I have just joined the forum as I found this post and wished to reply to it. I collect billhooks, new and old, and thus found this thread very interesting and useful. Sadly most of my archives are currently inaccessible, so I have to rely upon memory...
From a Royal Armouries correspondent I found out there was a sealed pattern for a billhook from the late 19th century - I have not been able to obtain a copy or image of this, but the WW1 billhooks stamped 1914 onwards appear to be the Pontypool pattern, with a thick and heavy nose - a feature found on several other Welsh pattern of billhook such as the Monmouth. In outline this is also very similar to the Berkshire pattern, but this does not have a thickened nose, and like the rest of the hooks from the south of England has a distal taper, i.e. it tapers from handle to nose and from back to cutting edge...
I guess the heavy Pontypool pattern was chosen because it is stronger and heavier than most other billhooks, would take a lot of misuse, and would be useful for more mundane tasks such as banging in tent pegs. The billhook has been around for over 2000 years in the UK, and is a useful tool for many purposes. Called a fascine knife in many other countries of Europe and in the USA, it was used for making fascines and gabions for defensive fortifications, trench supports etc, and thus was an ideal tool for machine gunners as it had been for cannon emplacements previously.
Some colonial troops carried it in a purpose made holster or sheath, and I understand it was a ceremonial dress item for some sappers, but I have never found any sheath issued for use by the British Army. Its successor, the golok, a type of machete, was issued together with a canvas sheath about the time of the Korean War. The same pattern billhook as the 1914 issue was still being made for WW11, and later (some are stamped in the 1950's). Most English edge tools makers made them, and a great many different makers' stamps can be found. The vast majority were made in one size, a 10" blade, but I recently found a smaller 9" model. The Broad Arrow was still being used by some WW11 makers and up to the 1950's (e.g Elwell) ...
The French army issued a Serpe de Genie (Sapper's billhook) with a leather sheath from WW1 period, later replaced by a similar model in canvas - most other European armies did so also, and I have several late issue Finnish leather sheaths, some stained khaki green, but sadly not yet found a finnish vesuri or billhook to go with them... The Spanish army were somewhat unique in having a double edged version and the Japanese for some reason copied an Italian design, not using their own native forms of Natagama.
The armies of Scandinavia, Prussia and Germany issued fascine knives in the form of short swords to their troops, with leather sheaths - these were replaced towards the end of the 19th century with a billhook shaped version which would appear to have been commonplace by WW1. (see http://www.vikingswo...ad.php?p=121052).
Britain seems to have been almost unique in issuing the billhook as a tool to be carried in a limber or tool box, rather than as a personal item...
For more info on billhooks, see: www.billhooks.co.uk












