Dealer profile
By Nicole Anderson
Arms and the Man WE SPOKE WITH JOEL BOHY, A SPECIALIST IN HISTORIC ARMS AND MILITARIA FOR SKINNER AUCTIONEERS AND APPRAISERS, ABOUT HIS VAST AND VARIED KNOWLEDGE OF MILITARY HISTORY AND MATERIAL CULTURE, HIS EXPEDITIONS TO ARCHAEOLOGICAL DIGS AT BATTLEFIELDS, AND HIS TALENT FOR MAKING REPRODUCTION ARMS AND UNIFORMS.
Joel Bohy marching with Captain David Brown’s company of Concord minutemen in a reenactment at the North Bridge in Concord, Massachusetts.
that was, I knew, a bayonet from the SpanishAmerican War era. They were saying it was captured on April 19, 1775, and I would say, “well, no, actually . . .” Through that, I would learn a lot more, and so would the museum.
where we had a range set up to study what happens when these weapons are fired and what they can and cannot actually do. Now I collect stuff to study what it does, and use what I collect for research.
TMA: How did you begin collecting? JB: Through all this research, I began collecting. Obviously, as a youngster, I couldn’t afford American Revolutionary War objects, though that was my main passion. I collected things from the Civil War, World War I, and World War II. When I was a child, there were many, many World War II veterans still around. I would sit and talk with them about their experiences. I would also go to militaria shows, and pick up artifacts or objects to complete uniforms and equipment that would have been worn and used by the common soldier during those wars.
TMA: Your expertise runs the gamut. Is it that once you start studying the period, you become interested in many different aspects of material culture? JB: I keep going back to this, because I was raised in Concord. You want to understand what these farmers, who were training to be militia and minutemen, used in their daily lives before they became citizen soldiers, and then during the time they were citizen soldiers. At least for me, I want to go through and study what, for example, they cooked with—and then that transfers to archaeology. What we find at these sites tells us what they used in their homes.
TMA: What is in your personal collection now? And what would you say is your most prized possession? JB: Well, it’s morphed a little bit since I started working at Skinner. I see so much of this material that I almost stopped collecting. I didn’t need to anymore. In a way, it was the thrill of the chase to find these objects and own them. But through working here and being around it so much, I don’t have to own them. And then through an archaeological dig I was doing in Minute Man National Historical Park near Concord, I met some other battlefield archaeologists, and I said: “You know,
Bohy holding Major John Buttrick’s sword while installing The Shot Heard Round the World: April 19, 1775, a 2014 exhibition at the Concord Museum. The sword was carried at the North Bridge battle on April 19, 1775. Photograph by Robert Cheney. A 1756 British Long Landpattern musket linked to the 43rd Regiment of Foot. Photographs courtesy of Skinner Auctioneers and Appraisers, Boston, Massachusetts.
wouldn’t it be great to do some ballistics on how these things actually functioned and their muzzle velocities and how that impacted different battles?” Then I started to have custom-built reproductions of American Revolutionary War muskets and fowlers made—different types of arms that would have been carried. Two years ago we did the first study and published it. We just recently finished working on the second part of the study down in Georgia,
The Magazine ANTIQUES: Could you tell me what first sparked your interest in this material? Joel Bohy: I grew up in Concord, Massachusetts, and obviously you know what happened there. I was infatuated with the history. I would spend any free time in the library, pulling out documents, and going to local historical sites and collections and trying to find objects that might relate to the start of the American Revolution, and then verify them through research. I would go to a small museum and see something
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