Older knives,
- muskrat man
- Gold Tier
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itf it weren't cracked in some many places ,and didn't have the shield I'd say go for a cigar band, due to it's age i'd leave it as is, just fill the cracks with some superglue, polish it down and leave it be.
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Big Boys & Old Toys
Great Old Knives Folks & Advice
Looks like rain moving in for a couple of days. Got two piles of dirt, soon to be mud in the yard. I am having better luck inside, I think
That looks like a Mint straight line to me Smiling-Knife
.
Johnnie, I have a little info on your timber scribe. I will get to it asap, if someone else does not.
Here is an old Frary little boys knife made with embossed pewter handles. The works are internal and still has good tension. Honed blade, they taught the kid right!
Decent shape for approximately 125 years old.
Frary later teamed up with Landers & Clark and they made a boys knife together.
It was the Official Boy Scout pocket knife from 1931 to 1939, BSA #1585. All nickel silver pins, bolsters, shield, bail and milled liners. The handles are black composition.
9ball


Looks like rain moving in for a couple of days. Got two piles of dirt, soon to be mud in the yard. I am having better luck inside, I think

That looks like a Mint straight line to me Smiling-Knife

Johnnie, I have a little info on your timber scribe. I will get to it asap, if someone else does not.
Here is an old Frary little boys knife made with embossed pewter handles. The works are internal and still has good tension. Honed blade, they taught the kid right!
Decent shape for approximately 125 years old.
Frary later teamed up with Landers & Clark and they made a boys knife together.
It was the Official Boy Scout pocket knife from 1931 to 1939, BSA #1585. All nickel silver pins, bolsters, shield, bail and milled liners. The handles are black composition.
9ball

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- Frary OUR BOY circa 1880 1.jpg (7.53 KiB) Viewed 2871 times
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- Frary OUR BOY circa 1880 2.jpg (7.88 KiB) Viewed 2871 times
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- LF&C UNIVERSAL Offical Boy Scout Knife.jpg (12.69 KiB) Viewed 2871 times
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- LF&C UNIVERSAL Offical Boy Scout Knife 1.jpg (29.94 KiB) Viewed 2871 times
My Oath as an American Army Soldier did not come with an expiration date.
- muskrat man
- Gold Tier
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nice ones 9 ball, LF&C made a darn good knife!
- Attachments
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- I-XL George Wostenholm split back whittler with elephant ivory handle, late 1800's I'm guessing.
- IXL splitback.jpg (43.03 KiB) Viewed 2865 times
Custom knives, repair, restoration & embellishment
Certified Hubertus, Taylor, & Schrade repairman past and present
http://www.muskratmanknives.com
https://www.facebook.com/Muskratmanknives
Certified Hubertus, Taylor, & Schrade repairman past and present
http://www.muskratmanknives.com
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9Ball,
That Boy's knife is sweet!
Dale
That Boy's knife is sweet!


Dale
Dale
AAPK Administrator
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AAPK Administrator
Please visit my AAPK store: www.allaboutpocketknives.com/orvet
Job 13:15
"Buy more ammo!" - Johnnie Fain
“Evil is Powerless If The Good are Unafraid.” – Ronald Reagan
- smiling-knife
- Posts: 3365
- Joined: Mon Feb 13, 2006 8:39 pm
- Location: Bedford, UK
Rare Old Jacks.
A collector allowed me to select these from a huge collection! It's like Harness Jack Heaven for me, as he was quite happy for me to have his "punch jacks"!! The top knife came from a different guy, but is no less hard to get!
Union Cut Co.
Case Tested (been looking for this pattern for years!)
Case Bradford
Case Tested
Case Bros Little Valley
W.R.Case & Sons
Union Cut Co.
Case Tested (been looking for this pattern for years!)
Case Bradford
Case Tested
Case Bros Little Valley
W.R.Case & Sons
- El Lobo
- Gold Tier
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Very nice, as always Charlie. You seem to be able to Harness some really nice older knives.
Bill



