@Artificer @Colonial Boy
Can y'all point me to any examples of an "18th Century Artificer's/Armorers Tool Chest"?
Hi Bark-eater,
Please understand, I'm not trying to be coy, but there's some things about such a chest that even with 20-25 years of diligent effort to find an original - I haven't found one and don't think I ever will. The things I'm referring to are:
1. Such boxes really were quite uncommon to downright rare even in the period, as they made for the very small numbers of military Artificer's/Armorers who accompanied Regiments in the field to repair arms. For example, the Tower of London sent only two (maybe three) trained Armorers to take care of the entire British Army in the North during the American Revolutionary war. We do have the lists of tools and spare parts sent with them, but many of the tools were meant to have been stored in buildings or shops and only some of the tools in the chests.
2. Such boxes were transported in the field by wagons, so they could only be so big. I have only found one original drawing of British Military Armorers in the field and though it shows an Armorer's Chest, one has to sort of estimate the size compared to the wagon it sits next to. It appears to be no larger than maybe 3/4 of the size of the "Anarchists Tool Chest" you mentioned and shown in the Christopher Schwarz videos I posted above.
3. I have asked the same question of the Gunsmiths at Colonial Williamsburg and they pointed to a repro they made that was much smaller in size than the one in the original drawing of the British Artificers/Armorers. I didn't have a tape measure with me, but it was perhaps at most about 2 feet wide, a foot and a half deep and maybe the same measurement in height. They made the point that in the period, the size of such a chest was determined by how many tools the person owned or needed and then the chest was made in the size to hold them.
OK, I realize I got a bit long winded talking about original chests, so even though I've not yet finished my repro Artificer's chest, I can give you some ideas on what I came up with to work on repro and original guns at reenactments. First of all and though I own an original early 19th century bench vise that is the same design as the 18th century, I would not carry it in my chest and neither would they have done so. I would make the interior of the chest just long enough to mount an original and somewhat short 1780 crosscut hand saw I own mounted on the inside of the lid, the empty storage space at the bottom would then be long and wide enough to store my repro Bow Saw and original Lancashire Pattern Hack Saw. Other things would go in there as well.
I thought about adding a horizontal strip of wood, nailed to the rear of the box with a number of U shaped cut outs to hold some chisels and similar tools, but I nixed that idea as it would have made the chest too large to transport to reenactments. Instead, I plan on hand sewing some tool rolls to keep the chisels sharp and protected. The tool rolls would be stored in the middle sliding tray as would the bare minimum of files I would need and they would have the wood "separator" strip as seen in the fourth video above to keep the files from banging into each other. The top sliding tray would store one or two medium size repro small oil tins as shown in the link below, along with other tools I more often use.
https://www.cg-tinsmith.com/product-page/oil-cans
My chest will have a removeable "chest of drawers" not unlike in the Benjamin Seaton Tool Chest shown in a link below, that will fill the front half of the middle and top sliding tray area. The plan is to remove this when set up to work and keep it outside the chest for easier access.
https://www.thewoodcrafter.net/proj/p109.php
Now I realize the size of my Chest will most likely be smaller and somewhat different design than what you will need. So I most strongly recommend you get the following book to help you with designing your chest.
https://www.amazon.com/Toolbox-Book...Storage-ebook/dp/B003TXSRI2?tag=forumyield-20
Gus