naterflint
32 Cal
if there was ever binoculars or spy glass type stuff, people would have used while hunting when Flint locks were all they had. And if so, does anyone know of any good reproductions?
Pure conjecture/supposition, unless you have a period reference you haven't shared.if there was ever binoculars or spy glass type stuff, people would have used while hunting
Okay, so that is an "officer" during the F&I at one specific place in a specific instance,,,, and a long way by time and mileage from the "mountain man" era. How does this really extrapolate put to a rocky mountain fur trapper or, "mountain man" carrying and using one?AI Overview
Learn more
The first recorded use of a telescope in a war in the American colonies was during the French and Indian War in 1758. Captain Robert Rogers sent men to use "Prospective Glasses" to look down a lake.
I don't see why they wouldn't have used them.
Robin
What kind of telescope?AI Overview
Learn more
The first recorded use of a telescope in a war in the American colonies was during the French and Indian War in 1758. Captain Robert Rogers sent men to use "Prospective Glasses" to look down a lake.
I don't see why they wouldn't have used them.
Robin
HubbellWhat kind of telescope?
Pure conjecture/supposition, unless you have a period reference you haven't shared.
Given the technology of the time, and packaging/baggage options of the time, would one really bother with something so fragile? A rugged spyglass would have been heavy, and a lightweight spyglass would have been fragile,,,,, and the Rocky Mountains were no place for fragile anything.
No, it does not really clear up the question/proposal in the OP...I guess that this pretty much clears things up -
https://vegavision.co.uk/blogs/rela...WLr1jHriZ4tZPtrxD47l_AxB_bz6t279eVZisBqGkDm1G
The question doesn't seem to be, did "they" have them, did binoculars/spyglasses exist, in the 18th and early 19th century.I could see them having them, ship Captains had them for years
Sorry for premature post.Read Osborne Russell's "Joudescribed Jim Bridger as using a spyglass to "look out for squalls."<
Enter your email address to join: