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I have had this print from a glass plate negative in the collections of the Southern Oregon Historical Society for 30 or more years, and always wonder how the lives of these three unknown young men turned out. The studio in which the photo was taken is unknown, as is the date, but if that is a Model 1881 Marlin in the hands of the chap on the left, then it would be 1881 or later. Pretty sure the other two rifles are Winchester Model 1876s. If in fact this image was made somewhere in Southern Oregon or Northern California, grizzly bears were still a serious menace to miners and stockmen at that time. The extra punch from one of the Winchester cartridges for the 76 -- or for that Marlin -- would have been very useful.
I also wonder how long they stayed in pose for their dogs to fall asleep! Laudanum dog biscuits??
Last edited by Bill in Oregon on Thu Sep 01, 2022 4:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Great shot, sure would be nice to be able to trace those guys.
Did you ever notice, looking at photos from the earliest days of photograph until about the end of WW1, the subjects are almost never smiling. In those days, having your portrait (photo) taken was serious business indeed, smiling would have revealed you to be frivolous and silly, not very smart. Also, most people back in that era had absolutely awful, ugly teeth if they had them at all. Certainly nothing to be showing off.
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Imagine when walking, doing chores, hunting small game, or fishing, would subject one to potentially lethal attack with no way to defend against bear or mountain lion. These days there still is risk certainly, but before the Civil War there isn't any portable weapon I'd want to rely on against several hundred pounds of fangs and claws.
These days there are plenty of handguns that are way more suitable for bear-defense than most of the long guns around before the lever-actions.
It's 2025 - "Cutesy Time is OVER....!" [Dan Bongino]
AJMD429 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 01, 2022 4:29 pm
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Imagine when walking, doing chores, hunting small game, or fishing, would subject one to potentially lethal attack with no way to defend against bear or mountain lion. These days there still is risk certainly, but before the Civil War there isn't any portable weapon I'd want to rely on against several hundred pounds of fangs and claws.
These days there are plenty of handguns that are way more suitable for bear-defense than most of the long guns around before the lever-actions.
A double barrel 10 gauge with at least one barrel loaded for Bear would be my choice before repeating rifles came about.
Nice quality photo, always interesting to see how folks were armed in those days.
Whatever you do always give 100%........... unless you are donating blood.
jnyork wrote: ↑Thu Sep 01, 2022 4:24 pm
Great shot, sure would be nice to be able to trace those guys.
Did you ever notice, looking at photos from the earliest days of photograph until about the end of WW1, the subjects are almost never smiling. In those days, having your portrait (photo) taken was serious business indeed, smiling would have revealed you to be frivolous and silly, not very smart. Also, most people back in that era had absolutely awful, ugly teeth if they had them at all. Certainly nothing to be showing off.
Well, maybe. But the main thing was the looonnnggg exposure times. You had to stay absolutely still for a prolonged period or you'd get a blurry photo. Ever tried to hold a smile, absolutely still, for a full minute? Almost hurts! It wouldn't surprise me if, carefully concealed, there aren't braces holding their heads still, as was often the case.
if i had to choose between one 10ga round and a spear i would prefer the spear. it was high sport in germany to hunt bears with spears, and a lion kill with a spear was the passage to manhood in some of Africa. . . anyone here hunt with spear?
Grizz wrote: ↑Thu Sep 01, 2022 10:31 pm
if i had to choose between one 10ga round and a spear i would prefer the spear. it was high sport in germany to hunt bears with spears, and a lion kill with a spear was the passage to manhood in some of Africa. . . anyone here hunt with spear?
No they're all dead......
Whatever you do always give 100%........... unless you are donating blood.
ps: i'm willing to bet far more game has fallen to spears and arrows than to bullets.... you know, if you follow the evidence going back 50,000+ years.
Never hunted with a spear. Please don't let me stop you if that is what you want to do.
D. Brian Casady
Quid Llatine Dictum Sit, Altum Viditur.
Advanced is being able to do the basics while your leg is on fire---Bill Jeans
Don't ever take a fence down until you know why it was put up---Robert Frost
I recall some utube vids of spear hunting but it was using a heavy spear and dropping straight down from a tree. Quite lethal actually. Several vids on wild boars and a few on bears. Don't think I would try to throw the thing as it was the weight that did the killing.
Leverluver wrote: ↑Fri Sep 02, 2022 6:06 pm
I recall some utube vids of spear hunting but it was using a heavy spear and dropping straight down from a tree. Quite lethal actually. Several vids on wild boars and a few on bears. Don't think I would try to throw the thing as it was the weight that did the killing.
yeah, that was a good video. i would not hurl a spear or atlatl dart unless i had my spear at hand. i rehafted my spear with a short stick so it's more like the one in Africa that was the Tommy killer . . . when i get some forge time i'm going to make a spear set that covers several scenarios. part i like best about forging them is the socket tang...
If you like spears, do a little research on SASHA SIEMEL, a fellow in the early 1900's that hunted dangerous game with the spear, similar to HOWARD HILL but used a spear.
4t5 wrote: ↑Sun Sep 04, 2022 8:01 pm
If you like spears, do a little research on SASHA SIEMEL, a fellow in the early 1900's that hunted dangerous game with the spear, similar to HOWARD HILL but used a spear.
THANKS. great photos in the search. I think I will start with the squirrels out back and see how that goes. LOL
The atlatl, by about 8,000 to 10,000 years by some estimates. The Aztecs still used the atlatl in the 1500s when Cortez invaded. The word comes from the Nahuatl language.
Bill in Oregon wrote: ↑Wed Sep 07, 2022 7:12 am
The atlatl, by about 8,000 to 10,000 years by some estimates. The Aztecs still used the atlatl in the 1500s when Cortez invaded. The word comes from the Nahuatl language.
For sure. In my region it is accepted the the bow didnt show up till around 800 AD. A modern invention.
When Did Humans Start Using Bows and Arrows?
June 20, 2022 by Partha Jain
The earliest remains of bow and arrow usage can be found in Europe, though there are possible fragments that were found in Germany dated 17,500 to 18,000 years old. However, archaeologists believe hunters have been using bows and arrows as early as 50,000 years ago.
Did early humans have bow and arrows?
Early humans used bows and arrows to hunt in tropical rainforests 48,000 years ago, study says – CNN.
How long have humans used bow and arrows?
The bow and arrow is an ancient weapon—going back at least 71,000 years, a study published in Nature suggests.
When did humans develop bows?
Early man first started using tools to manufacture other tools around 2.5 million years ago, scientists say. But the bow was not first used until 64,000 years ago, when its invention greatly increased the flexibility of their activities.