Tomahawk head
Description
Small iron pipe tomahawk head (also known as a calumet) with a heart shape cutout design (11/16") on the cutting edge of the tomahawk head. This piece is a good example of the type of fancier tomahawks offered to important clients at fur trade forts across the west.
Object Information
Date Created:
1820-1840
Local ID:
2020.69.1
Provenance:
From the estate of Richard Armstrong (2016)/The Gallant Pelham Military Antiques. The piece was used by Pierre Louis Vasquez/Louis Vasquez (1798-1868) who was a mountain man and fur trapper on the South Platte River; in 1835 he established the Fort Vasquez trading post there with Andrew Sublette. An adobe outpost this fort hired mountain men like Jim Beckworth and Baptiste Charbonneau and was frequented by the Cheyenne, Arapaho and Lakota people. He was active in Colorado in the 1820s and 30s. The piece is tied directly to firsthand accounts by Jim Beckworth. Vasquez was a friend of Jim Bridger and helped build Fort Bridger in 1843 on the Green River in Wyoming.
Creator(s):
Pierre Louis Vasquez
Rights:
In Copyright