Official Pennsylvania bowhunting safety course Link to Pennsylvania Game Commission

Hello, bowhunter! Pennsylvania's online bowhunter course has moved. Click here to go to the latest version of the Bowhunter Pennsylvania course—the official bowhunting safety course of the Pennsylvania Game Commission.

The following course material is for reference only. Please go to the new course to complete your Pennsylvania certification.

Chapter 1: Introduction to Bowhunting
The Development of Modern Bowhunting

Dr. Saxton Pope and Arthur Young are widely regarded as the “Fathers of Bowhunting.” In the early 1900s, Pope and Young cared for Ishi, the last known survivor of the Yana tribal group in California. Ishi impressed them with his bowhunting skills. He demonstrated how he made his equipment and stalked and shot game. Pope and Young followed his lead and took a variety of large and small game with archery equipment. In 1923, Pope published the book Hunting with the Bow and Arrow, which introduced many Americans to bowhunting.

Pope and Young Club logo

Ishi was the last known survivor of the Yana tribal group in California. Dr. Saxton Pope and Arthur Young cared for him in the last years of his life, and Ishi shared his bowhunting knowledge—making equipment, stalking game, and shooting game—with them.

Ishi used handmade obsidian points similar to the one pictured below.

A hand-made Obsidian point

Ishi, last known survivor of the Yana tribe in California

In the 1940s, Doug Easton started producing quality aluminum arrows. In the 1950s, showman and master archer Howard Hill popularized bowhunting with demonstrations, movie appearances, and a trip to Africa, where he hunted and shot many species of animals. Hill developed his archery skills and shot powerful longbows using 100-pound-plus draw weights. He delighted crowds with trick shots at long distances and unusual angles.

From the late 1950s through the 1970s, Fred Bear, Ben Pearson, and Earl Hoyt furthered the development of bowhunting equipment. Educational programs based on their techniques, including exciting films of some hunts in the early 1970s, did much to popularize the sport of bowhunting. More importantly, these men manufactured and sold bowhunting equipment at affordable prices.

Fred Bear

Fred Bear helped further the development of bowhunting equipment.

An important technological development during this period was the invention of the compound bow. Holless Wilbur Allen applied for a patent on the compound bow in June 1966. The patent application was entitled “Archery Bow with Draw Force Multiplying Attachments.” Allen sent an early prototype of his compound bow to Tom Jennings, a California bowmaker, who, with Allen, became the first manufacturer of compound bows. Not long afterward, Olympus and Carroll and many other archery companies began production.

 

Pennsylvania Game Commission
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Official bowhunting safety course for Pennsylvania bowhunters last modified: March 10, 2011
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