Most of us think of the "mountain man era" as that period between the Lewis & Clark Expedition and the last rendezvous in 1840. However, I've been reading a lot of material that was written in the 1850's lately. Some of it was published later, as the writers' memoirs, but it was about that "plainsman" era. It seems that every account I read, from that period, mentions a Bowie knife as part of the plainsman's kit. I don't think this was necessarily a generic term, as you see butcher knives mentioned too, as well as scalping knives. However, I have not yet found a specific description of one of those Bowie knives.
In my first post on this thread, I submitted a photo of a Green River Bowie with a spear point blade and suggested these may have been more common, at least for a time. However, there are some old knives with a pronounced clip. I was looking through a folder of saved images and found these pictures of an old Bowie. I think these are from a post on the ALR forum from several months ago. I don't know the age of the knife. I would guess around the time of the Civil War:
The sheath looks old, too, and you can get a pretty good idea of how it was put together. Anyway, you can see how this knife was ground, as compared to the modern knives in Post #1. I think this was what @Brokennock was getting at in Post #9. It appears to have and antler handle. The clip is different, and it has that peculiar "notchy" at the proximal end of the clip. I don't think I've seen that before. I suppose its possible that this knife could have been faked, but if it was, the maker did a pretty good job.
Notchy Bob
In my first post on this thread, I submitted a photo of a Green River Bowie with a spear point blade and suggested these may have been more common, at least for a time. However, there are some old knives with a pronounced clip. I was looking through a folder of saved images and found these pictures of an old Bowie. I think these are from a post on the ALR forum from several months ago. I don't know the age of the knife. I would guess around the time of the Civil War:
The sheath looks old, too, and you can get a pretty good idea of how it was put together. Anyway, you can see how this knife was ground, as compared to the modern knives in Post #1. I think this was what @Brokennock was getting at in Post #9. It appears to have and antler handle. The clip is different, and it has that peculiar "notchy" at the proximal end of the clip. I don't think I've seen that before. I suppose its possible that this knife could have been faked, but if it was, the maker did a pretty good job.
Notchy Bob