🔎 UNIDENTIFIED Iron and bone Knife

Wild Colonial Boy

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Sep 7, 2013
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Found this knife today, at a colonial farm site,
looks like a craft style knife
appears to have bone or antler handle and maybe one brass lozenge stud, any insight to its age and use
much appreciated


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Is the tip broke or a sheepsfoot style?
That doesn’t appear to be a Sheep’s foot style. Attached is a sheep’s foot photo. Yours looks broken or rust away at the tip. Still a very nice find. Congrats!
 

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Table knife with forged bolster, more or less "factory made". Could be very old, but they were made this way for quite some time (let's say 1800-1900 on this one). If it is marked, the marking would be roughly an inch in front of the bolster on the obverse side (left side if you were holding it as if you were about to cut something.)
 

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I don’t think it’s a table knife. It looks like a Spanish dagger. The top edge of the blade would be thin on table knife. A Spanish dagger would have a thick top edge. The Spanish dagger was the model Bowie used for his knives. This is a Spanish dagger I finished. It was a rough forging from France when I got it. Mammoth ivory scales backed with ebony.
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Hello, I read
Table knife with forged bolster, more or less "factory made". Could be very old, but they were made this way for quite some time (let's say 1800-1900 on this one). If it is marked, the marking would be roughly an inch in front of the bolster on the obverse side (left side if you were holding it as if you were about to cut something.)
I read an old post of yours pertaining to the Barr Brothers in Camas Valley where my family is from and I am related to Neal Brown that you mentioned in your article. I am going to contact Neal's step son, who is my cousin, I am sure he will be interested doing so looking into this. If so. I will have him contact you. Thank you for posting. Camas Valley is such a small place and my roots run deep there. Really happy to find your article.
 

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I don’t think it’s a table knife. It looks like a Spanish dagger.
I’ve seen broken butter spreader blades re-profiled to a profile similar to what you shared. I’ve done it myself to a nice silver bolstered one I found at a yard sale. That’s my guess without more pictures.

Need a photo of the top side of the blade/handle. Kitchen cutlery typically had small diameter handles, thin blades, and narrow partial tangs.
 

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Looks like a wooden handle to me. Don't think antler handled utensils are attached with rivets. They usually bore it out to insert the tang end of the uternsil into it. Could be from the 1800's, but I think it's probably from the 20th century.

You also have to remember that just because it's a colonial era site doesn't mean everything you find there is that old.
 

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Are we both talking about the original image at the top? When would antler or bone be the color of a tree? As a matter of fact it looks like a typical apple paring knife.
Have you dug old bone handled cutlery up?
Bone can be many different colors/tones.
The environment plays a big factor as we as the time it has spent in the ground.
The one on the right has a nice dark honey color.

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