Concerning Shields:
“Zulu shields are almost identical to the dueling shields used in Talhoffer” You really aren’t serious about that are you? Tolhoffer DUELING shields are much larger, heavier, have special hooks and angles, have a huge long central boss that even the engravings show were to be used with both hands to be most effective, and are very specialized shields QUITE different from Zulu shields. However, the reason I simply mentioned the Zulu’s originally was the “dreaded British soldier with his bayonet” came up against a fighting style he (collectively) did not know how to fight and got slaughtered. I’ll say no more about Zulu shields as we could go on and on and it isn’t germane to our time period.
An excellent example of British Regulars using bayonets extremely effectively in our time period was at the battle of Culloden 1745 and that battle teaches many things. Even though many of the Jacobite Scots were better armed, trained and experienced in close combat than the British: they lost because the British held their formations with great discipline and countered the Scots by angling their bayonets to attack a Scot to their side rather than the one in front of them. This got their bayonets in between the Scot’s Targes (shields) from the side where the Scots were not used to defending. For the British to have successfully used that tactic demonstrates extreme discipline and confidence/faith that the British soldier beside you is GOING to stab the enemy (Jacobite in this case) in front of YOU and thus not leave you exposed. It also requires an unwavering commitment to holding your formation and that is KEY to using bayonets effectively.
Concerning Bushy Run:
You dismiss the Scottish Warrior culture as being mostly of the upper class and while that would true of ENGLISH society of the time, it wasn’t as true of the Highland Scots. Yes, their upper class of the Scots had better and more weapons and had more financial resources to take more time to train. However; they also retained larger numbers of men whose only profession was the use of arms. Also, because of the Uprisings, Inter Clan warfare, raids, skirmishes and yes even cattle stealing; the Highland warrior culture ran further down Scottish society than the English. Even the lowest Highland peasants had more familiarity with the Lochaber axe than their English counterparts had with military weapons. (Lowland Scots were more like their English counterparts and that distinction should be made AND even they often considered the Highlanders as barbarians.)
PLUS we can not forget that at the Battle of Culloden, there were many Highlanders who fought FOR the British. It has been said that there were close to or as many Highlanders who fought there for the British as the Jacobites against them. (To this day, the Lairds of my Clan, Clan Campbell have made a HUGE distinction they were on the British side at Culloden.)
Now, many clansmen (from both sides) and especially after the 1746 Act of Proscription, whose only profession had been the profession of arms (besides the upper class sons who would not inherit the family fortune) joined the Highland Regiments that fought here in the Seven Years war. So, yes, those Highland Regiments drew on much more experienced men at arms of a warrior culture than was common in other English Regiments’ recruits. Finally, this depth of martial expertise had faded in the next generation, who had been raised under the Act of Proscription, so while the Highland Regiments who fought here in the Revolutionary War retained their Regiment’s Traditions, the recruits in those years had far less warrior experience to draw on than the Highland Regiments of the Seven Years War.
Concerning the William Henry Massacre:
The fact the French had promised protection to the British only goes so far as they only assigned what around 200 French Soldiers to protect them? You miss the fact the English BROKE their disciplined bayonet formations and RAN after the NA attacks.. This is somewhat remarkable as British Regulars were TRAINED to receive fire from the enemy while waiting orders to fire or charge with bayonets. Some accounts state that when Colonel Munro arrived at Fort Edward, he only had about 500 with him and that included women, children and sutlers – though many more filtered in over the following days/weeks. Probably the only thing that saved more of the British from being hunted down and slaughtered or enslaved was the fact Oswego had taught the NA’s that prisoners were far more valuable than scalps.
I mentioned a lot about 18th and 19th century drill manuals and my experience with them and with muskets and bayonets of the time periods and all you commented on was the M16 was not a good weapon with a bayonet? Well, very well. The point I was making was I had in fact trained with muskets and bayonets and wooden weapons in more combative training with them and used that knowledge to better train myself and modern Marines using the best points of the earlier styles. So yes I do have a lot of practical experience from which to base my points.
As to tomhawks vs bayonets in general:
“For example, if I recall correctly there is a British account from the Revolutionary war that describes "hunting" riflemen with bayonets at dusk when poor visibility made it easier for the redcoats to get close without being shot.”
