deadman DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
THIS ENTRY MAY CONTAIN OUTDATED INFORMATION, TERMS and EXAMPLES
1 n. — Obs.
one of two series of converging objects, such as posts, piles of turf, large upright stones, forming a funnel into which big game, such as buffalo, were driven into a pound for slaughter.
See also: deer drive deer hedge watching waiter
- 1858  [They set up] a lane of branches of trees, which are called "dead men" to the gate or trap of the pound.
- 1859  At one side [of a buffalo pound] an entrance is left, about ten feet wide, and from each side of this, to a distance of half a mile, a row of posts or short stumps, called deadmen, are planted, at a distance of twenty feet each, gradually widening into out the plain from the entrance.
2 n.
any solidly fixed object to which a block and tackle can be hitched. See 1954 quote.