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Barbed wire

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[AWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THAT SUCKS!!!!!!!!!!!!!![Image:Barbed wire, Melbourne Museum.jpg|thumb|300px|right|A selection of forms of barbed wire.]] Barbed wire, also known as barb wire[1] (and frequently in dialect form spelled bob[2] or bobbed[3]), is a type of fencing wire constructed with sharp edges or points arranged at intervals along the strand(s). It is used to construct inexpensive fences and also on walls surrounding secured property. It is also a major feature of the fortifications in trench warfare.

A person or animal trying to pass through or over barbed wire will suffer discomfort and possibly injury. Barbed wire fencing requires only fence posts, wire and fixing devices such as staples. It is simple to construct and quick to erect by even an unskilled fencer.

The most successful barbed wire was patented by Joseph F. Gidden of DeKalb,Illinious in 1874. It was an improvement on earlier less successful pointed wire products such as that invented in 1865 by Louis Jannin of France.

Barbed wire was the first wire technology capable of restraining cattle. Wire fences were cheaper to erect than their alternatives and when they became widely available in the late 19th century in the United States they made it affordable to fence much bigger areas than before. They made intensive animal husbandry practical on a much larger scale.

History

Waterman, Illinois farmer Henry Rose developed a fence consisting of a simple wooden strip with attached projecting wire points designed to dissuade encroaching livestock. He patented his design in May, 1873 (no. 138,763) and exhibited it at the DeKalb County Fair that summer. This prompted DeKalb area residents Isaac Ellwood, Joseph Glidden and Jacob Haish to work on improving the concept. Ellwood patented a type of barbed wire in February 1874 (no. 147,756), but soon concluded that Glidden's design was superior to his own.

Glidden is said to have made his early barbs with a modified coffee mill. He spaced the hand-made barbs on one strand of wire which was then twisted together with another strand of wire to hold the barbs in place. Glidden was issued patent no. 157,124 in November, 1874. Meanwhile Isaac Ellwood had purchased a one-half interest in Glidden's invention in July, 1874 and together they formed the Barb Fence Company in DeKalb. The business was quickly very successful with production rising from 10,000 lbs in 1874 to nearly 3 million lbs in 1876. Jacob Haish also founded a successful business based on his own patents. In 1876 Glidden sold his remaining patent rights to the Washburn and Moen Manufacturing Company of Worcester, Massachusetts, which then joined with Ellwood to expand the business even further.

In the American Southwest

Modern barbed wire
File:Barbedwirefence.jpg
A crudely made barbed wire fence

John Warne Gates demonstrated barbed wire for Washburn and Moen in Military Plaza, San Antonio, Texas in 1876. The demonstration showing cattle restrained by the new kind of fencing was followed immediately by invitations to the Menger Hotel to place orders. Gates subsequently had a falling out with Washburn & Moen and Isaac Ellwood. He went to St. Louis and founded the Southern Wire Company, which became the largest manufacturer of unlicensed or "bootleg" barbed wire. An 1880 US District Court decision upheld the validity of the Glidden patent, effectively establishing a monopoly. This was affirmed by a US Supreme Court decision in 1892. In 1898 Gates took control of Washburn and Moen, and created the American Steel and Wire monopoly, which soon became a part of the United States Steel Corporation.

This led to disputes known as the range wars between free-range ranchers and farmers in the late 19th century. These were similar to the disputes which resulted from enclosure laws in England in the early 18th century. These disputes were decisively settled in favor of the farmers, and heavy penalties were instituted for cutting the wire in a barbed wire fence. Within 25 years, nearly all of the open range had been fenced in under private ownership. For this reason, some historians have dated the end of the Old West era of American history to the invention and subsequent proliferation of barbed wire.

Agricultural fencing

Barbed wire fence in west Texas

Barbed wire fences remain the standard fencing technology for enclosing cattle in most regions of the US, but not all countries. The wire is aligned under tension between heavy, braced, fence posts (strainer posts) and then held at the correct height by being attached to wooden posts and battens, or steel star posts. The gaps between star posts vary depending on terrain—on short fences in hilly country they may be placed as closely as every 3 yards, whereas in flat terrain with long spans and relatively few stock they may be spaced out up to 30 to 50 yards. Wooden posts are normally spaced at 2 rods (10 metres) in any case with 4 or 5 battens in between. Many farmers place posts 2 meters apart as battens can bend causing wires to close in on one another.

