Object number
55/69
Exhibition
Creator
Description
A billhook is an edge tool used in hedging, coppice work and other woodland trades, and the tool shows great regional variety with each area having its own accepted pattern and shape. This is a Monmouth billhook, with a very wide 10 inch blade and a single cutting edge. The blade is stamped with 'Elwell 156-10'. It was made by Edward Elwell Ltd. of Wednesbury, Staffordshire, in the mid-twentieth century.
Physical description
1 billhook: metal; wood
Archival history
MERL 'Catalogue index' card – 'This thick nosed 10 inch billhook is of the Monmouth type. It has a curved single cutting edge, the blade having a maximum width of 3.0 inches. The blade is tanged into the pistol shaped wooden handle which is 5.5 inches long. The whole tool is 15.8 inches long.', MERL 'Catalogue index' card – [54/705] – ‘Billhooks are used in hedging and coppice work, and they vary very greatly from region to region. The local traditional form of blade and balance first forged by the local smith are still followed by the large scale manufacturers of Sheffield and Birmingham. Each district has its own accepted pattern and shape. For example a Dorset man would never use the Nottinghamshire bill and for this reason the large firms still produce a great variety of bills, each one for a particular district or county. Messrs Edward Elwell of Wednesbury Staffordshire for example manufacture no less than thirty-six varieties of billhooks.’
Production place
Wednesbury
Production date
1940 - 1940
Object name
Material
Associated subject
Associated person/institution