Caribbean Tales - Personal Weapons - Axes
Boarding Axes
Boarding
Axe, circa 1600's
Boarding Axe,
circa 1700's
A boarding axe was pretty much your standard long handle axe. It was used primarily in cutting lines and knocking down cabin doors. For example when being boarded, grappling hooks with lines would be tossed from ship to ship in order to pull the ships together. An axe was the most effective way to cut these lines and repel boarders. A cutlass could also be used but the blow from the axe would be more effective in many cases. Once a ship was boarded, the axe was sometimes used as a weapon but an axe was not nearly as effective as a cutlass. The axe could be used to cut the mast or yards on a ship plus it was effective for breaking open hatches and cabin doors. Boarding axes were sized somewhere between a hatchet or tomahawk and a the double bladed axe, typically they had a handle around two to three feet (60 -90 cm) long and a two pound (1 Kilo) iron and later steel head, sharpened on one side and flattened for smashing on the other. Contrary to the movies, they were not designed to be thrown.
Tomahawks
The first of Native American origin, the second a typical Trade Tomahawk
made in Europe and traded with the Iriquois Nation.
The trade tomahawks found favor among Colonial Americans as well as Native
Americans
and is similar to the military issued tomahawks.
Some people confuse the larger boarding axe with a tomahawk or throwing
hatchet. The term "tomahawk" is a derivation of the Algonquian
words "tamahak" or "tamahakan". The earliest definitions
of these words (early 1600's) applied to stone-headed implements used as
tools and weapons. Later it was applied to any striking weapons; wood clubs,
stone-headed axes, metal trade hatchets, etc. As the years passed a tomahawk
was thought of as any Indian-owned hatchet-type instrument. Later, Colonial
Americans (traders, trappers, explorers) came to rely on the tomahawk as
standard equipment. By the time of the American Revolution, Tomahawks had
come into standard use among members of the Colonial Army and Militia as
well as the Colonial Navy. Tomahawks are smaller in size and weight and
could be thrown or used as a parrying weapon instead of a dagger. While
not as good at cutting rigging or breaking down doors, they were easier
to wield in close quarter combat.