Dutch Long-Shanked Socket Bayonet
Dateca. 1710-1730
Maker
Unidentified
OriginEurope, Low Countries
MediumIron and steel
DimensionsOverall: 16 5/8" Socket: 2 7/8" Blade: 11 5/8" x 1 3/16"
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number2021-65
DescriptionSocket bayonet with a hexagonal-sectioned flat blade, square blade shoulders, a long rounded shank and an open-ended socket cut with a three-step mortise for a top-of-the-barrel bayonet lug.Label TextDuring the French and Indian War, Britain supplied American soldiers with varied “Dutch” muskets and bayonets, which were considered perfectly suited for colonial use, though inferior to the Brown Bess. More than 10,000 were shipped here, including 2,000 sent to Virginia in 1754.
These "Dutch" arms were originally purchased between 1715 and 1741 in what is today Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany, to make up for a shortfall in British arms production. Most were used and worn, and this early long-shanked type is thought to have been included in the 1715 purchase. An example was found during the excavation of Fort William Henry in New York State, the scene of the horrific massacre in August of 1757 fictionalized in “Last of the Mohicans.”
ProvenanceFrom the George D. Moller collection
ca. 1710-1730
1730-1750
1750-1780
ca.1727-1730
ca. 1720-1740
ca. 1715-1725
ca. 1710-1720
ca. 1771-1773
ca.1740-1760
ca. 1771-1773
c.1778-1783