The online community of knife collectors, A Knife Family Forged in Steel
In the past few months I've gotten interested in the traditional knives I grew up with. When I picture my childhood pocket knife I can see a medium stockman like I was holding it now. I had different ones and don't remember what patterns or brand but they were all similar. Now thanks to the ease of serching due to the internet I see there are several companies who make the same patterns. Stockman, congress, peanut, copperhead, etc. I am a little curious about how this came to be. Who started it? Just a brief history lesson will do. :) I have gotten the feeling in the past few days since spending time here some of you know the story well. :)
If this type of question should be in a different forum please move it if you want. I'm still getting aquainted with this place.
Jack
Tags: congress, jack, knife, patterns, peanut, stockman, trapper
Tobias I had heard they were widely used for small game and that has always made more sense to me than they were used as fighting knives
Camillus may have had to most correct description for this style blade
Tobias Gibson said:
Of interest while everyone today seems to call the larger 5 inch toothpicks " toothpick" or "fish knife", Camillus originally called their knife a Switchback and described it as a folding bird and trout knife.
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