cb51 wrote:I was wondering what kind of conditions must have been present in the U.S. for knives to evolve to the styles that are so typical of American knives, when most of the same conditions were present in Europe but they just stuck with a simple single blade knife? I look at the three bladed stockman, and it seems like overkill to have three blades, vs just one and keep it sharp. Not looking for an answer, just musing out loud here to other knife nuts. Like why does the American cowboy need three blades, when an Argentine Gaucho or Spanish sheep herder has just used a large single blade knife like a sodbuster? And then you have the French using an Opinel for everything!
I think Americans like to apply “American ingenuity” to their tools to refine them to do more efficiently the work for which they are used.
The popular Stockman pattern is essentially a knife designed for the cowboy, shepherd or someone else who works with animals on a daily basis. Most people in would have fallen into this category in 1900. It typically has a sheepfoot blade, a spey blade and a spey blade. In some patterns a punch blade is added in place of the spey or sheepfoot blade.
The clip blade is a general all-purpose knife blade. It is the longest blade on a stockman pattern and is used for tasks where a larger blade is helpful, and for general cutting chores such as skinning an animal or making shavings to start a fire. The fine point on the tip is good for detail work or for piercing cuts such as a cowboy would make on the ear of a steer when ear marking the cattle. Earmarking is cutting a certain pattern in one or both ears to identify cattle. I have also seen the long clip blade used to pierce though the hide of a cow’s back and into the 1st or 2nd stomach to relieve the stomach pressure of a cow that had the bloat, (best stand down wind). The process works well and the cow heals up quickly.
The sheepfoot blade is designed to trim hooves. The straight edge makes this easier to use than the slight curve in most clip blades, especially when the animal you are working on is not cooperative. The strong point created by the steep angle at the front of the blade is very useful for heavy cutting chores such as cutting hooves or in cutting thick leather.
The spey blade is ground thin (usually hollow ground) giving it a very thin and sharp edge; exactly the edge needed for castrating an animal. It is also great for field dressing animals, with the sweeping front edge of the blade. Many spey blades (especially those made by Case) were etched with the words: “FOR FLESH ONLY.” A fine sharp blade makes a cleaner cut that heals much faster than a ragged cut made by a duller blade. This is important when the cowboy is castrating a bunch of young bulls in a heard. The newly made steers are left in the herd on open rangeland. There was neither the manpower nor the place to separate these animals from the herd and doctor them if they got infected. So anything that helped them heal better and avoid infection was a good thing, (like a sharp knife to make a clean cut).
A forth blade often appearing in Cattle knives and sometimes in the Stockman pattern is the punch blade. A cowboy spent the day setting in a leather saddle and holding leather reigns in his hands. Teams of horses were harnessed with leather harnesses. It was inevitable that at some point a piece of critical leather equipment would fail and have to be repaired. Repairs were accomplished in the field by the cowboy himself with tools and materials at hand; usually his pocketknife and pieces of leather or perhaps a rivet.
Having grown up on a ranch I have seen these blades used for their respective purposes. It is not that a single blade could not be used for all the tasks; it is just that the appropriate blade for the job works easier, faster, makes cleaner cuts, and does a better job. Something Americans have historically taken pride in.