In 1874, a farmer in the United States took two thin wires, twisted them together, and fixed sharp metal points along the length. He called it barbed wire. It cost very little. Anyone could put it up. It was strong enough to hold back a 600 kg cow. Within twenty-five years, it had changed the map of a continent. Within fifty years, it was strung across the battlefields of the First World War, and millions of soldiers were dying in front of it. Today, barbed wire surrounds farms, borders, and prisons on every continent. This little object — just metal and points — is one of the most powerful inventions in modern history. It also has a darker name. People who study it sometimes call it 'the devil's rope'. This lesson asks why.
This is the problem barbed wire solved. On the great plains of North America, there was almost no wood and no stone. Farmers could not afford to build long fences. Cattle wandered freely and ate other people's crops. Joseph Glidden's invention in 1874 was simple, cheap, and used only a small amount of metal. One person with a hammer and a few wooden posts could fence a huge area in a few days. Suddenly, land could be divided up. The age of the open range was over. For farmers, this was wonderful. For ranchers who had used the open land for free, it was a disaster. For the Indigenous peoples whose land it was, it was something else again — and we will come to that next.
This is one of the most important parts of the story, and the part that is often left out. The plains were not 'empty' before fences. Indigenous nations had lived there for thousands of years. Their way of life depended on open land and on bison herds that moved with the seasons. Barbed wire — together with railways, hunters, and the United States Army — broke this way of life apart. The bison were almost wiped out. The Indigenous nations were forced onto small areas called reservations. Some Lakota called barbed wire 'the devil's rope' because of what it did to their land and their lives. The wire itself was not evil. But it was a tool that made it much easier and cheaper to take land and to keep people off it. Inventions are never neutral. They always help some people more than others. Students should think about who designs things, who pays for them, and who lives on the wrong side of them.
Before the war, generals thought modern battles would be quick. They were wrong. Barbed wire turned every attack into a slow, exposed walk. A soldier caught on the wire could not move. A soldier waiting to cut the wire was a target. Whole armies died trying to cross fields of wire that one farmer could have put up in a week. On the first day of the Battle of the Somme in 1916, around 20,000 British soldiers died — many of them tangled in wire that the artillery had failed to destroy. Barbed wire did not invent industrial war, but it made it possible. It is a strong example of how a tool made for one purpose (keeping cattle in) can be used for another (killing people in huge numbers). The same wire that fenced a field in Kansas in 1900 was strung across France in 1916. Students should notice how short the journey was — and how few people were thinking, at any step, about where it would lead.
Students will have different views on this and that is fine. The point is to see that barbed wire is not history — it is current. Every day, in many countries, governments choose to use this 150-year-old technology to control where people can go. Sometimes the reasons are practical: a building site needs to keep thieves out. Sometimes they are about national security. Sometimes they are about people who have lost everything and are trying to reach safety. Ask students: what is the difference between a fence around a school and a fence between two countries? What is the difference between keeping animals in and keeping people out? There are no easy answers. But students should see that fences are choices, and that someone always pays for them — sometimes the people inside, sometimes the people outside.
Barbed wire is a simple but powerful invention. It was patented in 1874 in the United States by Joseph Glidden. Two strands of steel wire are twisted together with sharp barbs added at regular spaces. The barbs prick anything — animal or human — that tries to push through. Within fifty years, this object had changed farming, taken land from Indigenous peoples, made the trenches of the First World War deadly, and become a tool of borders, prisons, and camps. It is cheap, easy to make, and easy to put up. Today it is one of the most common manufactured objects in the world. The story of barbed wire is the story of how a small change in technology can change a whole society — and not always for the better.
| Date | Event | What changed |
|---|---|---|
| 1874 | Joseph Glidden patents his design in Illinois, United States | A cheap, easy-to-make fencing wire is born |
| 1880s | Barbed wire spreads across the great plains of North America | The open range ends. Farmers gain. Indigenous peoples lose their land and the bison. |
| 1899-1902 | British forces use barbed wire in concentration camps in the Second Boer War in South Africa | For the first time, barbed wire is used to hold large groups of people |
| 1914-1918 | First World War: trenches lined with vast walls of barbed wire | The wire makes attacks deadly. Millions die in front of it. |
| 1939-1945 | Barbed and electric wire used in prison and death camps | The wire becomes a symbol of the worst crimes of the 20th century |
| Today | Used on farms, borders, prisons, and building sites worldwide | A 150-year-old design is still one of the most common ways to control space |
Barbed wire is old technology. People do not use it any more.
Barbed wire is still made in huge amounts and used all over the world today. New border fences in many countries are made of barbed or razor wire.
Some inventions stay useful for a very long time, even when newer technology exists. Cheap and simple often beats clever and expensive.
The American West was empty before settlers and farmers arrived.
Many Indigenous nations had lived on the great plains for thousands of years. They had their own languages, governments, and ways of using the land. Barbed wire helped to take that land away.
Saying a place was 'empty' is a way of saying the people who lived there did not count. They did, and their descendants are still here.
Barbed wire is just a fence. It is no different from a wall or a hedge.
Barbed wire was the first cheap way to fence huge areas of open land. Walls and hedges take time, money, and materials. Barbed wire takes a few hours and a small amount of steel. That difference changed history.
When something becomes much cheaper, more people use it, and they use it for new things. Barbed wire made fencing whole landscapes possible for the first time.
Barbed wire only matters in farming. War is decided by guns and bombs.
In the First World War, barbed wire was one of the main reasons attacks failed and soldiers died in such large numbers. Without the wire, the trenches would have worked very differently.
Defensive technology — walls, wire, mines — often shapes wars more than weapons do. Barbed wire is a clear example.
This lesson covers four sensitive topics: the loss of land and life by Indigenous peoples in North America, deaths in the First World War, concentration camps in the Boer War and the Second World War, and modern border fences. Treat each carefully and plainly. Do not call the American plains 'empty' or 'wild' before settlement — name the Indigenous nations who lived there and say their descendants are alive today. Do not romanticise the trenches or treat the Somme as an adventure story; the scale of the deaths matters. When you mention concentration camps, name them clearly but do not give graphic detail — younger students do not need it, and older students will read about it elsewhere. The modern border question is live and political; present it as a real debate with serious people on different sides, and do not push your own view. If you have students whose families have crossed borders, in either direction, be aware that this lesson may touch a raw nerve — make space for silence and do not call on anyone in particular.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about barbed wire.
What is barbed wire made of, and who invented the most successful design?
How did barbed wire change the great plains of North America?
Why was barbed wire so important in the First World War?
Why do some people call barbed wire 'the devil's rope'?
Give one way that barbed wire is still important today.
These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.
Is barbed wire a good invention or a bad one? Or is it neither?
When is it right for a country to build a fence on its border? When is it wrong?
Think of a small invention from your own time — a phone, a plastic bottle, a charger. In fifty years, what might it have done to the world that no one expected?
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