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I have a modest collection of British military knives from WWI and WWII. Does anyone else collect military knives? If so, please post them here. Folders and fixed blades welcome. It would be great to see them.
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The knife is called the 2 piece clasp knife. (the 3 piece has the marlin spike, the one piece lacks the can opener.) There are two possibiliities, iot could be a "commie" knock-of as they really don't pay attention to trademarks or trade agreements or it could have been made in the British Crown colony of Hong Kong.
Lee you have found a Very interesting knife. I like the entire concept, economic to produce,maintenance free, simple to operate, rugged enough to
withstand being used by knuckleheads for purposes no knife should have to endure, when it is borrowed and lost you are not out a bunch of hard earned Army pay.
Seems familiar. British Army knife makes sense. I have seen a bunch of items
called paratroopers knife and have never seen paratroooper
carry any of them, instead of his Ka-Bar or other fixed blade.
I don't know if I have seen one or if I only
imagined a good military pocket knife would keep it simple, just a Sheeps foot and a opener-utility blade for doing things that might
mess up the sheeps foot. No screw drivers,awls, toothpicks, nose hair scissors or tiny saw/files or littlepliers
, . If you need a wrench in the Army they will issue one to a spec five and you find something to do to
look busy until he fixes it right. Cork screw on a military knife? What ? We drink canned beer and once you open the bottle of whisky you toss the cap because you pass it around until gone.
I wonder if they let the French keep their knives to open wine bottles.
Please post any more history you may learn.
I think the history might be the part of
knife collecting I enjoy most..
My recollections about the time period political bed partners, including
about who suppied what to whom are clouded both
by time and the difficulting of unravelling all the misinformation that was shoveled by every source, worst of all by our own media and leftist political elites. Myown observations and the stories relayed to me by VietNamese refugee friends
makle me suspect thart knife would be more likely to be found anywhere but
North Viet Nam
, because Viet Nam and China hate each other
and the vast majority o material supplied North Viet Nam came from
the USSR
It makes sense for it to be made in China for the Brits even
back then. Our Cousins on that island of shop keepers seem to be able to continue to have favorable commerce
with their former colonies. Except for us. Were we the only colony tosuccessfully
wage war to get rid of
their tea drinking behinds ? We are lucky we got them out before they messed us up with driving on the wrong side of the road.
Terry I still come bavk and look at this display case.
It is put together with great care and with a real "eye" . This is the kind of thing we usually see only in magaines or antique houses. It is damn near perfect my man!
Terry Waldele said:
I have a fair sized collection of military knives, bayonets and memorabilia that I've assembled over the years. My favorites are from Great Britain and its former colonies. One day I was feeling especially creative and artsy, so I assembled a display case of British memorabilia including military knives and revolvers. This display case contains (from top left corner clockwise) a current issue British RAF pilots survival knife, a combat knife from New Zealand, an Australian L1A1 bayonet, a WWII British spike bayonet, a British "puppy gun" (not military issue), a WWII British sailor's knife (1943), a 50's British army clasp knife, a British WWII era Southern & Richardson combat dagger, a WWII Fairbairn-Sykes commando dagger, and a WWII Webley Mark IV .38/200 cal. "war finish" military issue revolver with correct "web" holster.
All of SE Asia hated the Chinese (for many reasons) and probably still do as China hurtles headlong into a new kind of power over the other Asian countries. But this is funny.....
Cork screw on a military knife? What ? We drink canned beer and once you open the bottle of whisky you toss the cap because you pass it around until gone.
I wonder if they let the French keep their knives to open wine bottles.
I am still laughing at the fundamental truth of it.
ken benson said:
Lee you have found a Very interesting knife. I like the entire concept, economic to produce,maintenance free, simple to operate, rugged enough to
withstand being used by knuckleheads for purposes no knife should have to endure, when it is borrowed and lost you are not out a bunch of hard earned Army pay.