Barbed wire for agricultural fencing is typically available in two varieties—"soft" or mild-steel wire and "high tensile". Both types are galvanized for long life. High-tensile wire is made with thinner but higher-strength steel. Its greater strength make fences longer-lasting because cattle cannot stretch and loosen it. It copes with the expansions and contractions caused by heat and animal pressure by stretching and relaxing within wider elastic limits. It also supports longer spans, but because of its "springy" nature it is hard to handle and somewhat dangerous for inexperienced fencers. Soft wire is much easier to work but is less durable and only suitable for short spans such as repairs and gates where it is less likely to tangle.

In high soil-fertility areas where dairy cattle are used in great numbers 5- or 7-wire fences are common as the main boundary and internal dividing fences. On sheep farms 7-wire fences are common with the second (from bottom) to fifth wire being plain wire. In New Zealand wire fences must provide passage for dogs since they are the main means of controlling and driving animals on farms.

Gates

As with any fence barbed wire fences require gates to allow the passage of vehicles and farm implements. Gates very in width from 12 feet to allow the passage of vehicles and tractors, to 40 feet on farm land to allow the passage of combines and swathes.

Gates for cattle tend to have 4 wires when along a three wire fence as cattle tend to put more stress on gates particularly in corner gates. The fence on each side of the gated ends with two corner posts braced or unbraced depending on the size of the post. An unpounded post (often an old broken post) is held to one corner post with wire rings which act as hinges. On the other end a full length post, the tractor post, is placed with the pointed end upwards with a ring on the bottom stapled to the other corner post, the latch post, and on top a ring is stapled to the tractor post, the post is tied with a Stockgrower's Lash or one of numerous other opening bindings. Wires are then tied around the post at one end then run to the other end where they are stretched by hand or with a stretcher, before posts are stapled on every 4 feet, often this type of gate is called a Portagee Fence or a Portagee Gate in various ranching communities of coastal Central California. Which had a large influx of Portuguese immigrants during the turn of late 19th Century and the early 20th Century, often these immigrants took up dairy farming and their descendants still to this day have the same dairies and family farms that were Homesteaded. Sonoma and Marin Counties, just north of San Francisco, California were heavily populated by immigrant farmers from Northern Italy, Switzerland and Portugal during this time and many of them started dairy farms and Chicken ranches. Petaluma, California and the central Sonoma County area was known as "The Egg Basket of the World" as well as it's Dairy and Cattle ranching community. Even today they celebrate the counties rich agricultural roots by having the annual Butter and Egg's Day Parade.

Most gates can be opened by pushing on the upturned post, which is why it is left full length. Sometimes a gate is too tight to open in this way so a post suspended from a rope or chain is used to pry the gate open. As mentioned above the opening loop can be substituted with a Stockgrower's Lash which is a rope tied to a post with an taut-line hitch(ABoK#1799) or to the latch post the main rope is then wrapped around both the latch post and the latch post three times and pulled with tight, before the rope is pulled under the three loops securing it to the tractor post. Another method occasionally seen though becoming rarer is to staple a thresher chain to the latch post and pound a nail on the front of the latch post. The chain is then wrapped around the tractor post and pulled onto the nail, stronger people can pull the gate tighter but anyone can jar off the chain to open the gate.

Human-proof fencing

Fence with barbed wire on top

Most barbed wire fences, while sufficient to discourage cattle, are passable by humans who can simply climb over the fence—or through the fence by stretching the gaps between the wires using non-barbed sections of the wire as hand holds. To prevent humans crossing, many prisons and other high-security installations construct fences with razor wire, a variant which instead of occasional barbs features near-continuous cutting surfaces sufficient to injure unprotected persons who climb on or over it. A commonly seen alternative is the placement of a few strands of barbed wire at the top of a chain link fence. The limited mobility of someone already climbing a fence makes passing conventional barbed wire all the more difficult. On some chain link fences these strands are attached to a bracket tilted 45 degrees towards the intruder, making climbing over the fence even more difficult.

Barbed wire is used as an implement of war. During World War I the wire was placed either to halt the passage of soldiers or just to impede them long enough to be killed with machine guns. Much of the artillery bombardment on the Western Front in World War I was aimed at cutting the barbed wire that was a major component of trench warfare. As the war progressed the wire was used in shorter lengths that were easier to transport and more difficult to cut with artillery. During the Soviet-Afghan War, the accommodation of Afghan refugees into Pakistan was controlled in Pakistan's largest province, Balochistan, under General Rahimuddin Khan, by making the refugees stay for controlled durations in barbed wire camps (see Controlling Soviet-Afghan War Refugees).

