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. I am interested in knowing what a bill hook is?
Thanks for the info on billhooks. My great grandad was born near Herefordshire and came to the US in 1856.Tasky wrote: ↑Sun Mar 12, 2023 12:44 amThanks guys!OLDE CUTLER wrote: ↑Sun Mar 12, 2023 12:26 amWelcome to AAPK,![]()
. I am interested in knowing what a bill hook is?
Well, in general terms, a Bill or Billhook is a European equivalent of a machete - About the same size only with a blade shape similar to a hawksbill or pruning knife, albeit bigger. It is primarily an agricultural tool, but there were also military versions that (supposedly) evolved from the peasant farming tools.
Billhooks come in all shapes and sizes, with variants from one country to the next and even from one county to the next. You had different ones for different sizes, such as the Hedging Bill, Forest Bill, and so on. The military version was favoured by the English army, being mounted on a pole about 5' long, with a long top spike and a wicked backspike.
It's basically what you'd get if an evil-minded medieval blacksmith crossed a poleaxe with one of those crazy Zombie Tactical knives!
https://royalarmouries.org/stories/our- ... se-weapon/
Exiter may be a misspelling of Exeter, a city in Devonshire, England...Mumbleypeg wrote: ↑Sun Mar 12, 2023 2:31 pmOn the subject of billhooks, here’s one (the remnants of one anyway) I picked up at a flea market. It has had a rough life and been modified in several ways. The hook has been ground, or sharpened away. When I acquired it someone has written “Exiter” in pencil on both sides of the blade.It has a mark stamped into its blade which I’ve not been able to learn much about.
Thank you for that info about William Swift. More than I have been able to find previously!Tasky wrote: ↑Sun Mar 12, 2023 3:13 pmExiter may be a misspelling of Exeter, a city in Devonshire, England...Mumbleypeg wrote: ↑Sun Mar 12, 2023 2:31 pmOn the subject of billhooks, here’s one (the remnants of one anyway) I picked up at a flea market. It has had a rough life and been modified in several ways. The hook has been ground, or sharpened away. When I acquired it someone has written “Exiter” in pencil on both sides of the blade.It has a mark stamped into its blade which I’ve not been able to learn much about.
However, WS with the crown is probably William Swift, a maker of agricultural edged tools from Kent since about 1850.
Some local history here:
https://www.billhooks.co.uk/app/downloa ... +Swift.pdf