Seems familiar. British Army knife makes sense. I have seen a bunch of items
called paratroopers knife and have never seen paratroooper
carry any of them, instead of his Ka-Bar or other fixed blade.
I don't know if I have seen one or if I only
imagined a good military pocket knife would keep it simple, just a Sheeps foot and a opener-utility blade for doing things that might
mess up the sheeps foot. No screw drivers,awls, toothpicks, nose hair scissors or tiny saw/files or littlepliers
, . If you need a wrench in the Army they will issue one to a spec five and you find something to do to
look busy until he fixes it right. Cork screw on a military knife? What ? We drink canned beer and once you open the bottle of whisky you toss the cap because you pass it around until gone.
I wonder if they let the French keep their knives to open wine bottles.
Please post any more history you may learn.
I think the history might be the part of
knife collecting I enjoy most..
My recollections about the time period political bed partners, including
about who suppied what to whom are clouded both
by time and the difficulting of unravelling all the misinformation that was shoveled by every source, worst of all by our own media and leftist political elites. Myown observations and the stories relayed to me by VietNamese refugee friends
makle me suspect thart knife would be more likely to be found anywhere but
North Viet Nam
, because Viet Nam and China hate each other
and the vast majority o material supplied North Viet Nam came from
the USSR
It makes sense for it to be made in China for the Brits even
back then. Our Cousins on that island of shop keepers seem to be able to continue to have favorable commerce
with their former colonies. Except for us. Were we the only colony tosuccessfully
wage war to get rid of
their tea drinking behinds ? We are lucky we got them out before they messed us up with driving on the wrong side of the road.
Hi Lee,
Thanks so much for the kind words. I have other British militaria that I would have liked to include in this display, but the display box would have been too big to hang easily.
Thanks again,
Terry
Lee Saunders said:
Terry I still come bavk and look at this display case.
It is put together with great care and with a real "eye" . This is the kind of thing we usually see only in magaines or antique houses. It is damn near perfect my man!
Terry Waldele said:I have a fair sized collection of military knives, bayonets and memorabilia that I've assembled over the years. My favorites are from Great Britain and its former colonies. One day I was feeling especially creative and artsy, so I assembled a display case of British memorabilia including military knives and revolvers. This display case contains (from top left corner clockwise) a current issue British RAF pilots survival knife, a combat knife from New Zealand, an Australian L1A1 bayonet, a WWII British spike bayonet, a British "puppy gun" (not military issue), a WWII British sailor's knife (1943), a 50's British army clasp knife, a British WWII era Southern & Richardson combat dagger, a WWII Fairbairn-Sykes commando dagger, and a WWII Webley Mark IV .38/200 cal. "war finish" military issue revolver with correct "web" holster.
Here are a couple of WWII knives gifted to me from an old employee of mine
Top-WWII Cattaraugus 225Q-Quartermaster style knife
Middle- WWII Kinfolk's combat / utility knife with etched Kinfolk's sheath
Bottom-
-Cattaragaus (top) & Kinfolk's (bottom) actually although the picture doesn't adequately reflect this- they are almost identical in length and the Cattaraugus is the much more hefty knife
Lee Saunders said:
I am always surprised when I start pulling out my knives. I like Military knives a lot because they are made for work, fit to a task. And they last!
I do often get confused between some of the Navy type of knives and some of the pruners and Hawkbills especially when the blades get worn down and reworked. In fact, I think I have a pruner in this mix now that I look....oooops.
The Group:
I only have one Marline Spike, I have to start buying some more if I can find some nice knives.
A few Non-spike Navy and Coast Guard (approved) knives:
Below are U.S. Coast Guard approved knives:
The last ones are U.S. and U.K. Navy or rope knives. Both with real nice stag.
The U.K. knife is larger and heavier. The U.S. knife is a Civil War era knife from Russell and has what is left of an etched blade. It use to say Navy Knife.
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