Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

This forum is dedicated to the discussion and display of old knives. The rich history of all the many companies that made them through the early years will be found here as well as many fine examples of the cutlers art. Share pictures of your old knives and your knowledge here!
Post Reply
Bfeldman
Posts: 87
Joined: Wed May 09, 2018 6:42 pm
Contact:

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by Bfeldman »

Here’s a few knives that fit the bill. The black handled one is a thiers-issard and the brown handled one is from m Klein and sons.

But the one I’m curious if anyone has any ideas about is the last one. No stamp, a very interesting locking mechanism and the guy who sold it to me gave me some story about it being made out of a railroad spike by a guy in Mexico but as I’m not sure I buy it.
9F5A3037-7DE4-415B-860B-AF070E511CCE.jpeg
4B8C718F-809D-4A59-81A5-71AE8F418384.jpeg
9685E09B-A3E2-4C90-B30C-B6502BD485C1.jpeg
EFEF6D21-A09D-4457-95CD-DB212A113AF7.jpeg
doglegg
Gold Tier
Gold Tier
Posts: 21503
Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2017 2:35 am
Location: Grand Prairie, Texas

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by doglegg »

Three cool ones Bfeldman. That guy in Mexico must have been a real craftsman as that is a cool knife. ::tu:: ::tu::
Bfeldman
Posts: 87
Joined: Wed May 09, 2018 6:42 pm
Contact:

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by Bfeldman »

doglegg wrote:Three cool ones Bfeldman. That guy in Mexico must have been a real craftsman as that is a cool knife. ::tu:: ::tu::
Thanks. I’ve never seen a locking mechanism like this one.
User avatar
LongBlade
Posts: 3416
Joined: Mon May 18, 2015 3:00 pm
Location: Woods of CT

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by LongBlade »

I like the French 2 blade Hawkbill ::tu:: .. though I think it was repinned at some point. The knife noted as Mexican looks like a Spanish Billhook folder - not sure about Mexico... maybe ::shrug:: ...
____________________________________________________________________________
Lee
Bfeldman
Posts: 87
Joined: Wed May 09, 2018 6:42 pm
Contact:

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by Bfeldman »

LongBlade wrote:I like the French 2 blade Hawkbill ::tu:: .. though I think it was repinned at some point. The knife noted as Mexican looks like a Spanish Billhook folder - not sure about Mexico... maybe ::shrug:: ...
Good eye. It definitely looks like it was reprinted which is interesting because it doesn’t show a ton of wear otherwise.
User avatar
Eustace
Posts: 1152
Joined: Sun Aug 20, 2017 6:26 am
Location: Bulgaria

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by Eustace »

I am glad when I find old Bulgarian knives in such a condition.
Attachments
IMG_0626.JPG
IMG_0625.JPG
IMG_0623.JPG
IMG_0622.JPG
IMG_0620.JPG
User avatar
LongBlade
Posts: 3416
Joined: Mon May 18, 2015 3:00 pm
Location: Woods of CT

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by LongBlade »

Nice set of knives Eustace ::tu:: ::tu:: ... A pruner and budding grafting knife as a pair is very cool 8) ..
____________________________________________________________________________
Lee
User avatar
royal0014
Silver Tier
Silver Tier
Posts: 6703
Joined: Sun Jun 17, 2012 8:21 pm
Location: ♥Sweet Home Alabama♥

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by royal0014 »

Very nice set, Eustace
::tu::
Chris
i woke last night to the sound of thunder
how far off i sat and wondered
started humming a song from nineteen sixty two
aint it funny how the night moves
kootenay joe
Posts: 13373
Joined: Mon Jan 11, 2016 5:36 pm
Location: West Kootenays, B.C.

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by kootenay joe »

Some fine very old knives being posted. Lee's Billhook is a fine survivor, could easily be a 200 yr old knife.
Here is one i just fopund in my basement. I put it there some years ago because the blade looks rusted beyond saving. But today it spoke to me so i took some pictures. "H & J.W. King Warranted 1869". King was an importer so this might have come from Germany. Liners & bolsters are integral. Note the big swell of handle towards the butt. Snaps are all very crisp, has a half stop and no play, solid in open position. Pretty good for 150 years old.
Any advice on getting the 'scale' off the blade ?
kj
Attachments
IMGP6934.JPG
IMGP6931.JPG
IMGP6932.JPG
IMGP6935.JPG
IMGP6930.JPG
doglegg
Gold Tier
Gold Tier
Posts: 21503
Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2017 2:35 am
Location: Grand Prairie, Texas

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by doglegg »

