The online community of knife collectors, A Knife Family Forged in Steel
Knives have been made at the factory of Queen Cutlery Company of Titusville Pennsylvania for over 100 years. It is arguably the oldest and last American Cutlery that truly continues to produce knives in the same way as they were produced there when the factory opened in 1902. The factory’s first tenant was the Schatt & Morgan Cutlery Company: Queen Cutlery Company displaced Schatt & Morgan there in 1933. Queen City Cutlery Company first began to produce knives in 1918 around the end of the First World War, incorporated in 1922, and shortened their name to “Queen Cutlery Company” in January of 1946. Purchased by Daniels Family Cutlery Corporation on September 18, 2012
LINK TO Complete Guide to Queen and Schatt & Morgan Knives and History
Website: http://queencutleryhistory.com/
Location: Titusville PA
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Latest Activity: Mar 20
Started by Dan Lago. Last reply by Dan Lago Feb 9, 2021. 2 Replies 7 Likes
After five months of preparation I am pleased to announce a new website…Continue
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Tags: 2020, mini-Trapper, Cutlery, Queen
Started by Jan Carter Feb 1, 2020. 0 Replies 1 Like
I have rather an off question but I am hoping someone can help answer it. We have an old forum that has been revived about Northwoods knives. Now I know that the timeline of ownership on the Scagel…Continue
Started by Kenneth W. Hill. Last reply by Jan Carter Oct 3, 2019. 1 Reply 3 Likes
I HAVE BEEN WANTING ONE OF THESE KNIVES FOR A YEAR ,NOW ! I LOVE THE BLACK SPAULTED MAPLEWOOD AND A LINER LOCK TO BOOT. 1 OF 30 A GREAT SCORE ! …Continue
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Sounds good. Thank you Sir.
Tim, Thanks for the comment. The Mountain man Express is the 4.5" size and came after the John Henry Express, but used the same switchblade opening lock. It was generally quicker to open and easier to carry. More popular and around 96 different versions were made, BUT never cataloged. Brian Guth and I are working on several articles that will describe this knife. Dan
Great info Dan. Thank you.
Was the smaller 4-5/8" (Express #3?) from a older pattern as well?
Just added a very useful article on Queen John Henry EXPRESS switchblades. Brian Guth and I have put together a listing of all 18 factory-made John Henry Express knives, with a bit of history and details of how each knife was packaged. Let us know what you have to add! Read it here: https://secureservercdn.net/198.71.233.109/gbh.929.myftpupload.com/...
The latest Historical Knife Spotlight at queencutleryhistory.com is the second installment of a series on contract knives made by Schatt & Morgan and Queen. This month's feature covers the Griffon Cutlery and Curtin & Clark knives made years ago by Schatt & Morgan. Several photos of rare knives and actual tang stamp dies and impressions are included.
Also new at QCH (and available for download) is a supplement to the Tang Stamp Guide covering Dollar Knife, Tuna Valley and Robeson.
A new Historical Knife Spotlight has been posted at queencutleryhistory.com. This month's feature kicks off a limited series on Schatt & Morgan and Queen contract knives, spanning more than a century. You'll read about brands you know and some you may never have heard of. Check it out!
The Keystone Series had some beautiful knives Bob! Thanks for the info on them
There is a new Historical Knife Spotlight article at queencutleryhistory.com. This month's feature is the 20 year run of the highly collectible Keystone Series. In 1991 Queen revived the Schatt & Morgan brand with an annual set of limited issue, hand crafted, premium quality pocketknives. Have a look!
New Article on QUEEN CUTLERY CLASSICS. Comments a few days ago urged me to give a little more details on this Ken Daniels Special Factory Order with Queen in and after 2002, https://secureservercdn.net/198.71.233.109/gbh.929.myftpupload.com/...
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