Cool, thank you. I’ll have to look up the book you mentioned. Have a great night, thank you for taking time to comment!My two cents..
I would say possibly, leaning toward yes. In Carl P. Russel’s book, Firearms, Traps, and Tools of the Mountain Men, there are examples of knives all including separate features of your knife. There’s examples of antler handles, cross guards, and an example of a trade knife with that same blade shape. Just not an example including all the above combined into one.
Your knife also appears to have been made from a file or rasp, and that was quite a common occurrence on homesteads and in small towns. If you were isolated, you’d utilize everything you had, including broken files! My interpretation of your knife would be one that was made on a homestead and brought along to the fur fields.
Thats a joke, right?Nope, clip point blades were not a thing in the 18th century.
F&I blades were crude dirk like knives and daggers.
Thats a joke, right?
Nope, clip point blades were not a thing in the 18th century.
F&I blades were crude dirk like knives and daggers.
Somehow, I doubt it.Thats a joke, right?
Don’t sweat it, we’ve all had our thoughts or interpretations corrected here, some just do it with more grit than necessary.No i was told wrong i suppose. Jokes on me.
Don’t sweat it, we’ve all had our thoughts or interpretations corrected here, some just do it with more grit than necessary.
Without being there or a history professor I think it’s difficult to know what’s the correct information when doing research…
The problem is sometimes the information available is not accurate.Your approach is wrong. Do your research first, then buy or make what your research indicates.
Maybe not. There is a wealth of information available on trade knives, both English and French that, as I understand it, were shipped to the New World in vast numbers, available at your local general store, or nearest fur trading post. Here are some articles I have found.Without being there or a history professor I think it’s difficult to know what’s the correct information when doing research…
Great, thank youMaybe not. There is a wealth of information available on trade knives, both English and French that, as I understand it, were shipped to the New World in vast numbers, available at your local general store, or nearest fur trading post. Here are some articles I have found.
And that's just three of my favorite articles. With a little time spent on a rainy day, I'm certain Google will turn up more articles on English trade knives.
Yes I have also ran into museums who have things wrong and are not interested in correcting it.The problem is sometimes the information available is not accurate.
For instance, I was at Brandywine Battlefield, they have a locking folding knife on display claiming it’s from Revolutionary War, months later after speaking to an expert on knives of that period that knife is from much later, museum will not change display…
Often times what was accurate no longer is. Information and ideas that were once thought correct have proven out over time not to be. Books that were thought to be spot on 50 or 60 years ago, and have not had revisions, aren't so accurate anymore. More research has been done, more articles written and reviewed, more artifacts found, more paintings and drawings made available to the public. More sharing of views on, and discussion of, those paintings and artifacts has happened.The problem is sometimes the information available is not accurate.
For instance, I was at Brandywine Battlefield, they have a locking folding knife on display claiming it’s from Revolutionary War, months later after speaking to an expert on knives of that period that knife is from much later, museum will not change display…
I understand, but in the grey areas I thought this was the place to ask questions or get additional information or opinions. Then you have people complaining about “do your own research” as if it’s some top secret homework assignment. My thought is if you don’t want to share your most treasured researched information then don’t.Often times what was accurate no longer is. Information and ideas that were once thought correct have proven out over time not to be. Books that were thought to be spot on 50 or 60 years ago, and have not had revisions, aren't so accurate anymore. More research has been done, more articles written and reviewed, more artifacts found, more paintings and drawings made available to the public. More sharing of views on, and discussion of, those paintings and artifacts has happened.
Unfortunate, there are many who read those early books, spoke with those early writers and researchers, who will not change their tune and keep passing on inaccurate information.
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