Weapons
Mariners brought back many examples of weapons from this region, perhaps intrigued at the variety of deadly forms used in close combat. From Fiji, they collected throwing clubs, paddle, and gunstock shaped clubs. From Kiribati, swords and spears with edges lined with shark teeth, and from New Guinea, cassowary bird bone daggers and stone maces.
Shark Tooth-Edged Spear
c. 1880
Kiribati, Gilbert Islands
This piece was collected by a Maine mariner and donated to the former Portland Society of Natural History. The PSNH regularly put out calls for mariners to collect ethnographic items for the museum.
Ex. Portland Society of Natural History
HM6475
Club with Stone Head
19th Century
Papua New Guinea
This club was collected by Richard Emerick and was not related to the items he acquired in the 1950’s. To complement collections gathered during his fieldwork, he often sought out examples from other areas and time periods.
Emerick Collection
HM6600
Gunstock Club
c. 1850
Fiji
Collected by Captain Robert Owens of the USS St. Mary when the ship was assigned to the Pacific Squadron between 1848 and 1872.
Emerick Collection
HM6487
Totokia War Club
19th Century
Fiji
This particular form of war club was designed to bash a hole in an enemy’s skull.
I-ula tavatava
Fiji
This throwing club is designed to be thrown from a distance and would be used to incapacitate birds, animals, and humans, which would them be finished off at close quarters. Made from the dense wood of the ironwood tree, they were extremely lethal weapons.
Martha J. Stevens Collection
HM2664