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I have just acquired after a long search some of the discarded timbers from HMS Victory Nelson's flagship at the battle of Trafalgar. We are going to use the wood for knife scales commemorating the Napoleonic wars and the 200th Anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo which is next year. We use all the old traditional blade types and was considering using the authentic tackler blade but whilst the blade is still made I can find no reference to it's origin. Some of the tackler blades you see are not tackler blades at all and if anybody has an ideas regarding it's origin just let me know. regards malcolm
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Interesting Malcom, would love to see a picture of the wood to be used as well as of the knife profile. Whatever you have planned it is sure to be quite an adventure.
Hello HMS Victory was the laid down in 1759. In 1922 she was moved to a dry dock and preserved as a museum ship and is the worlds oldest naval ship in commission. The wood comes from the 1923 refurbishment and many years later was sent to fine furniture makers to commission pieces - I have picked up some of the offcuts from that exercise. It is oak and still has the brass nails in it. I will post a picture of a piece.
OK sure Thank you Malcom. It looks great and I am sure you can do a lot with that wood. Here is an example of Canal Street Cutlery, using a trapper pattern and applying reclaimed American chestnut as the knife scales. It came out very nice:
http://www.canalstreetcutlery.com/41twoblmopie.html
One thing we were talking about is the meaning of a tackler blade? Can you share with us what that is?
I pinched this pic off Greg's site, hope he don't mind.
This is my guess at a "Tackler's Knife", a Tackler was a mechanic in a weaving shed who fixed the looms when they went wrong. Weavers and tacklers had an uneasy relationship as the weavers tended to be payed on piecework, and a poor tackler could cost the weavers money.
I have just worked out what it is. A Tackler is a job in the mills. The Ettrick shaped knives with the lambsfoot blades were used by tacklers and that is how the blade name came about. So a tackler blade would be most unsuited to my HMS Victory wood knife scales. A sheepsfoot blade would be more suited.
This would be a tackler blade in the Ettrick shape which we would describe as Ettrick lambsfoot. The whole matter is from my wife's point of view getting slightly inconvenient as our HMS Victory timber has now joined the HMY Britannia Royal Yacht teak decking in the hall. Anyway you can see progress on http://www.sheffield-gb.com
OK like the look of this one and thanks to John , JJ and Malcom for clarifying a tackler knife and giving a bit of history! Even an old dog like me can learn something new!
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