.

Variations have become popular with collectors, possibly due to the appearance of such a knife in the first Rambo film with Sylvester Stallone. Knives with the sawtooth feature are still being made and sold, often called "survival knives," and incorporating a hollow handle that can theoretically be used to carry assorted survival gear. Despite many variations, it is quipped that for a knife to be considered a Bowie knife, it must be long enough to use as a sword, sharp enough to use as a razor, wide enough to use as a paddle, and heavy enough to use as a hatchet (Johnson 2006). The Bowie knife is sometimes confused with the "Arkansas toothpick," possibly due to the interchangeable use of the names "Arkansas toothpick", "Bowie knife", and "Arkansas knife" in the antebellum period.[1] The Arkansas toothpick is essentially a heavy dagger with a straight 15-25-inch blade. While balanced and weighted for throwing, the toothpick can also be used for thrusting and slashing. James Black is also credited with inventing the "Arkansas Toothpick" but no firm evidence exists for this claim (Ibid. Johnson).

The KA-BAR Knife of World War II fame is essentially based on the Bowie design.

A Bowie knife also appears on the shoulder sleeve insignia of the U.S. 39th Infantry Brigade, headquartered in Little Rock, Arkansas.

[edit] Legal status

In the late 1830s, several southern states passed anti-bowie knife legislation attempting to curtail the manufacture and sale of the implements. In 1837, the Alabama legislature imposed a $100 transfer tax on bowie knives and stipulated that any killing with a bowie knife was murder regardless of the circumstances (Cramer 1999). In the state where Jim Bowie died, Texas, it is now a criminal offense (generally a Class A misdemeanor) to carry a Bowie knife, as a Bowie knife is classified in Texas as an "illegal knife".[2] This law does not apply if you are traveling in private vehicle because it is now legal to carry a handgun, illegal knife, or club in the vehicle or en route to or from the vehicle or engaged in a sporting activity involving the use of a large knife.

[edit] In fiction

  • Quincey Morris used one to kill Dracula in the book of the same name and in some of the movie versions.
  • In Back to the Future Part III Seamus McFly tells Marty that his brother Martin McFly was stabbed with a Bowie knife.
  • Crocodile Dundee always carries around a big knife. The most famous line from the first movie is spoken when Dundee is approached by a mugger carrying a switchblade. When Sue fearfully asks Mick to comply due to the fact the mugger is armed with a knife, Mick remarks, "That's not a knife" and continues "That's a knife", producing a very large bowie knife.
  • The artist David Bowie, (aka David Robert Jones), adapted his name from Jim Bowie and his Bowie knife in order to avoid possible confusion with Davy Jones of The Monkees.[3]
  • The villain from horror movie Wolf Creek uses a bowie knife to torture his victims.
  • In Happy Tree Friends, the character Flippy uses a bowie knife during his murders.
  • The film The Iron Maiden starring Alan Ladd, was a fictionalised account of Jim Bowie and his famous knife. An excerpt from the film has been used in recent times in humorous out-take TV compilations, such as It'll Be Alright On The Night for unintended humorous dialogue, In the scene where Bowie sadly confides to his ladyfriend his loss in knife-fighting self-confidence to the extent that he stopped wearing the knife with the words - while looking downward at his groin "It's all gone - all of it !" - to which she replies "But you still wear the sheath !".
  • Bowie knife is the weapon of choice of Gene, main antagonist in the PSP game Metal Gear Solid: Portable Ops.
  • In Harry Harrison's book Deathworld 3, the protagonist is using "an unusual knife that he had forged and tempered himself, after an ancient design called the 'bowie'."
  • The bodyguard Brock Samson from the television show The Venture Bros. carries a Bowie knife with a saw filed onto the rear side of the blade.
  • In the movie, Scream, the Bowie knife is the weapon of choice for the horror character, Ghostface.
  • In the Anime Neon Genesis Evangelion, the main character's mecha EVA 01 utilises a proportionally sized knife called a Progressive Knife which vibrates at very high frequency, it cuts on a molecular level and was stylised after a Bowie knife.
  • The Bowie knife is the mélee weapon of the popular video game, Counter-Strike.
  • In Jules Verne's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, Canadian harpooner Ned Land carries a Bowie knife.
  • In The Difference Engine, by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling, a "Texian" assassin guts his victim with a Bowie knife, which is described in detail.
  • In the possible future of Lilo and Stitch, Angel and Reuben possibly used two to take out their enemies.
  • In The Haunting of Alaizabel Cray, the serial killer, Stitch-Face, is seen carrying a Bowie knife.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Bowie Knife - Encyclopedia of Arkansas
  2. ^ Tex. Penal Code sec. 46.01(6) and sec. 46.02.
  3. ^ Buckley (2000): p.33

In the film The Iron Mistress

[edit] References

Cramer, Clayton E. Concealed Weapon Laws of the Early Republic,Dueling, Southern Violence, and Moral Reform USA, Praeger Publishers, 1999

Cumpston, Mike The American Exalibur: Jim Bowie's lethal legacy, San Diego, Guns Magazine April, 2007 [[1]]

Johnson, Russell T, The Bowie Knife and the Arkansas Toothpick, Arkansas, The Arkansas Travelog Home Page 2006[[2]]