It comes from a tradition followed by some Native American tribes. At the end of a war, the tribes' chiefs would literally bury a hatchet as a symbolic gesture of their new peace.
Not all tribes followed this tradition. However, it likely predated the European settlement of the Americas, and it was seen as a solemn and important ceremony. One 1664 account describes the Iriquois proposing peace as “proclaim[ing] that they wish to unite all the nations of the earth and to hurl the hatchet so far into the depths of the earth that it shall never again be seen in the future.”
In fact, some sources claim that the practice of burying a hatchet came from the Iroquois. Per oral histories, the leaders Deganawidah and Hiawatha convinced the five tribes of the Iroquois Confederacy (the Mohawk, Cayuga, Oneida, Onondaga, and Seneca) to stop fighting, at which point they decided to bury their weapons under the roots of a white pine. The timing of this event is widely disputed, since the nature of oral traditions makes determining the exact date difficult, but it definitely happened prior to the mid-1600s.
According to etymology blog The Phrase Finder, one of the earliest uses of the exact phrase “bury the hatchet" comes from a 1747 book, The History of the Five Indian Nations of Canada. Here’s that passage:
The great Matter under Consideration with the Brethren is, how to strengthen themselves, and weaken their Enemy. My Opinion is, that the Brethren should fend Messengers to the Utawawas, Twibtwies, and the farther Indians, and to send back likewise some of the Prisoners of these Nations, if you have any left to bury the Hatchet, and to make a Covenant-chain, that they may put away all the French that are among them.By the early 20th century, the practice was well known in the United States, and it was no longer exclusively associated with native tradition. In 1913, two former soldiers—one Confederate, one Union—commemorated the 50th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg by purchasing a hatchet from a local hardware store and burying it at the site of the battle.
Scince a fray is a fight the opposite of fray is when you bury the hatchet.
The saying 'to bury the hatchet' means to forgive and forget, make peace, etc. It is something the Native Americans would literally do in times of harmony with other tribes and the new settlers. A similiar idioms would be to 'smoke the peace pipe', which also came from the Native Americans.
I want to kill someone with a hatchet
Where did Brian in the book Hatchet get his Hatchet
Bury
Bury the Hatchet - film - was created in 2010.
The duration of Bury the Hatchet - film - is 1.43 hours.
Bury the Hatchet - album - was created on 1999-04-19.
When you are finished cutting firewood, it is safest to bury the hatchet in the end grain of a spare log. It seems like those two will never bury the hatchet.
The cast of Bury the Hatchet - 2008 includes: Shulie Cowen as Elspeth Hatchet Rich Fulcher as Toby Shore Mary Pat Farrell as Hailey Hatchet
Bury the Hatchet - 2008 TV was released on: USA: 1 September 2008 (internet)
Indians Bury Hatchet on Custer Battlefield - 1926 was released on: USA: 1926
In the House - 1995 Bury the Hatchet 3-4 was released on: USA: 16 September 1996
The hatchet should burriedin the ground for safety and lets not fight anymore
Forgive and Forget
Top Shot - 2010 Bury the Hatchet 2-6 was released on: USA: 15 March 2011
The cast of Bury the Hatchet - 1937 includes: Stanley Blystone Monte Collins Beatrice Curtis June Gittelson Tom Kennedy Sammy McKim