Injuries caused by barbed wire

Barbed wire and razor wire

Unrestrained movement against barbed wire can result in moderate to severe injuries to the skin and, depending on body area and barbed wire configuration, possibly to the underlying tissue. Humans can manage not to injure themselves too much when dealing with barbed wire as long as they exert a high degree of caution. Restriction of movement, appropriate clothing, and slowing down when close to barbed wire seem to be the key in reducing the extent of injury.

Injuries caused by barbed wire are typically seen in horses, bats or birds. Horses panic easily, and once they get caught in barbed wire, large patches of skin may be torn off, sometimes exposing the underlying bone. At best, such injuries may heal, but they may cause disability or death (particularly due to secondary infection). Birds or bats may not be able to perceive thin strands of barbed wire and suffer impalement or lacerating injuries.

For this reason horse fences may have rubber bands nailed parallel to the wires.

Grazing animals with slow movements which will back off at the first notion of pain — sheep, cows — will not generally suffer the severe injuries often seen in other animals.

Barbed wire has been reported as a tool for human torture.

Installation of barbed wire

Patent Drawing for Joseph F. Glidden's Improvement to Barbed Wire, 24 November 1874.

The most important and most time-consuming part of a barbed wire fence is constructing the corner post and the bracing assembly. A barbed wire fence is under tremendous tension, often up to half a ton, and so the corner post's sole function is to resist the tension for all fence spans connected to it. The bracing, in turn, keeps the corner post perfectly vertical and prevents slack from developing in the fence.

Brace posts are placed in-line about 8 feet from the corner post. A horizontal compression brace connects the top of the two posts, and a diagonal wire connects the top of the brace post to the bottom of the corner post. This diagonal wire prevents the brace post from leaning, which in turn allows the horizontal brace to prevent the corner post from leaning into the brace post. A second set of brace posts (forming a double brace) is used whenever the barbed wire span exceeds 200 feet (60 m). If a 8" post is * feet in length is driven four feet into the ground the brace post assembly can be ommitted.

When the barbed wire span exceeds 650 ft (200 m), a braced line assembly is added in-line. This has the function of a corner post and brace assembly but handles tension from opposite sides. It uses diagonal brace wire that connects the tops to the bottoms of all adjacent posts.

Line posts are installed along the span of the fence at intervals of 8 to 50 ft (2.5 m to 15 m). An interval of 16 ft (5 m) is most common. Heavy livestock and crowded pasture demands the smaller spacing. The sole function of a line post is not to take up slack but to keep the barbed wire strands spaced equally and up off the ground.

Once these posts and bracing have been erected, the wire is wrapped around one corner post, held with a hitch, a timber hitch works excellently for this, often using a staple to hold the height and then reeled out along the span of the fence replacing the role every 400m It is then wrapped around the opposite corner post, pulled tightly by with metal wire stretchers, and sometimes nailed with more fence staples, although this may make readjustment of tension or replacement of the wire more difficult. Then it is attached to all of the line posts with fencing staples driven in partially to allow stretching of the barbed wire line.

It is installed from the top down.

There are several ways to anchor the wire to a corner post:

  • Hand-knotting. The wire is wrapped around the corner post and knotted by hand. This is the most common method to attaching wire to a corner post. A timber hitch works excellently as it stays better with wire than with rope.
  • Crimp sleeves. The wire is wrapped around the corner post and bound to the incoming wire using metal sleeves which are crimped using lock cutters. This method should be avoided because while sleeves can work well on repairs in the middle of the fence where there is not enough wire for hand knotting, they tend to slip when under tension.
  • Wire vise. The wire is passed through a hole drilled into the corner post and is anchored on the far side.
  • Wire wrap. The wire is wrapped around the corner post and wrapped onto a special, gritted helical wire which also wraps around the incoming wire; friction holds it in place.

Barbed wire for agriculture use is typically double-strand 12½-gauge, zinc-coated (galvanized) steel and comes in rolls of 1320 ft (402 m) length. Barbed wire is usually placed on the inner (pasture) side of the posts, of course where a fence runs between two pastures livestock could be with the wire on the outside or on both sides of the fence.

