btrwtr wrote:I always enjoy looking in on this post. Some fantastic knives shown here. Mason that Hunter looks like it was just taken out of the showroom case. Cato the Miller Bros. is awesome.
Here are a few I have recently picked up.
First pic,
Case Tested Green Bone high pull 6265 SAB with no shield, iron bolsters and liners.
Phoenix Knife Co. with double pulls. A previous owner has installed a steel pin where a lanyard ring was in the tail end bolster.
Cattaraugus King of the Woods liner lock
Second pic,
Northfield Knife Co. lockback
F.A. Koch Co. with unusual lock at tail end of frame
4 line Camillus with match striker pull
Third pic,
American Shear and Knife Co lockback
Ulster Dwight Devine and Sons English jack
Schrade Cut lockback with fancy threaded bolsters
The remaining pictures are of a Marbles Woodcraft first model knife variation that I have never seen before. I have owned dozens of old Woodcrafts including a number of the "PAT. PEND." knives. This is the first PAT. PEND. model I have ever seen that did not have the XXXXX type cross hatching on the back of the blade. This knife has the later parallel type cross hatching that is seen on the later made knives. I think it must be a transition knife. The knife has a 1/2" barrel nut and round pommel that is typical of early Woodcraft models. Maybe others have seen this but it is a new variation to me.
The Marbel's Woodcraft fixed blade hunting knife that you show, is almost identical, to the first hunting knife that I acquired. As, my memory serves me, the cross hatching on top of the blade was just just straight across the blade, But everything else, was pretty much the same. I was a boy of seven years, recovering from a broken leg, in a cast up to my shorts. This was in 1938. I said that I wanted a hunting knife, and the neighbor man brought that old Marbel's woodcraft, and gave it to me, Well, that about tickled the "stuff" out of me. I cherished that old knife, carried, and used it until I was out of High School. By that time I had quite a few knives accumulated, and my Mother started to use it as her garden Knife. She used it as long as she had a garden, until around 1993, when she passed away. That old knife was in our family for around 55 years, and I have no idea of how old it was when I got it. I lost track of it, when Mom passed away. I would gladly give all of the knives that I own to get it back. Your old "Woodcraft" sure brought back good memories. Thanks for sharing my long winded, true tale. Sut Tatersaul