One has to REALLY be careful not to make too much of this quote because it was most likely made by a blowhard braggart or buffoon, who I most seriously doubt EVER went “hunting riflemen” at such times. While it’s true in an age before electric lights that British Regulars would have been able to operate more effectively at night than in modern times, British Regulars had nothing of the experience Riflemen did in operating at night or in poor light conditions. Such conditions would have made if very difficult AT BEST to maintain tight/disciplined formations that was the STRENGTH of bayonet armed Regulars. In fact it would have disrupted formations and made them more vulnerable to individual attack, taking away much of their advantage. Once the formations broke up, the advantage would have gone to Riflemen who were used to operating at night in hostile areas before the War and could easily close with them where the length of reach of the bayonet no longer mattered or indeed would have been a disadvantage. This information does not come from just book knowledge, but practical knowledge in my case. I did a lot of raccoon hunting at night growing up and we never used lights to move around, only to actually shoot the raccoon. When I was in Infantry Training Regiment after boot camp, I was stunned at how many of my much senior Instructors who had all done at least one or two tours in Nam in the Infantry, had far less knowledge of operating at night than I. British Regulars who were used to Sentry Duty at night and did not have much experience at night operationally, would have had a gross disadvantage in such a situation compared to American Riflemen.
Now it is absolutely true Riflemen ran before confronting large disciplined formations of Bayonet wielding Regulars, especially early in the Rev War. Of course so did our Musket wielding soldiers and even our Provincial Regulars who had bayonets, all too often. It was suicide for Riflemen to close in attack bayonet wielding British Regulars IN DISCIPLINED FORMATION (in daylight) and I never wrote nor intended anything different. There an attacker can not get past the British Regulars NEXT to the Regular one is attacking, as the formation is mutually supportive. However, individual fights are a different matter.
Often Riflemen used their rifles in “clubbed musket” fashion at the beginning of close in fighting with individual Regulars. The intention was to knock the musket away and if they hit the musket hard enough, it would have stunned the hands of the Regular holding it. That was enough to close with the Tomahawk. OR, they would use the front of the rifle to parry the bayonet and get in close to use the tomahawk in their other hand. Now, if they dropped or broke their rifle, then they would have pulled the knife to use in one hand while the tomahawk in the other. I realize I did not make that clear, because it is a “no brainer” to me, but I failed to mention it nonetheless.
Perhaps the most demonstrative example of the value of the tomahawk for the military for this discussion is the fact that in 1759, British Light Infantry began carrying belt axes and did so throughout the Rev War. These were the soldiers the British used most often against Riflemen in the Rev War and they would often leave their bayonets behind when going out on scout or to confront Riflemen outside pitched battles. Now of course they retained their bayonets to use in pitched “regular” battles as protection especially against cavalry. Had they not appreciated the use of a hand held belt axe/tomahawk as a fighting weapon, they would not have issued them in the numbers they did to Light Infantry who already had bayonets, RATHER they would have just carried a far lesser number of axes to use for chores.
OK, you keep implying that no written accounts mean so much. Very well, where are the accounts explaining how NA’s used stone war clubs, or the ball head clubs? Where such accounts ARE mentioned and they are darn few, they never mention how the weapons were used other than to occasionally mention hitting someone in the head. If one goes by those accounts, alone, one gets the impression that NA’s were not much more than cavemen or stupid barbarians. We know they were far more intelligent and sophisticated than that. Indeed our very system of the 13 Colonies joining to become one nation was directly copied from the Iroquois Confederation by no less an authority than Benjamin Franklin. How did they have time to do and administer that if they were on the type of barely subsistance culture you seem to be maintaining they were?
We surely know NA’s had far more than subsistence level cultures if nothing less than by the number of warriors they fielded in these wars and often allied with European Settlers against other NA tribes. Kieft's War (1643–1645) , French and Iroquois Wars (mid-17th century), King Philip's War (1675–1676) , Tuscarora War (1711–1715, Yamasee War (1715–1717), Chickasaw Wars (1720–1760), Natchez War(1729–1731), Pontiac's Rebellion (1763–64).
