Rob
1864 From the incense sticks, I'd guess incense burner.
"Rob H." <rhv...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:hm5mj...@news5.newsguy.com...
> Just posted another set of items:
>
> http://55tools.blogspot.com/
>
>
> Rob
1864: Rushlight holder - holds certain plant stems that burn much like
candles. Many were made with candle cups on the curved portion so they
could be used for either light source. Bet I've made a hundred of 'em.
They work well as recipe card holders too.:)
> 1864: Rushlight holder
Agreed. Actually, the rushlights themselves were made by soaking the
peeled stem of a rush in animal fat such as tallow.
> Just posted another set of items:
>
> http://55tools.blogspot.com/
My guesses:
1861 - Binder for cornstalks (or other grain)? I'm pretty sure I've
encountered this before...but can't remember much more than that.
1862 - Alarm gong/bell?
1863 - Harrow, dragged along the ground (presumably by horse power) to
cultivate the soil
1864 - Holder for flaming sticks, I'd guess either as a light or to keep
the fire when you didn't care to have the fireplace grate full--probably
the latter.
1865 - Primitive doghouse
1866 - Booby trap, with small guns (perhaps firing blanks) triggered by
pressure or motion of the pointed bits. It would appear that this is
intended to kill or frighten some wild animal, rather than human prey.
--
Andrew Erickson
"He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot
lose." -- Jim Elliot
Northe
Oops! Yup, you're right. I'd forgotten that bit of the byte. It's that
the rushes are well suited to absorbing the fat, making them
candle-like, neh?
1861 - very early portable winch?
1862 - Well it wouldn't make a lot of sound but it could be used as a
simple bell. I know of a FD near me that has a railroad driver wheel
with a notch cut out as a back-up bell for meetings and such.
1862 - Fixed tooth harrow. Can also be used to prep seedbeds by making
closely spaced rows for the seeds to drop into so they don't blow away.
Such as in a rice paddy or wheat field.
1864 - Old rush light. Holds pieces of reed that burn like a tallow
candle because of the waxy sap in them.
1865 - Pedestrian pass through cut in a tree? Sort of like the redwoods
with the tunnels cut through them?
1866 - Well it almost looks like some type of weird bayonet/gun combo.
If those are muzzle-loading barrels on either side.
--
Steve W.
Canal boats traveled silently 24 hours a day. In 1835, Nathaniel
Hawthorne stepped ashore one night as a fallen limb was removed from the
towline. When he looked, the lanterns of the boat were moving away and
he had a long walk ahead.
Passengers probably had meals in towns. A gong in the town square could
allow each boatman to alert passengers to get aboard.
Bill.
1866 -It's got a "safety" on it, so it means business. Maybe it was
used to slaughter cattle?
Bill
--
"Steamboat Ed" Haas : Blue Cross socks us
Hacking the Trailing Edge! : $23,000/yr!! ...
www.nmpproducts.com
---Decks a-wash in a sea of words---
Does 1862 have glass in it, or is that just an artifact in the photo?
--
Dennis
1861.
1862. fire bell?
1863. (as someone else already posted) harrow
1864. rob, didn't you run one like this a couple weeks ago? even so i
couldn't remember what it was. i'm guessing the other responses are
correct, neat. or, maybe it was when i was googling some other item you
posted i saw this thing in amongst some items at some website and thought
"dayum, that thing looks like a REALLY cool sculpture!"
1865. again, (i guessed the tub from a few weeks was sycamore) some sort of
sycamore item. wow that thing is huge. the hole near the top made me
wonder if the hole was for looking through, like a native american arrow
"armor", ridiculous huh? way too heavy. then i wondered if it was a "bee
gum" but what bee keeper would want to go INSIDE his hive to get the honey?!
and it still wouldn't be bear-proof. don't know but it's an impressive
piece of wood.
1866. that is one nasty looking thing. i'd guess for harpooning and
simultaneously shooting, *twice*, some sort of sea animal, sharks?
dolphins? barbed arrowhead and lanyard loop for retrieval of dead
fish/manatee/whatever. wonder if it would be possible to waterproof such an
item so it would shoot after being violently immersed in water.
