Brass?I think I'll carry a 'French horn.'
Brass?I think I'll carry a 'French horn.'
Given the census here it would be reasonable to assume that, though there were Bison in the east, the Western buffalo and it's much larger horn ( ie powder horn) is a Western expansion thing. Post Lewis & Clark era.
Is that supposed to be a powder horn in the picture?Don't get me into this or I might start talking about the Longhorn powder horn. Now, that's something you don't see every day.
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When I was a young man in 1960, my family went to Niagara Falls, there was a museum on the Canadian side that had a Woods Bison head hanging on the wall and it was twice the size of our Western Bison! Don't know if it is still there or not,it's been 60 years ago!As stated above, we do know there were bison in the east, and it seems logical that some of their horns would have been used for powder. It would be pure speculation on my part, but I would think that horns from domestic bovines would have been in more common use, and I believe there were probably professional "horners" to provide them. I believe wild bison try to avoid people when they can, and I'm guessing home-made buffalo powder horns would have been more likely to appear on the frontier than in the settlements.
I found this horn, attributed to the Cherokee, on the Peach State Archaeological Society website:
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You do see brown bison horns sometimes, and I've heard they are more frequently associated with eastern bison, but I haven't seen any solid documentation of that, the assertion above notwithstanding. There is also some confusion regarding "woodland bison." It is my understanding that the eastern bison were genetically the same as the plains bison. "Wood buffalo" are a different species (although they will interbreed with plains bison), and native to the far northern boreal forests. In any event, the information above is submitted for consideration.
This 1732 painting of a Tunica family, from the lower Mississippi Valley, shows what looks like a buffalo powder horn, slung on the gentleman's side:
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That's about the best I can do. I'm looking forward to reading some of the other responses.
Notchy Bob
It’s great as you can carry powder or use it to call an elk.
Are there any pictures available? Are they in a museum?l know of several pre 1750 eastern buffalo powder horns from western conetticut - they have a brown cast rather than black
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