Bill
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- muskrat man
- Gold Tier
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love that little valley!
Custom knives, repair, restoration & embellishment
Certified Hubertus, Taylor, & Schrade repairman past and present
http://www.muskratmanknives.com
https://www.facebook.com/Muskratmanknives
Certified Hubertus, Taylor, & Schrade repairman past and present
http://www.muskratmanknives.com
https://www.facebook.com/Muskratmanknives
- smiling-knife
- Posts: 3365
- Joined: Mon Feb 13, 2006 8:39 pm
- Location: Bedford, UK
- smiling-knife
- Posts: 3365
- Joined: Mon Feb 13, 2006 8:39 pm
- Location: Bedford, UK
- muskrat man
- Gold Tier
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thats a nice on S-K, I guess the toothpick-tweezer ideas isn't new fangled after all!
Custom knives, repair, restoration & embellishment
Certified Hubertus, Taylor, & Schrade repairman past and present
http://www.muskratmanknives.com
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Certified Hubertus, Taylor, & Schrade repairman past and present
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- smiling-knife
- Posts: 3365
- Joined: Mon Feb 13, 2006 8:39 pm
- Location: Bedford, UK
- smiling-knife
- Posts: 3365
- Joined: Mon Feb 13, 2006 8:39 pm
- Location: Bedford, UK
Heredity
Completely forgot about this knife for many years! This is an oldie with a story!
My (patertnal) grandfather immigrated to Buffalo, from Sicily just before 1900. After working for a few years as a brick mason, he established a food wholesale and importing business, selling local goods, and bringing in olive oil, cheese and all the other traditional foods enjoyed by his countrymen and women, and of course now by most Americans! The family all worked in the biz, and in between the wars, my dad had these knives made for customer gifts, at good old Camillus cutlery, a 2 hour drive from Buffalo! Most of you know my SFOs from Queen, so this proves the apple doesn't fall far from the tree! "Daily" was the in-house brand for canned fruits and vegetables, and "Falls" macaroni products (not shown) were from the first pasta factory in North America, owned by my mother's family in Niagara Falls, N.Y. The business relationship is how my parents met. This knife was in a box of mementos my dad left me in 1989 when he passed away.
My (patertnal) grandfather immigrated to Buffalo, from Sicily just before 1900. After working for a few years as a brick mason, he established a food wholesale and importing business, selling local goods, and bringing in olive oil, cheese and all the other traditional foods enjoyed by his countrymen and women, and of course now by most Americans! The family all worked in the biz, and in between the wars, my dad had these knives made for customer gifts, at good old Camillus cutlery, a 2 hour drive from Buffalo! Most of you know my SFOs from Queen, so this proves the apple doesn't fall far from the tree! "Daily" was the in-house brand for canned fruits and vegetables, and "Falls" macaroni products (not shown) were from the first pasta factory in North America, owned by my mother's family in Niagara Falls, N.Y. The business relationship is how my parents met. This knife was in a box of mementos my dad left me in 1989 when he passed away.
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- Campagna&Sons.jpg (47.06 KiB) Viewed 3125 times
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Old Knives
Folks
,
Been trying to get caught up, but I do not think that is possible, this placed has really grown.
Just gonna try and work on one area at a time and right now it is old knives.
steve
Those are some mighty fine looking pocket knives. I am beginning to like that little eisenhower pattern.
upnorth
That is the prettiest set of punch jacks I have ever seen. Great old pattern. Plus a cool piece of Family history.
smiling-knife
Thanks Smiling-Knfe, that a nice Horsemans knives. Lots of history with Horses. They have became more of a "Pleasure' ride around here. I showed one to my neighbor (he breeds horses) and he never seen an old one before.
orvet
Thanks, IIRC Frary was the first to make these.
singin46
Thanks and Welcome
muskrat man
That is a nice old knife, I believe I would leave it as is. You are right, LFC did make alot of fine old cutlery and other items also. The Boss still uses one of their old meat grinders to make wontons. I started to post an image of it, maybe one day.
jonet143
My GrandDad ran a saw mill and my Dad told me he used them when he was a kid, that would have been around 1920 or so. I guess you read Levine 4 revised. I believe that is where I saw them called "Race Knives" also. For working on wagon wheels, spokes, etc.. The shape of the blade was use to push on/in pull spokes. Over the years on the web I see them in the Blacksmithing/Old tools category alot.
That is the first Camillus I have seen. I saw/had another once stamped OVB. Most of the other I have seen have been made/stamped by New York Knife Company. I have seen those in early catalogs, so I am guess they are around 100 years old. The pattern has been around longer that that, I am sure.
Here is a excellent/near mint? New York Knife Company scribe with the Hammer Brand tang stamp. They also made the first Official Boy Scout Knives 1923-1931. One is shown below that. I guess I could replace the bail, just leave it be I reckon.
That is a Remington R4373, the first Official Girl Scout 1925?-1940 knife also shown. It has the Tillmans two piece can opener, so it was made some time after 1926.
9ball

