Western: Brands and SFOs
Posted: Sat Dec 01, 2012 3:44 am
I've got kind of an unofficial tally going of brands used by Western, and known purchasers of SFOs from Western. I thought I'd put it up here, and folks can add the ones I've forgotten to the list, or new ones as they are discovered.
Brands
(I think I'm missing some of the in-house brands here.)
Western States (the original brand)
Westaco
West-Cut
West Co/Westco (but see note below)
Western
Westmark
plus whatever brands were used after the purchase by Coleman, and later, by Camillus
SFOs
Western-made SFOs are interesting in a couple of ways.
First, Western's fixed-blade knives (including SFOs) used the patented split-tang construction from about 1930 or so til sometime after the sale to Coleman (or the later purchase by Camillus). This construction method was never licensed to another company, no company seems to have adopted it after the patent expired, and Camillus at least did not use this method of construction after purchasing Western. (I'm not sure how Coleman Western knives were made, I haven't seen enough eaxamples.) If you can see two pins in the pommel and strips of steel showing on either side of the handle, it is almost certainly a product of the Western factory. The SFOs seem to usually have included the patent number (1,967,479) in the tang stamp, or at least be marked "PAT'D".
On the other hand, the folding knives made as SFOs are not as easy to identify. One possible clue may be the presence of a Western pattern number in the usual place on the pile side of one of the blades. I've seen this on two Western-made SFOs. Both were rather early (1930s and early 1940s); it isn't clear if this was their usual practice, or if it was continued.
Companies known to have purchased SFOs from Western include Western Auto (confirmed by several fixed-blade knives that seemed to parallel the West-Cut K-series), Sears (confirmed by two different Western knives, one marked "Ted Williams" and the other "Craftsman"), possibly Montgomery Wards (a very "Westernish" stockman with a Montgomery Wards brand but the booth owner wasn't available to take it out of the case so I could look closer), Coast Cutlery (confirmed by multiple examples of fixed blades made by Western), and Boker (one fixed blade was noted, and a couple more mentioned in various internet discussions).
I'm sure there were more, and hope folks will post information as they run across it.
Edited to add: LLBean, courtesy of Knifeaholic
The Westco note
"Westco" is a bit of a headache. Western used "Westco" and "West Co" for what appears to be a line of less-than-premium knives; for example, the Westco folding hunter had a simple nail nick instead of the match-striker nick. These are typically marked "WESTCO" in an arch similar to the "Western States" arch, over "Made in USA."
Western also did several SFOs for a company called "Westco Cutlery" in Juneau Alaska. These are usually marked "WESTCO CUTLERY, JUNEAU, ALASKA" on the mark side, and "MADE IN USA, PATENTED" on the pile side, or "WESTCO CUTLERY CO, JUNEAU ALASKA, PAT'D MADE IN USA" in three lines on the mark side.
It isn't clear when these were made, or if there was any connection beyond SFOs. The examples I've seen seem to me to be 1970s production.
Jim
Brands
(I think I'm missing some of the in-house brands here.)
Western States (the original brand)
Westaco
West-Cut
West Co/Westco (but see note below)
Western
Westmark
plus whatever brands were used after the purchase by Coleman, and later, by Camillus
SFOs
Western-made SFOs are interesting in a couple of ways.
First, Western's fixed-blade knives (including SFOs) used the patented split-tang construction from about 1930 or so til sometime after the sale to Coleman (or the later purchase by Camillus). This construction method was never licensed to another company, no company seems to have adopted it after the patent expired, and Camillus at least did not use this method of construction after purchasing Western. (I'm not sure how Coleman Western knives were made, I haven't seen enough eaxamples.) If you can see two pins in the pommel and strips of steel showing on either side of the handle, it is almost certainly a product of the Western factory. The SFOs seem to usually have included the patent number (1,967,479) in the tang stamp, or at least be marked "PAT'D".
On the other hand, the folding knives made as SFOs are not as easy to identify. One possible clue may be the presence of a Western pattern number in the usual place on the pile side of one of the blades. I've seen this on two Western-made SFOs. Both were rather early (1930s and early 1940s); it isn't clear if this was their usual practice, or if it was continued.
Companies known to have purchased SFOs from Western include Western Auto (confirmed by several fixed-blade knives that seemed to parallel the West-Cut K-series), Sears (confirmed by two different Western knives, one marked "Ted Williams" and the other "Craftsman"), possibly Montgomery Wards (a very "Westernish" stockman with a Montgomery Wards brand but the booth owner wasn't available to take it out of the case so I could look closer), Coast Cutlery (confirmed by multiple examples of fixed blades made by Western), and Boker (one fixed blade was noted, and a couple more mentioned in various internet discussions).
I'm sure there were more, and hope folks will post information as they run across it.
Edited to add: LLBean, courtesy of Knifeaholic
The Westco note
"Westco" is a bit of a headache. Western used "Westco" and "West Co" for what appears to be a line of less-than-premium knives; for example, the Westco folding hunter had a simple nail nick instead of the match-striker nick. These are typically marked "WESTCO" in an arch similar to the "Western States" arch, over "Made in USA."
Western also did several SFOs for a company called "Westco Cutlery" in Juneau Alaska. These are usually marked "WESTCO CUTLERY, JUNEAU, ALASKA" on the mark side, and "MADE IN USA, PATENTED" on the pile side, or "WESTCO CUTLERY CO, JUNEAU ALASKA, PAT'D MADE IN USA" in three lines on the mark side.
It isn't clear when these were made, or if there was any connection beyond SFOs. The examples I've seen seem to me to be 1970s production.
Jim