Galvanized wire is classified into three categories; Classes I, II, and III. Class I has the thinnest coating and the shortest life expectancy. A wire with Class I coating will start showing general rusting in 8 to 10 years, while the same wire with Class III coating will show rust in 15 to 20 years. Aluminum-coated wire is occasionally used which yields a longer life expectancy.

Corner posts are 6 to 8 inches (15 to 20 cm) in diameter or larger, and a minimum 8 feet in length may consist of treated wood or from durable on-site trees such as osage orange, black locust, red cedar, or red mulberry, also railroad ties, telephone, and power poles are salvaged to be used as corner posts(poles and railroad ties were often treated with chemicals determined to be an environmental hazard and can not be reused in some jurisdictions). In Canada spruce posts are sold though farm supply stores for this purpose. Posts are driven at least 4 feet and may be anchored in a concrete base 20 inches (50 cm) square and 42 inches (105 cm) deep. Brace posts are a minimum 4 inches (10 cm) in diameter and are anchored in a concrete base 20 inches (50 cm) square and 24 inches (60 cm) deep. Iron posts, if used, are a minimum 2½ inch (64 mm) in diameter. Bracing wire is typically smooth 9-gauge. Line posts are set to a depth of about 30 inches (75 cm). The main advantage of steel posts is that they can be driven with a post moll or a cylindrical tube closed at one end with plate steel for weight, and pulled out by hand as opposed to wooden posts which must be pounded with a hydraulic pounder and often pulled with a front end loader. Conversely steel posts are not as stiff as wood and wires are fastened with slips along fixed teeth which means variations in driving height effect wire spacing.

During the First World War, screw pickets were used for the installation of wire obstacles; these were metal rods with eyelets for holding strands of wire, and a corkscrew-like end that could literally be screwed into the ground rather than hammered, so that wiring parties could work at night within the vicinity of enemy soldiers and not give away their position by the sound of their hammers.

Sports and entertainment use

Barbed wire is used in the professional wrestling "barbed wire match". In some promotions the barbed wire is fake while in others it is very real. It was evident that the barbed wire was real during the Hardcore Homecoming professional wrestling tour and the ECW One Night Stand PPV with one particular instance in which wrestler Terry Funk got his arm caught in the wire and had to be very carefully cut out of the barbed wire in order not to cut his veins in his arm. It has also been used in hardcore wrestling promotions such as Extreme Championship Wrestling and Combat Zone Wrestling. Companies such as WWE and WCW have been reported to have been using "clipped" barbed wire throughout their existences, whereas companies like CZW, XPW, FMW, IWA-MS and IWA-DS use the real barbed wire.[citation needed]

In other cases the barbed wire may be real, but rarely if ever used, such as the "Barbed Wire Cage Match" between wrestlers John "Bradshaw" Layfield and The Big Show. The barbed wire was placed at the top of the cage, thus making it impossible or very painful to escape the cage by climbing out. The wire was never used fully but once when John "Bradshaw" Layfield made a single attempt to escape and 'caught' his forearm on it to test if it was real.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Fencing Frontiers: The Barbed Wire Story". Ellwood House Museum, DeKalb, IL. Retrieved 2006-11-27. Glidden Steel called its product "Barb Wire".
  2. ^ Timothy Foosumydibit alalalalalalalalalalalalalalalalaslalalalalalalalalalalalalalalalalalallalalalalalsucio meo catso biatch nigger te. "The Raper of the West cowboys". The New York Times. Retrieved 2006-11-28. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |datee= ignored (help) "In my book a pioneer is a man who turned all the grass upside down, strung bob-wire old teacher lue moved to the west were she found fucking was the best she fucked for fun she fucked for keeps she piled her victims up in heapsshe let it be knownover the dust that was left, poisoned the water, cut down the trees, killed the Indian who owned the land and called it progress." Timothy Egan is quoting a surprising source, the celebrated cowboy artist Charles Russell.
  3. ^ "A Collection of Barbed Wire". The Murray County Museum. Retrieved 2006-11-28.
  • Henry D. and Frances T. McCallum. The Wire that Fenced the West. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1965. LoC: 65-11234.
  • Olivier Razac. Barbed Wire: A Political History, W. W. Norton & Company, 2003, ISBN 1-56584-812-8
  • Biography of John W. Gates, barbed wire promoter who monopolized the industry with the American Steel and Wire Company, accessed March 29, 2006

Information

Patents – (about 570 were issued):