Bull Boat
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A Bull Boat is a small boat, usually made by American Indians and frontiersmen, made by covering a skeletal wooden frame with a buffalo hide.
When traders of Hudson's Bay Company first visited the Mandan Indians in 1790 they found that tribe possessed of tublike boats with framework of willow poles, covered with raw buffalo hides. Later, frontiersmen who ascended the Missouri River noted this light, convenient craft. From 1810 to 1830, American fur traders on the tributaries of the Missouri regularly built boats eighteen to thirty feet long, using the methods of construction employed by the Indians in making their circular boats. These elongated bull boats were capable of transporting two tons of fur down the shallow waters of the Platte River.[1] These larger boats required joining the buffalo hides with waterproof seams, a technique not used by the American Indians.
The bull boat was more a device than a boat. The framework was made of willow branches bent in a huge bowl shape about four feet across the top and eighteen inches deep. A bull buffalo hide (thus the bull phrase) was then stretched around this framework making the entire boat weigh about 30 pounds. The hair was left on the hide because it prevented the craft from spinning plus it also aided in keeping the water out. The tails were also kept intact and used to tie numerous bull boats together. Once in the water, it was not very steady because it bobbed around like a cork, but it served its purpose for short trips. The closest analogy that can be used is that it would be like floating in a huge Tupperware bowl.
William Clark of the Lewis and Clark Expedition described them thusly:
- Two sticks of 1-1/4 inch diameter are tied together so as to form a round hoop of the size you wish the canoe to be, or as large as the skin will cover. Two of those hoops are made, one for the top or brim, and the other for the bottom. Then sticks of the same diameter are crossed at right angles and fastened with a thongs to each hoop, and also where each stick crosses the other. Then the skin, when green [fresh, that is, not tanned] is drawn tight over the frame and fastened with thongs to the brim, or outer hoop, so as to form a perfect basin.[2]
- Pryor's two canoes were nearly the same size, 7 feet 3 inches in diameter and 16 inches deep, with 15 ribs or cross sticks in each.
A bull boat is similar to a Welsh coracle or an Irish currach. This similarity was used to support a theory that a Welsh party colonized the New World in the 12th century.
[edit] References
- ^ Dictionary of American History, James Truslow Adams, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1940
- ^ http://www.lewis-clark.org/content/content-article.asp?ArticleID=1002