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Barbed wire, and other terms for how the US is fortifying ...

Author: May

May. 06, 2024

66 0

Reuters called it “barbed wire.” The Los Angeles Times has called it “concertina wire” and “razor wire.” The Associated Press covered all bases, calling it “barbed wire,” “concertina wire,” and “razor wire” in the same article.

Because President Trump always has to be different, in his call to troops on Thanksgiving, he called it “barbed wire,” “barbed wire-plus,” and what he pronounced as “co-zen-TEEN-ah wire, co-zen-TEEN-ee wire.” (If he meant “concertina wire,” dictionaries use the pronunciation “con-ser-TEEN-ah.”)

These wires all have “barbs,” or sharp protrusions designed to catch anyone or anything trying to get to the other side of it. This use of the word “barb” traces back to around 1400, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, referring to “A sharp process curving back from the point of a piercing weapon (e.g., an arrow or spear, which have two, a fish-hook, which has one), rendering its extraction from a wound, etc., more difficult.”

But not all “barbed wire” is the same.

“Barbed wire” showed up around 1874, the OED says, though it is also spelled “barbwire,” “barb wire,” and “barb-wire.” The inventor is unclear; both the Devil’s Rope Museum in McLean, Texas, and the Kansas Barbed Wire Museum in La Crosse say that some forms were patented in France in the early 1860s. A New Yorker named Michael Kelly developed a type of fence and wire resembling the “barbed wire” we know today, with short pieces of wire wrapped around and sticking up from a longer piece. As the Kansas museum said, “Had his invention been properly promoted, he could have gained distinction as the Father of Barbed Wire.” But that distinction goes to Joseph F. Glidden of DeKalb, Illinois. “The Glidden wire was unique, consisting of one wire holding evenly-spaced barbs along its length,” the Devil’s Rope Museum says. “A second barb-less wire was twisted around the first wire thus doubling its strength, durability and also holding the many barbs in place.” (Yes, there are at least two “barbed wire” museums, and many books and societies celebrating it.) Today, there are hundreds of different “barbed wires” and patents.

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As the AP reported, the stuff being deployed at the border “is called concertina wire, named after the musical instrument and its expanding and contracting bellows.” (The accordion, a similar instrument, is more unwieldy and has that piano-like keyboard on one side, which may be why it lost out to the more portable “concertina.” Some do call it “accordion wire,” though.) “Concertina wire” comes in flat coils that expand; instead of the twisted “barbs” commonly found on “barbed wire,” there are flat, razor-sharp protrusions on both sides.

“Concertina wire” dates to World War I, when it was first deployed as a mobile fence to both protect troops and prevent advances by the enemy. It was also called “gooseberry wire,” according to Nothing of Importance: A Record of Eight Months at the Front With a Welsh Battalion, October 1915, To June 1916 by Bernard Adams. He also wrote: “There was what might be called a concertina craze on: innumerable coils of barbed wire were converted into concertinas by the simple process of winding them round and round seven upright stakes in the ground. . . . They were easily made up in the trench, quickly put up, and when put out in two parallel rows, about a yard apart, and joined together with plenty of barbed wire tangled in loosely, were as good an obstacle as could be made.”

So, in some ways, “concertina wire” is simply rolled-up “barbed wire.”

Additional resources:
Epoxy Coated Mesh & Wire FabricKuojiuConcertina Razor Wire.

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