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Axe


Image - Axe Image - Axe
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Nom de l'objet : Axe
Classification de l'objet : man-made artefact
Catégorie de l'objet : Tools and Equipment for Materials
Sous-catégorie de l'objet : Forestry Tools and Equipment
Discipline : anthropology
history
local history
material culture
social anthropology
social history
Matériaux : iron
wood
Technique de fabrication : handcrafted
carved
cast
Numéro d'accession : 998.1
Province d'origine : Pre-Confederation Newfoundland
Newfoundland and Labrador
Continent d'origine : North America
Province d'utilisation : Pre-Confederation Newfoundland
Newfoundland and Labrador
Pays d'utilisation : Canada
Dominion of Newfoundland
Culture : North American
Secteur géo-culturel : North America
Contexte culturel : woodworking
hunting
Date de fin de production : c 1809
Période : Early 19th century
Description : The surviving portion of the axe includes most of the iron head and part of the wooden handle. The blade itself widens as it extends, and is badly rusted. Layers of the axe are beginning to delaminate due to rust.
Commentaires : The axe is most notable for being the weapon used in the murder of Joseph Rendall and Richard Cross in 1809 by John Pelley. The murder occurred before the community of Cow Head was settled, when the area was known as Shallow Bay. The most definitive account comes from the court deposition of Sarah Singleton, the sister of the murdered Cross. When her brother did not return from a trapping expedition on time, she became concerned and set out from Rocky Harbour with John Paine to look for him. The pair encountered Pelley at the house of Joseph Rendall, where he denied having seen Cross and maintained that Rendall had gone into the woods to trap. The next day, Singleton and Paine found some of her brother's belongings near Rendall's cabin, and became suspicious of Pelley. They returned to Rocky Harbour to gather more people and went to Shallow Bay to confront Pelley, at which point he confessed to murdering both men with the axe. Pelley was apprehended, brought to St. John's, tried, and then hanged for his crime.
Fonctions : The axe was originally used to chop firewood by furriers who trapped around Shallow Bay, later known as Cow Head, in the early decades of the nineteenth century.
Hauteur : 4
Longueur : 25.5
Largeur : 15.5
Unité de mesure linéaire : cm
Nombre d'objets : 1
Nombre de parties composantes : 1
Nom des parties composantes : axe
Établissement : Dr. Henry N. Payne Community Museum  Facebook-Dr. Henry N. Payne Community Museum 
Ville de l'établissement : Cow Head
Province de l'établissement : Newfoundland and Labrador

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