Remington upland

The Remington Corporation and the knives that they built have influenced the U.S. cutlery industry more than nearly any other manufacturer. From the time America was settled, to the end of WWI, American knife companies struggled to compete with Britain and German imports, but events that occurred during and after the First World War led to a great change in this phenomenon. Unprecedented opportunities arose, and Remington stepped up to seize the moment. In the process, they created some of today's most prized collectables. In an ironic twist, the next World War played the greatest role in ending the company’s domination of the industry.
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prairieschooner
Posts: 1
Joined: Sun Feb 12, 2017 2:52 pm

Remington upland

Post by prairieschooner »

Hi - new here with a question. I acquired an upland folder - blade, gut hook and short spey blade. New in box which is marked ERI-D Upland. The spey blade is marked "1994, first production run, 1 of 1200". Just wondering if this this has any special significance. I bought the knife to use but if it has some sort of provenance or collector value maybe I should find another and keep this one unused? Thanks...
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AREMINGTONSEDGE
Posts: 1903
Joined: Tue Jan 03, 2012 6:01 pm
Location: MECHANICSVILLE, VIRGINIA

Re: Remington upland

Post by AREMINGTONSEDGE »

Welcome to AAPK. the knife you reference is plentiful and not that rare. Check eBay to verify. Save, collect or use and enjoy my friend. ::nod:: ::tu::
Rocky, AKA- AREMINGTONSEDGE
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