hey richied, i looked thru my books of knife mfgrs, but nothing with k c. possibilities are great. i found lots of companys from germany that could have used those initials.
johnnie f 1949
on the cutting edge is sometimes not the place to be.
please support our troops - past and present
if not a member...join the NKCA! they're on our side.
this is what I found in my barn when I moved here four years ago. The handle was bleached white and the metal was heavily rusted. I've worked on it the last two days and got it to look like this. That's when I saw it stamped with K C Co
Germany
Attachments
It's the early bird that gets the worm but it's the second mouse that gets the cheese.
I can't really offer any knowledge, about the fork, except to say that it's excellent. K C Co. ? Everybody's thinking _____ Cutlery Co, and they're probably right. But, what about Kissing Cranes ? At any rate, my unqualified guess is late 40's - early 50's.
Post-war Germany was a mess, if the fork was made pre-war, the records were blown up - if it were immediately post-war, no records were kept. I've even owned knives that were stamped "Middle Germany". Never did figure out who actually made them. Nice knives, tho - wish I'd kept one.
Whatever the case, you've got a keeper, in my opinon. The last Lindner catalog I have shows a slicer, that would be a nice match. Wouldn't that be an impressive carving set, at Thanksgiving, or Christmas ?
Man i just passed up a chance to buy a fork and knife set just like that!
"Mary gave him a brand-new "Barlow" knife worth twelve and a half cents; and the convulsion of delight that swept his system shook him to his foundations".
Mark Twain