Eustace wrote:I am glad when I find old Bulgarian knives in such a condition.
Eustace, I somehow missed these until now. Great condition! Proud for you. ::nod:: ::tu::
User avatar
LongBlade
Posts: 3416
Joined: Mon May 18, 2015 3:00 pm
Location: Woods of CT

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by LongBlade »

kootenay joe wrote:Some fine very old knives being posted. Lee's Billhook is a fine survivor, could easily be a 200 yr old knife.
Here is one i just fopund in my basement. I put it there some years ago because the blade looks rusted beyond saving. But today it spoke to me so i took some pictures. "H & J.W. King Warranted 1869". King was an importer so this might have come from Germany. Liners & bolsters are integral. Note the big swell of handle towards the butt. Snaps are all very crisp, has a half stop and no play, solid in open position. Pretty good for 150 years old.
Any advice on getting the 'scale' off the blade ?
kj
Thanks for comment on Billhook - it is an oldie - some followup research indicates to me 1850 or later and most likely Italian in origin... though probably somehow imported and used here in the Northeast based on where and how it was found...

KJ - That is an old pruner for sure ::tu:: - I know you mention possibly Germany but I wouldn’t know - I haven’t seen too many German made Hawkbills but not ones I would collect ... I’m not familiar with that stamp at all... but in terms of cleaning that knife it is pretty far gone.. looks to be very deep pitting and corrosion - I think buffing it to death may not even work :) ... personally I rather see it like this than a shiny and lousy facsimile of a knife!

I’m still sticking to pre-1860 for integrated liners/bolsters as I still have not seen many later examples and certainly none after 1900 despite that conjecture in another thread ....
____________________________________________________________________________
Lee
kootenay joe
Posts: 13373
Joined: Mon Jan 11, 2016 5:36 pm
Location: West Kootenays, B.C.

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by kootenay joe »

I think this one has integral liners/bolsters and it was made in 1869. Goins has some info on this brand.
I was not thinking of buffing, more like rubbing or flicking off the superficial scale that covers both blade surfaces.
kj
Robo
Posts: 251
Joined: Thu Apr 27, 2017 12:37 am

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by Robo »

I made a separate post about this old Keen Kutter K136 pruner in "Knife Q&A" but I fiqured I'd run some photos of it here amongst these other great pruning and Horticultural knives. Enjoy!
Attachments
Keen Kutter K136
Keen Kutter K136
Keen Kutter K136 2
Keen Kutter K136 2
Keen Kutter K136 3
Keen Kutter K136 3
Keen Kutter K136 4
Keen Kutter K136 4
Keen Kutter K136 5
Keen Kutter K136 5
Keen Kutter K136 6
Keen Kutter K136 6
Keen Kutter K136 7
Keen Kutter K136 7
Keen Kutter K136 8
Keen Kutter K136 8
Keen Kutter K136 9
Keen Kutter K136 9
IMG_0019 2.jpg
User avatar
LongBlade
Posts: 3416
Joined: Mon May 18, 2015 3:00 pm
Location: Woods of CT

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by LongBlade »

Great looking Hawkbill Robo ::tu:: ::tu:: ... the etch on a Hawkbill is very cool and not something often seen 8) ... Thanks for sharing it in this thread!!
____________________________________________________________________________
Lee
Robo
Posts: 251
Joined: Thu Apr 27, 2017 12:37 am

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by Robo »

LongBlade wrote:Great looking Hawkbill Robo ::tu:: ::tu:: ... the etch on a Hawkbill is very cool and not something often seen 8) ... Thanks for sharing it in this thread!!

My Pleasure, Lee!
User avatar
Eustace
Posts: 1152
Joined: Sun Aug 20, 2017 6:26 am
Location: Bulgaria

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by Eustace »

My friend send me this pictures. Has anyone seen something like this?
Attachments
aparie4.jpg
aparie3.jpg
aparie2.jpg
aparie1.jpg
User avatar
LongBlade
Posts: 3416
Joined: Mon May 18, 2015 3:00 pm
Location: Woods of CT

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by LongBlade »

Very interesting knife Eustace ::tu:: ::tu:: ... I can’t tell from photos but is that a spud used to graft on the back end of knife or is it just an extension of the handle? Not sure from where it originated but looks European in style...
____________________________________________________________________________
Lee
User avatar
Eustace
Posts: 1152
Joined: Sun Aug 20, 2017 6:26 am
Location: Bulgaria

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by Eustace »

I'm almost sure it's French. The stamp is "aparie" or "aparis"
Attachments
aparie5.jpg
aparie6.jpg
User avatar
LongBlade
Posts: 3416
Joined: Mon May 18, 2015 3:00 pm
Location: Woods of CT

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by LongBlade »

I believe your correct Eustace as the stamp appears French ::tu:: - I didn’t pay attention to the stamp ::facepalm:: ... looks like a folding billhook (aka pruner) that has the handle open from a folding extension... pretty cool 8) ...
____________________________________________________________________________
Lee
kootenay joe
Posts: 13373
Joined: Mon Jan 11, 2016 5:36 pm
Location: West Kootenays, B.C.

