I appreciate the posts submitted by
@Eterry and
@dave_person , likely because I agree with them.
I interpreted the original question as concerning guns versus bows and arrows. Except for direct hits to the spine, arrows kill by inducing hemorrhaging, which may take a little time. Bowhunters expect a fatally shot deer to move off, and if left undisturbed, he will bleed out and collapse. Bullets, on the other hand, hit with more force and induce hydraulic shock. Even a non-fatal hit with a big old lead “punkin ball” might put someone out of the fight, whereas someone hit with an arrow could have some fight left in him.
There was also the “shock & awe” created by the noise and concussion of firearms. Before guns, Indian battles would have involved a good deal of yelling, but the twang of bowstrings, the muffled thuds of people being hit with arrows and clubs, and the crackling of homes afire would have been relatively quiet, compared to a fight with muskets.
Costs were also a factor. While actual costs varied, acquisition of firearms would have involved trading skins, hides, robes, or furs collected by the men but processed by the womenfolk. One buckskin might get you four to six charges of powder with an equivalent number of balls. Bows, on the other hand, were made by the men. If you have ever made one, especially with primitive tools, you know it takes a great expenditure of labor. When I was about fifteen, I made a hickory bow with a jack knife, a hatchet, and a coffee can full of broken glass shards that I used as scrapers. No bandsaw, sanders, vise… it took forever to finish. Imagine making a sinew-backed bow, which was worth a trained buffalo pony, or a sheephorn bow… jeez..
Arrows were another matter. They could be re-used, but they were expensive to “buy” and labor intensive to make. A few here have made arrows from natural materials. I have, way back in the dim past. Finding shaft material may involve time and travel, and it should be cut at the right time of year. Then you have feathers and heads… first you have to get the materials, then process them, them assemble everything into arrows. There was no Bowhunter’s Warehouse with spined Port Orford shafts, die-cut feathers, Duco Cement, or Black Diamond broadheads, all ready for the arrowmaker to assemble. Running a few balls over the campfire was easy by comparison.
It may only be peripheral to this discussion, but if you have not studied the Fetterman Fight of December, 1866, it would be worth looking up. It was a total disaster for the US Army. A lot of people don’t realize that about two-thirds of Fetterman’s men were infantry… foot soldiers, not mounted… and they were armed with muzzle-loading Springfield rifle muskets. Captain Marcy ((who was not involved, but wrote about frontier Army life in general terms) said a lot of recruits did not know they were supposed to put the powder in before the ball. Live-fire practice was considered extravagant and wasteful. The result was very poorly trained men armed with near-obsolete weaponry that they probably didn’t know how to use properly. There were a few cavalrymen present, I think twenty or so, armed with Spencers and Colt (percussion) revolvers, and there were also a few civilian “scouts” there, carrying Henry repeaters. However, Andrew Garcia, in
Tough Trip Through Paradise, said Spencers and Henrys were considered popguns by the Indians, who preferred rifles with more knock-down power. Garcia did a brisk trade in surplus fifty-caliber Springfields and cartridges with his Blackfoot and Pend d’Oreille customers. Anyway, the Indians in the Fetterman fight had a variety of weapons and they knew how to use them. Needless to say, the Indians won the day.
The tables were turned eight months later, in the Wagon Box Fight of August, 1867. Fetterman’s defeat got the attention of the Army brass, and the frontier soldiers were subsequently issued the relatively new trapdoor Springfields. I don’t know if the rifles used in that fight were chambered for the original .58 caliber rimfire cartridges or the new .50-70 rounds. In any event, the increased rate of fire and ease of loading those trapdoor rifles saved the day for the men huddled behind tipped-over wagons. The casualty rate among the Indians, who were used to fighting men with muzzle-loaders, was terrible.
Notchy Bob