Difference between revisions of "Waterville Cutlery, "Hand Forged" 4/8"
(added == References ==) |
m (steel type) |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
|Point=Barber's Notch | |Point=Barber's Notch | ||
|Scales=Celluloid | |Scales=Celluloid | ||
− | |Steel=Carbon | + | |Steel=Carbon |
|Image=[[image:Waterville - Hand Forged 001.jpg|540x540px]][[image:Waterville - Hand Forged 002.jpg|700px]][[image:Waterville - Hand Forged 003.jpg|700px]] | |Image=[[image:Waterville - Hand Forged 001.jpg|540x540px]][[image:Waterville - Hand Forged 002.jpg|700px]][[image:Waterville - Hand Forged 003.jpg|700px]] | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 16:51, 24 March 2009
Copy/Paste for Forum |
[table=head]Fields|Data [/table] |
Manufacturer | Waterville Cutlery |
---|---|
Model | Hand Forged |
Region | Waterville neighborhood of Waterbury, CT USA |
Date | 1890-1913 "1890-1913" contains a sequence that could not be interpreted against an available match matrix for date components.
|
Grind | Full Hollow |
Size | 4/8 |
Point | Barber's Notch |
Shoulder | |
Spine Decoration | |
Jimps | |
Scales | Celluloid |
Steel | Carbon |
Image |
In 1890 George L. Jenks bought out Sprague & Boyden cutlery manufacturers and incorporated Waterville Cutlery Waterbury, Connecticut USA. Sprague & Boyden had succeeded Waterville Manufacturing which had earlier succeeded Leavenworth & Kendrick which even earlier had taken over Waterville's original entrepreneurs - 3 button makers among whom was Noah Webster's son William. Jenks dropped his interest in Waterville Cutlery in 1896. Company president W. Sumner Babcock improved Waterville, but died within a few years thereafter and by 1913 the property was approved for sale by the Superior Court.[1]