Popguns were historically constructed from natural materials such as hollow plant stems, especially elder (
Sambucus nigra), and fitted with carved wooden plungers. Children commonly used berries, peas, or damp paper as ammunition. Such devices were widespread in rural Europe and North America and were often described in 18th- and 19th-century instructional literature for children. Various types of popguns have been described, such as popguns made of a hollowed-out
alder, willow, or elder branch in Texas and in
Appalachia in the early 1900s, used to fire a wad of paper. Similarly an 1864 American children's book advises using a piece of elder with an iron rod as the piston, shooting pieces of "moistened tow". a similar anecdote from Alabama in the early 20th century used an elder tube, oak piston, and fired peas or
chinaberries. Similar tube-and-plunger toys, firing small stones, were used by the
Plains Indians and Native Americans of the Pacific Northwest, though these may post-date European contact. Similar toys were found in other American Indian cultures. The popgun evolved from a primitive folk toy into a mass-produced consumer product. By the mid-19th century, popguns began to be manufactured commercially, often from turned wood with leather-sealed pistons. American companies like Upton & Co. and later
Daisy Manufacturing began producing lithographed tin and steel popguns. These often featured "break-action" loading mechanisms similar to real shotguns to appeal to the "Wild West" cultural trends of the time. In the 20th century, metal and plastic versions became common as industrial toy production expanded. ==Derivatives==