This arrow belonged to my friends dad. He lived in Oregon and Washington, was "white", was a member of the "redmen", a fraternal order from days gone by. My friend is wondering what this arrow is. Is it an authentic native american arrow from the 17 or 1800's? Is it a replica arrow made for the "redmen hall". Here are the basic stats:
length about 24 inches.
diameter- 1/4 inch
Material- it's a shoot shaft, pretty heavy. Could be Ocean spray- it's hard to tell.
lashings appear to be real sinew- the feather lashing is quite well- done and the point wrapping is a little cruder, but pretty nice.
Feathers- grey and white and brown with some banding. Pretty worn, but may have been shaped thru burning- the edge is slightly wavy.It's hard to think that these feathers are more than a hundred years old- they're mostly complete. It doesn't look like they were "split" . That is, the quill is not super thin, Rather, they look cut. That is, the feather was split with an edged tool.
crest- a dark red paint under feathers and sinew near the nock.
nock-well carved, slightly bulbous.
point- steel. the stem has a few side notches as seen in old trade points. not pointy at the tip. edges sharp. tool marks look like a whet stone. unsharpened flat faces smooth.
Lightning grooves- these begin just near the end of the point lashing. they extend under the feathers, but do not go clear back to the nock. two are wavy, while one is straight. the grooves are quite flat on the bottom with perpendicular sides, and could be cut by a burin.
Here are my thoughts:
Looks like a real native arrow of the 70 or 1800's, but a few things are puzzling:
It's really short and seems like it would be stiff.
the point lashing is a bit crude- while the fletches are well laid on.
The feathers are really long in relation to it's overall length. feathers in too good a condition to be really old.
more pics to come