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by kootenay joe »

Does it have 1 blade and 2 springs ?
Does the handle extension fold closed when blade is open to keep blade locked open ?
"Aparie" makes me think of bee keeping.
Never seen anything like it.
kj
User avatar
New_Windsor_NY
Gold Tier
Gold Tier
Posts: 12800
Joined: Thu Nov 08, 2018 4:50 pm
Location: I'm On The Far Right On The Left Coast In Commiefornia

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by New_Windsor_NY »

Hi. I enlarged the stamp/mark in your last photo. The last 2 "figures" look like numbers, not letters. Maybe a 15 and not is or ir?
Just an observation. ::shrug::
Attachments
image.jpeg
image.jpeg (39.79 KiB) Viewed 4243 times
Kid: "Wish we had time to bury them fellas."
Josey Wales: "To hell with them fellas. Buzzards got to eat, same as worms."
Clint Eastwood-The Outlaw Josey Wales

Skip
User avatar
New_Windsor_NY
Gold Tier
Gold Tier
Posts: 12800
Joined: Thu Nov 08, 2018 4:50 pm
Location: I'm On The Far Right On The Left Coast In Commiefornia

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by New_Windsor_NY »

My GEO. SCHRADE pruner.
Attachments
image.jpeg
image.jpeg
image.jpeg
image.jpeg
image.jpeg
Kid: "Wish we had time to bury them fellas."
Josey Wales: "To hell with them fellas. Buzzards got to eat, same as worms."
Clint Eastwood-The Outlaw Josey Wales

Skip
User avatar
RobesonsRme.com
Posts: 10076
Joined: Wed Jan 28, 2009 3:44 pm
Location: The Heart of Dixie.
Contact:

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by RobesonsRme.com »

I knew a man from Mexico named, "Aparis".

So, I suppose your knife could be Spanish.

Charlie
DE OPPRESSO LIBER

"...Men may spurn our appeals, reject our message, oppose our arguments, despise our persons ___but they are helpless against our prayers. "

Sidlow Baxter
User avatar
New_Windsor_NY
Gold Tier
Gold Tier
Posts: 12800
Joined: Thu Nov 08, 2018 4:50 pm
Location: I'm On The Far Right On The Left Coast In Commiefornia

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by New_Windsor_NY »

My latest pruner, this Geo Schrade. It's almost identical to the one I posted above, except the advertising is engraved/stamped into the blade, not etched on the blade like the previous knife. The tang stamps are different also.
Attachments
image.jpeg
image.jpeg (30.29 KiB) Viewed 4130 times
image.jpeg
image.jpeg (28.17 KiB) Viewed 4130 times
image.jpeg
image.jpeg (21.24 KiB) Viewed 4130 times
image.jpeg
image.jpeg (21.56 KiB) Viewed 4130 times
image.jpeg
image.jpeg (50.58 KiB) Viewed 4130 times
Kid: "Wish we had time to bury them fellas."
Josey Wales: "To hell with them fellas. Buzzards got to eat, same as worms."
Clint Eastwood-The Outlaw Josey Wales

Skip
User avatar
FRJ
Posts: 16336
Joined: Fri May 14, 2010 1:43 pm
Location: Ct.

Re: Old Pruning and Horticultural Knives

Post by FRJ »

American Knife Co,. Thomaston. 1875-1895 - 4 3/8" closed.
It has earned all it's scars.
The same can be said for its neighbor, one town over, American Knife Co., Plymouth. 1849-1875 - 4 3/8" closed.
Great old Connecticut knives and stamps.
There is an interesting bit of history in Goin's encyclopedia about these two companies and the towns themselves,
including Northfield Knife Co.
I live in Plymouth.

Thanks for looking.
Attachments
DSCN8873.JPG
DSCN8875.JPG
DSCN8880.JPG
DSCN8882.JPG
DSCN8890.JPG
DSCN8894.JPG
DSCN8900.JPG
Joe
Post Reply

Return to “Knife Lore - Traditional Knives From the Old Days”