May 12, 2007 - May 12, 2007 |
Historic Arkansas Museum-Little Rock,AR |
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| Picture of an Arkansas Toothpick of course.(Bowie#1) The Historic Arkansas Museum (HAM) celebrates Arkansas' cultural and material heritage with six galleries of Arkansas art and artifacts, an interactive children's gallery, orientation theater, museum store with Arkansas products and more. Four original Little Rock dwellings on the museum's grounds provide the setting as expert tour guides describe life on the Arkansas frontier and costumed Living History actors portray early Arkansans. This Museum is beautifully presented with 18th and 19th century artifacts. Frank and I will be demonstrating soapmaking and leatherworking along with other demonstrators. This is a one day event and I cannot stress enough what a fine Museum this is. Arkansas was on the edge of the United States in the 1830s, and when Americans thought of a "rough and tumble" place where people might even pick their teeth with big knives, they thought of Arkansas. Washington, Arkansas, was the home of James Black, a blacksmith who became well known for the knives he made. Black's knives were copied by cutlers in Sheffield, England, and sold in America as the "Arkansas Toothpick." As early as 1835, the "Arkansas Toothpick" and the "Bowie Knife" were tied together as two terms used for the knives that were then popular. A Knife for Jim Bowie Jim Bowie became known for his ability to fight with knives after the "Sandbar Duel" in Mississippi in 1827. In this fight he used a knife which was given to him by his brother. According to many sources, James Black made a knife for Jim Bowie. Some people called this the first bowie knife, the first knife actually made for Jim Bowie. By the time Jim Bowie died at the Alamo in 1836, the term Bowie knife was established as the name for the knives popular at the time. |
| Downtown Little Rock, AR |
| www.historicarkansas.org Really great website with many artifacts viewable from site. |
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