Collection ID
OBJ.000423
Type
Object
Date
Mid-1900s
Geography
Ecuador
Language
N/A
Medium
Wood and Reed
Dimensions
90.9 × 2.5 in. (231 × 6.5 cm)
Exhibit Location
On View at The Billy Graham Museum, Wheaton, IL

This poisoned dart blowgun was made and used by the Waodäni people of Ecuador. A thin, wooden, poisoned dart about 12 inches in length was inserted through the mouthpiece at one end. The hunter would blow the dart out the other end at their prey. The long length aided in accuracy. This poisoned dart blowgun was kept by Elisabeth Elliot as a reminder of her time living among the tribe as a Christian missionary during the 1950s.

Created in the mid-1900s by the Waodäni people, Ecuador; Gifted to Elisabeth Elliot (1926–2015); Via death in 2015 to Lars Gren, Little Rock, Arkansas; Donated in 2020 to Museum of the Bible, Washington, DC.

Questions about our Collections?

Visit Contact Us Page

(866) 430-MOTB

To acquire permission to use this image, please visit our Rights and Reproduction page .

More From The Collections

Book Binding Tool

Object
ca. 1600
Belgium

Book Binding Tool

Object
ca. 1600
Belgium

Book Binding Tool

Object
ca. 1600
Belgium