Stone war clubs were not used “just to bash in the other caveman’s head” by NA’s. If one thinks about it for only a few moments, it is easy to visualize they fully realized there would be opportunities to use it to take out an elbow or knee cap or crush ribs, or trip an opponent or a number of different ways to use it in the attack or defense. If they did not realize it, they DIED from those who spent more than a few moments in figuring out different ways of using them offensively and defensively. IOW, when that is your main hand to hand weapon, human beings figure out how to use them even if they wind up being “taught” by others who know how to use them well and you are on the losing side, but are lucky enough to survive. In a culture where warfare is common, even limited guerilla type or raids, you either pass on those techniques by training your youth or the tribe dies out. This did not happen just in NA cultures on this continent, but all over the world in different ages. Further, NA oral traditions tell of training their young men for war. I honestly can not understand anyone who must have written evidence to back up what is so obviously an anthropological fact repeated many times all over the world in different ages.
OK, so now comes iron tomahawks from the Europeans. How long did it take NA’s to figure out you could use them to even better hook an arm or leg in close combat than a stone club? Hey, they didn’t crack like a stone club would do more easily (though Iron tomahawks/belt axes could and did crack at times, especially when the welding was poor.) Is it so hard to conceive they would use their older techniques and see what new techniques they could now employ? Do you really need written documentation and if so, you must explain how NA’s suddenly went stupid everywhere they got the iron tomahawks against anthropological fact.
As to the use of knives in combat, it all depends on what kind of knife you have. If all you have is a stone knife, then you would use it, but not as a preferred weapon of choice like a stone war club. We have to remember that even the best knives available in the 17th and 18th centuries (and later) from Europeans were no where near as sharp as flint knives. The reason NA’s took to iron/steel knives was they didn’t break as easily as flint knives. Does that mean they totally discarded flint knives/tools when iron ones came along? No, they continued to use them for skinning, butchering, scraping hides for tanning and other uses where the sharper edge was useful. However, now with an iron knife, they had a knife strong enough it would not break easily and could be used as a weapon.
Now I imagine the some NA enemy who was used to using only a stone war club or tomahawk was extremely surprised the first time another NA used both his war club or tomahawk AND a knife to fight against him. If the surprised NA managed to survive that hand to hand account, I’m sure he would have thought about or used an iron knife the same way, if and when he got his hands on an iron knife. The guy with the iron knife now had a survival advantage, though of course the NA might and probably would not have thought about it that way.
I am at a loss to understand your extrapolation of British Culture on American Frontier culture to come to a conclusion that knives were never or rarely used in fighting. While it’s true that knife fights would have been extremely rare in the well settled areas of the tidewater regions of the colonies, it probably has more to do with the fact that if they carried a knife at all, it was more likely a folding knife or penny knife. Now, society in the tidewater regions was more “civilized” or likened to British society than on the frontier. (As LATE as the Rev War, many people did not want to move the Virginia Capital to Richmond because Richmond was known as “a den of filthy Scots.” This because Williamsburg folk thought of themselves as British and still thought of Scots as barbarians, but also because society was “rougher” around Richmond than in the more settled Williamsburg. )
Now I’m sure if you walked around Williamsburg (or other good sized colonial towns/cities) with a trade knife or English Scalper on your belt as an everyday item, that might have gotten some tongues wagging, as common wearing of a knife on a belt had stopped in English society during the Tudor period. This even though small swords and or military swords would have not gotten a second glance.
The further one went from the settled/civilized areas, the more likely one would have seen trade knives or scalpers on the belts of at least some of the men. It was mainly a tool to them, though they might not have worn them every day. Of course carrying something as valuable as a knife on your person to prevent loss or theft was not unreasonable. The closer one got to the frontier in hostile territories, the more common it was to see a tomahawk/belt axe or knife or both on men, especially in times of hostile actions.
“Notes on the settlement and Indian wars of the western parts of Virginia and Pennsylvania, from 1763 to 1783, inclusive: together with a view of the state of society, and manners of the first settlers of the western country:
http://digital.library.pitt.edu/cgi-bin/t/text/text-idx?c=pitttext;view=toc;idno=00age8892m As to swords, I never wrote or implied that some swords were not on the frontier. Matter of fact what I wrote in regard to using a cut down sword for a knife was “one has to be careful to use a sword that was actually available in this country at that time and not some later sword or hilt.”
Gus