1865: Hunting blind? Leave it in place for days or weeks so the animals
get used to it. Sit on a chair watching through peep holes. When game
or predator is in range with back turned, stand on chair and shoot.
Nope, none of the guesses are correct for this one. This tree section was
cut around 1870, was used until about 1957, and originally had a clapboard
roof.
Rob
Fire alarm bell is correct.
Rob
There isn't any glass in it, the artifact is from less-than-great digital
image modifications. ;-)
Rob
> 1861.
>
> 1862. fire bell?
>
> 1863. (as someone else already posted) harrow
>
> 1864. rob, didn't you run one like this a couple weeks ago? even so i
> couldn't remember what it was. i'm guessing the other responses are
> correct, neat. or, maybe it was when i was googling some other item you
> posted i saw this thing in amongst some items at some website and thought
> "dayum, that thing looks like a REALLY cool sculpture!"
You must have seen it somewhere else, I didn't post one like this recently.
>
> 1865. again, (i guessed the tub from a few weeks was sycamore) some sort
> of sycamore item. wow that thing is huge. the hole near the top made me
> wonder if the hole was for looking through, like a native american arrow
> "armor", ridiculous huh? way too heavy. then i wondered if it was a "bee
> gum" but what bee keeper would want to go INSIDE his hive to get the
> honey?! and it still wouldn't be bear-proof. don't know but it's an
> impressive piece of wood.
It's suppposedly a gum tree section, and it wasn't used for a bee hive.
>
> 1866. that is one nasty looking thing. i'd guess for harpooning and
> simultaneously shooting, *twice*, some sort of sea animal, sharks?
> dolphins? barbed arrowhead and lanyard loop for retrieval of dead
> fish/manatee/whatever. wonder if it would be possible to waterproof such
> an item so it would shoot after being violently immersed in water.
I don't usually give clues or answers for the ones that are used in the
collaboration with Neatorama, but I will say that it's not water related.
Rob
Posting from rec.crafts.metalworking as always.
1861) Hmmm ... it will behave like a screw, with the rope going from
one side of the cross board to the other as it is cranked.
Not sure whether it is to drive into the earth for planting
something or to serve as a jack, with the point in some kind of
hardened socket.
1862) Almost certainly it (when struck) serves as a gong to call the
population's attention -- perhaps as a fire alarm, perhaps to
indicate an imminent attack, perhaps just of marking the time.
1863) Perhaps to be used to stretch animal pelts when curing?
1864) Looks like an incense holder to me.
Or perhaps used to hold tapers to light pipes.
1865) Perhaps a beehive?
1866) Hmmm ... looks like a harpoon point without a shaft which
has two small guns mounted. It looks as though there is a
missing crossbar which goes in the notch of the hammer to strike
two percussion caps at once -- probably triggered by a strong
tug on the ring at the back.
The 1850s was a strong period for the whaling industry, though
I've not seen anything like this before.
Now to see what others have suggested.
Enjoy,
DoN.
--
Email: <dnic...@d-and-d.com> | Voice (all times): (703) 938-4564
(too) near Washington D.C. | http://www.d-and-d.com/dnichols/DoN.html
--- Black Holes are where God is dividing by zero ---
>A Tent?
It's not a tent nor an outhouse.
1861: The windlass for a well?
1862: Ye Olde Hulae Hoope?
1863: A frame for some sort of stage scenery?
1864: Looks like drug paraphenalia to me. Looks like you stuck
whatever those things were in it to hold them, then burned the ends.
1865: It's a hollow tree stump, what else? I imagine the hole at the
top is important.
1866: You've heard of guns called "hand cannons"? That's the original
hand cannon. With optional extended sights.
Assuming the cannon actually works, perhaps for signalling of
some sort. Or maybe just a gunsmith's novelty.
--
The problem with socialism is there's always
someone with less ability and more need.
"Rob H." <rhv...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:hm5mj...@news5.newsguy.com...
> Just posted another set of items:
>
> http://55tools.blogspot.com/
>
>
> Rob
>A smoke house?
Yes! Smoke house is correct.
Correct, as Alexander also guessed, it's a trap for animals, the gruesome
details of how it works can be found starting on line 70 of the patent.
They've all been answered correctly this week, more details can be seen
here:
http://55tools.blogspot.com/2010/02/set-325.html#answers
Rob