Been trying to get caught up, but I do not think that is possible, this placed has really grown.
Just gonna try and work on one area at a time and right now it is old knives.
steve
Those are some mighty fine looking pocket knives. I am beginning to like that little eisenhower pattern.
upnorth
That is the prettiest set of punch jacks I have ever seen. Great old pattern. Plus a cool piece of Family history.
smiling-knife
Thanks Smiling-Knfe, that a nice Horsemans knives. Lots of history with Horses. They have became more of a "Pleasure' ride around here. I showed one to my neighbor (he breeds horses) and he never seen an old one before.
orvet
Thanks, IIRC Frary was the first to make these.
singin46
Thanks and Welcome
muskrat man
That is a nice old knife, I believe I would leave it as is. You are right, LFC did make alot of fine old cutlery and other items also. The Boss still uses one of their old meat grinders to make wontons. I started to post an image of it, maybe one day.
jonet143
My GrandDad ran a saw mill and my Dad told me he used them when he was a kid, that would have been around 1920 or so. I guess you read Levine 4 revised. I believe that is where I saw them called "Race Knives" also. For working on wagon wheels, spokes, etc.. The shape of the blade was use to push on/in pull spokes. Over the years on the web I see them in the Blacksmithing/Old tools category alot.
That is the first Camillus I have seen. I saw/had another once stamped OVB. Most of the other I have seen have been made/stamped by New York Knife Company. I have seen those in early catalogs, so I am guess they are around 100 years old. The pattern has been around longer that that, I am sure.
Here is a excellent/near mint? New York Knife Company scribe with the Hammer Brand tang stamp. They also made the first Official Boy Scout Knives 1923-1931. One is shown below that. I guess I could replace the bail, just leave it be I reckon.
That is a Remington R4373, the first Official Girl Scout 1925?-1940 knife also shown. It has the Tillmans two piece can opener, so it was made some time after 1926.
9ball

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- First Official Boy & Girl Scout Knives 1.jpg (12.22 KiB) Viewed 3093 times
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- NYKC Hammer Brand.jpg (9.22 KiB) Viewed 3093 times
My Oath as an American Army Soldier did not come with an expiration date.
cool scout knives 9 ball. i have brl3, where i read about "rase". i had one like yours but someone used it. a lot. half of the blade used and the kick filed down to close in frame. someone else wanted more than me so it was sold. i felt lucky to find the old camillus in suck good condition. trying to picture how it was used on spokes other than as a gouge or marker. thanks for sharing your dad's story.
johnnie f 1949
on the cutting edge is sometimes not the place to be.
please support our troops - past and present
if not a member...join the NKCA! they're on our side.
on the cutting edge is sometimes not the place to be.
please support our troops - past and present
if not a member...join the NKCA! they're on our side.
wirejack
here is an old schrade wirejack. simple, cheap and useful.
johnnie f 1949
on the cutting edge is sometimes not the place to be.
please support our troops - past and present
if not a member...join the NKCA! they're on our side.
on the cutting edge is sometimes not the place to be.
please support our troops - past and present
if not a member...join the NKCA! they're on our side.