A spontoon, sometimes known by the variant spelling espontoon[1] or as a half-pike, is a type of European polearm that came into being alongside the pike. The spontoon was in common use from the mid-17th century to the early 19th century, but it was used to a much lesser extent as a military weapon and ceremonial implement until the late 19th century.
Description
Unlike the pike, which was a very long weapon that was typically 4.3–4.9 m (14–16 ft) long, the spontoon on the other hand was much shorter and only measured around 1.8–2.4 m (5 ft 11 in – 7 ft 10 in) in overall length. Generally, this weapon featured a more elaborate head than the typical pike. The head of a spontoon often had a pair of blades or lugs on each side, giving the weapon the look of a military fork or a trident. There were also spontoon-style axes which used the same shaped blades mounted on the side of the weapon with a shorter haft.
Italians might have been the first to use the spontoon,[2] and, in its early days, the weapon was used for combat, before it became more of a symbolic item.
After the bayonet and musket replaced the pike and arquebus as the primary weapons of the common foot soldier, the spontoon remained in use as a signalling weapon. In the British army commissioned officers carried the spontoon until 1786[3] as a symbol of their rank and used it like a mace, in order to issue battlefield commands to their men, whilst sergeants generally carried the halberd until 1792 when it was replaced by the sergeant's pike, a spontoon.[4][5] British Army officers used spontoons at the Battle of Culloden.[6]
During the Napoleonic Wars, the spontoon was used by sergeants to defend the colours of a battalion or regiment from a cavalry attack. The spontoon was one of few polearms that stayed in use long enough to make it into American history. As late as the 1890s, the spontoon accompanied marching soldiers.
^Charles ffoulkes, E.C. Hopkinson, 'Swords, Lance and Bayonet: A Record of The Arms of The British Army and Navy'. Cambridge University Press, 2013. Original publication 1938. ISBN9781107670150, Page. 115
^George C. Neumann, 'Swords and Blades of The American Revolution'. Stackpole Books, 1973. ISBN9780811717205
^Charles ffoulkes, E.C. Hopkinson, 'Swords, Lance and Bayonet: A Record of The Arms of The British Army and Navy'. Cambridge University Press, 2013. Original publication 1938. ISBN9781107670150. Page. 116
^Fitzroy MacLean, Bonnie Prince Charlie, New York: Atheneum, 1989, p. 208
^Moore & Hanes, Tailor Made, Trail Worn: Army Life, Clothing & Weapons of the Corps of Discovery (Farcountry Press 2003)
^Paul Schullery, Lewis & Clark Among the Grizzlies (TwoDot 2002)