EXCELSIOR
Re: EXCELSIOR
Thanks very much Charlie. She was a good price to boot.
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Re: EXCELSIOR
Thought I'd add pics to this thread. Tang stamp is very faint but can be read in just the right light.
SCOTT
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Re: EXCELSIOR
Scott,I believe that one would have come from the time Northfield used the tang stamp.
Roger
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Re: EXCELSIOR
What a great post LT.
That is what i like about you, you go into things to the nth degree to get at the truth. A great read, thank you.
Tony Moat.
That is what i like about you, you go into things to the nth degree to get at the truth. A great read, thank you.
Tony Moat.
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Re: EXCELSIOR
When was that?peanut740 wrote:Scott,I believe that one would have come from the time Northfield used the tang stamp.
SCOTT
HOME OF THE BRAVE! (not the scarety cats)
Colonial Knife Company History ebook:
https://gumroad.com/l/ZLDb
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Colonial Knife Company History ebook:
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Re: EXCELSIOR
Up until 1920 or so.The look of the construction would place it towards the latter.There was a guy named Gill who used Northfield marked blades from left over parts into the 1960's.It is possible I suppose that he also could have used blades marked Excelsior also, but that is complete speculation.
Roger
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Re: EXCELSIOR
Here's mine that I have posted years ago but not sure where, pics are not that great sorry.
Re: EXCELSIOR
Nice knives Scott, Roger and Mike ...
Scott - actually that is the first Excelsior I have seen with celluloid handles and thanks for bringing this back to top
Roger that Excelsior is rather special for sure - minty as they say and beauty of an etch
Mike - a Cattle knife with MOP and nice etch - awesome as well
Any Excelsior is pretty rare... Never knew we had a thread on Excelsior as I see it was resurrected from 2012... Here's a Excelsior Hawkbill from me that belongs here as well...
Scott - actually that is the first Excelsior I have seen with celluloid handles and thanks for bringing this back to top
Roger that Excelsior is rather special for sure - minty as they say and beauty of an etch
Mike - a Cattle knife with MOP and nice etch - awesome as well
Any Excelsior is pretty rare... Never knew we had a thread on Excelsior as I see it was resurrected from 2012... Here's a Excelsior Hawkbill from me that belongs here as well...
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Lee
Lee
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Re: EXCELSIOR
Interesting old folding hunter, still has some etch, but unable to make it out.
Re: EXCELSIOR
Just wanted to correct somethings here. Mr. Gill worked and then owned the equipment (and still does) from 1920ish and its still in the family. The knifes made by him are all original and not "left overs" The markings at the time were trade marked and belonged to him. He continued to make knifes as a hobby until the early 50s when his son took it over again for a hobby and continuing the name. The original machines and forges from the old buildings are still kept here. There are no other connections other than name to any knife company out there now.peanut740 wrote:Up until 1920 or so.The look of the construction would place it towards the latter.There was a guy named Gill who used Northfield marked blades from left over parts into the 1960's.It is possible I suppose that he also could have used blades marked Excelsior also, but that is complete speculation.
Excelsior branding was because at one time there was a Excelsior Knife company in Torrington Ct that Northfield bought out in 1885 or so.
I just registered here to post this as it is part of my family history and its something I have learned more about recently. I have of course grown up with the equipment and unknowingly some of the awards and lots of paper documents.
Re: EXCELSIOR
I understand this is about Excelsior knives but I have a pair of shears that I can't seem to find any info on. I can just barely make out the stamp and it seems to say excelsior. Any an all info on this would be greatly appreciated.
Re: EXCELSIOR
It is possible that they are Excelsior made shears... I wasn’t aware that they made them but certainly possible... The stamp is curved as was seen on some of their knives and the pin connecting the shears certainly looks old... You have a photo of the shears as a whole (end to end)?
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Lee
Lee
Re: EXCELSIOR
Sure do, not sure if the pin was larger but it looks like the tried to hammer it to make it tighter. The blades do have a good bit of gap between them.
Re: EXCELSIOR
Nice Tinmann44 and thanks for sharing the photos ... There is a book called American Scissors and Shears by Phil Pankiewicz - though he doesn't have info on Excelsior Knife Co making scissors or shears he does have Northfield Knife Co listed and importantly they bought Excelsior Knife Co in 1884... Since Northfield continued using the Excelsior stamp in addition to their own Northfield stamp on cutlery for 20 years I am speculating these may indeed be the same Excelsior... In looking through the book I saw similar scissors from the same time period - same handles and pin so the age appears correct.... I think they are pretty cool ..
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Lee
Lee
Re: EXCELSIOR
That's quite an informative read, its ashame they don't mention excelsior that much or have a product catalog, perhaps its lost to the ages now. I was considering contacting a historical society from the town but I doubt they'd have much more to offer. Either way I thought you guys would appreciate it. Thanks again
Re: EXCELSIOR
I've got a couple of folders that belong here... any additional info about them would be super cool to know...
a 3 1/8" jack with some pretty worn blades but nice ebony handles. Has the arched tang stamp.
then a beefier 3 1/2" jack with fuller blades... the main being a clip... with jigged bone handles. Has the straight lines tang.
a 3 1/8" jack with some pretty worn blades but nice ebony handles. Has the arched tang stamp.
then a beefier 3 1/2" jack with fuller blades... the main being a clip... with jigged bone handles. Has the straight lines tang.
Re: EXCELSIOR
Did Oz give you those wonderful scissors? Hmnnn..
Unique jigging on that one Ken.
Unique jigging on that one Ken.
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Lyle
Re: EXCELSIOR
Tinmann44 - You can try the historical society but my experience with one close by to Northfield was not much help... surprising given the role of the cutleries in providing jobs back in that time period...
Ken - Nice score on the Excelsior knives ... the jigging as Lyle noted certainly is appealing - and with that clip blade master a very cool knife ...
Ken - Nice score on the Excelsior knives ... the jigging as Lyle noted certainly is appealing - and with that clip blade master a very cool knife ...
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Lee
Lee
Re: EXCELSIOR
I thought as much with the historical societies. I got them of an ol buck I work with they were his grandfathers. His grandfather used them for wallpaper and they've been used in different trades right up until he gave em to me. The stories they could tell
Re: EXCELSIOR
I see in the new Dec 2018 issue of Knife Magazine that the Excelsior name has been purchased by Ryan Daniels, and they are releasing new high end knives, incorporating the old trademark logo into the stamp. Kind of neat. The first new knife is out now, and a picture is shown on their website.
Carl B.
Re: EXCELSIOR
Yes, probably so. But if he only makes 25 piece knife runs, 3-4 times a year. He probably has a high-end customer base for that amount.
Carl B.
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Re: EXCELSIOR
Yeah, for $450 I would buy an original first!peanut740 wrote:I would think the market will be pretty limited for a $450 single blade knife.
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