I am fascinated by the history of these old beauties. Any information about this company would be great! It was part of a lot I picked up on Ebay....I was actually after one of it's companions, but this is likely to wind up in my "user" drawer as well...assuming it will take/hold an edge; haven't tried that yet.
Thanks,
Jon
ANYONE HEARD OF THIS COMPANY
Re: ANYONE HEARD OF THIS COMPANY
A bit of follow up. I was checking on this and realized I had not said anything about the stamp. I am reasonably sure the COLO stands for Colorado, and there is a Monte Vista northeast of Alamosa. I can't make out the first initial with any certainty; could be a J or O or I suppose G. Pretty sure second is R and then WHITING.
As an old retired carpenter, I love how the handle guy made use of the pin knot in the wood (hickory?) to help prevent the scales from splitting apart beyond the sawcut for the nice tapered tang.
280 knife lovers and no one has heard of it? Must be really rare. That makes it crazy valuable, right! HA
Jon
As an old retired carpenter, I love how the handle guy made use of the pin knot in the wood (hickory?) to help prevent the scales from splitting apart beyond the sawcut for the nice tapered tang.
280 knife lovers and no one has heard of it? Must be really rare. That makes it crazy valuable, right! HA
Jon
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Re: ANYONE HEARD OF THIS COMPANY
I believe the second letter is a B rather than an R. Must have been some production of them as I doubt anyone would have a stamp made up for just one knife.Did you try doing an obituary search of the area? Sometimes that will bear fruit.jonbowie wrote: ↑Mon Feb 08, 2021 6:14 pm A bit of follow up. I was checking on this and realized I had not said anything about the stamp. I am reasonably sure the COLO stands for Colorado, and there is a Monte Vista northeast of Alamosa. I can't make out the first initial with any certainty; could be a J or O or I suppose G. Pretty sure second is R and then WHITING.
As an old retired carpenter, I love how the handle guy made use of the pin knot in the wood (hickory?) to help prevent the scales from splitting apart beyond the sawcut for the nice tapered tang.
280 knife lovers and no one has heard of it? Must be really rare. That makes it crazy valuable, right! HA
Jon
Adventure BEFORE Dementia!