Queen Cutlery & Friends

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

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  • Jan Carter

    Rick still very cool information!

  • Jan Carter

  • John Bamford

    That bone handled one looks really nice !

  • Rick Hooper

    Wow, those cotton samples are awesome, the cattle horn is A1!  Jan, I read that info in the 1980-90's,and sometime between now and then, "someone" moved the Walden Knife Co-operative file over to Schatt and Morgan file. LOL, old age strikes again!

  • Jan Carter

  • Carl Bradshaw

    So how many folks here will be going to the Queen show in 1 month?  I'll be there!

  • Jan Carter

    Oh how I wish I was!


  • Featured

    Charles Sample

    I dearly wish I could go too!

  • Dave Steiner

    Picked up this carving knife recently (I smoke a pipe and sometimes try to carve one... maybe this will help! ;-) ).

    By the tang stamp, it's fairly recent but I'm not sure how to date the newer stamps.

    -ds

  • Jan Carter

  • Carl Bradshaw

    woohooo!  I get a little shakey everytime I think about it.  This is my favorite knife show of the year!

  • Jan Carter

    Dave,

    Those carvers, if memory serves me right, are only made for one company.  I am not sure that they have ever had a different tang than that but we will see if we can get Queen to take a look at it for us

  • Jan Carter


  • Featured

    Jeremy B. Buchanan

    Great looking knives. Queen keeps impressing me with their new ones.

  • Carl Bradshaw

    I had a great time at the Titusville Queen knife show this past weekend.  Lots of familiar faces, and a nice crowd turnout.  Ken even gave my daughter a free knife for attending the show, he's a true class act.  Thanks again to everyone that put on the show, and to the employees/management of Queen Cutlery.

  • Dan Lago

    I have been AWOL for a while working on the Queen  Catalog project, which was unveiled at the Queen Show last weekend.  With catalogs digitized and loaded on the Queen historical document website, you can look at original catalog pages going back to 1947 - first catalog known..  The database now has over 7,250 knives entered and gives you a lot of information by model # or Series.  It makes no attempt to enumerate SFO knives, but it give the best detail available on regularly offered knives.  For example history of both amber and pearl handled knives shows huge production over the years - Queen could easily be called the pearl knife company!   Please check out the hisotridcal documents page and comment back to us - always looking to make this amore useful resource.

    Thanks,

    Dan

  • Jan Carter

    I had a little free time today and some of us in the chat were talking about how companies keep up their web sites.  I am so impressed with the Queen Historical Guys!!  

    Did you know you can go to the historical page and click on a report of whatever series you can think of...THEN you can click back and go see what was offered in the catalog!

    I checked out the rawhide series

  • Jean-François

    Congrats, Carl!

  • Jon Salmon

    I've been waiting for this Schatt & Morgan 033043-1/2 Jumbo Carpenter's Whittler ever since they announced the limited run early this year.  She's a BEAST !! Awesome slab stag handles, beautiful heavy duty blades an sweet etches on 2 of the blades. Shout our to Greg at TSA Knives for procuring this "pick of the litter" for me (thanks to my advance order).

  • Jan Carter

    Jon,

    It is indeed a heavy duty knife and they made sure the stag on this one matches the stoutness of the frame!  Congrats and I am glad it made it to a good home

  • Ron Cooper

    Congrats, Jon! That's a real sweet lookin' whittler you got there! Enjoy!

  • Howard P Reynolds

    I think you could whittle totem poles with that heavy duty whittler, Jon.  A beautiful knife.

  • Carl Bradshaw

    I looked at one of those at the Wilmington, OH show.  Very nice looking knife!

  • Jon Salmon

    Thanks to all who have taken the time to comment on my new S & M whittler - I'm really stoked about this knife, probably due somewhat to the fact that I had been anticipating its arrival for so many months ! (In addition to the superb quality of the knife). Best to all

  • Jan Carter

    Why Collect Queen?

    by Bob Welch Author’s note:

    October 1, 2015. This article was originally published in the quarterly newsletter of Queen Cutlery Collectors, LLC., (QCC) Volume 2, 2000. The original publication date was November, 2000. 

    read about it here

  • Derek Wells

    I started my Queen Cutlery 'journey' with a Mountain Man but recently I have had a thing for Barlows

    Very happy with these two beauties !

  • Derek Wells

    Opps tried to load two Pics at the same time 

  • Ron Cooper

    Derek,

    Both the S&M and Queen knives are beauties. But only the Schatt is a Barlow. The Queen would be a Swell End Jack pattern. 

    Like I said, though...they are both sweet looking knives! Just different patterns, that's all.

     

  • Howard P Reynolds

    Hard to pass up a "Barlow" looking knife.  Queen makes some great knives.  Such a classic pattern that has a main blade robust enough for average tasks, and then a nice little blade to shave off a bit of plug tobacco, clean your fingernails, sharpen a carpenter's pencil, or whittle a stick while sitting on your quarter horse waiting for the cattle to be graded through the clover-leaf corral.

  • Tobias Gibson

    Ron an dHoward, Queen's standard barlow, and swell end jack use the same frame.  The only difference is the set up of the scales and bolsters.  Compare the knives in the photos below.  One is the iKC Barlow the other a Queen Proto-type that was an SFO for SMKW.

    In the case of these two knives, even the main blade is from the same blank.

  • Howard P Reynolds

    Thanks, Tobias.

  • Cory Hess

    I was wondering if anybody here knew of a Queen harness jack that was made in D2.  Depending on the configuration a cattle knife with a punch would work as well.  I'm specifically looking for a spear main blade that I can pinch open with a punch secondary made in D2.

    Thanks for any help anybody can offer.

  • Jan Carter

    yes, but look for Queen City with a punch for the D2.  Queen has made some in 1095 and S&M in 440.  But I believe only Queen City did the D2 versions

    and a camp knife version was done also

  • Jan Carter

    I think the first one is an old #37 with imitation winter bottom

  • Cory Hess

    Thanks for the response.  I have eyed the 99s in the past, but am now thinking that I might just need to pick one up and remove the mark side spring and two tools leaving just the spear and punch.  Should work perfectly.

  • David Clark

    This is not a punch jack but an old Queen City utility scout – circa 1928. This is the only Queen City four blade I have seen. I do have the smaller three blade scout however. This knife is in poor shape but all blades snap well. Early Winterbotton bone handles.

  • Jan Carter

  • Cory Hess

    I'm really excited to check out the Queen City easy open teardrop jack.  Looks like a winner to me.  I'm also interested in hearing about the fossilized bone and finding out how similar it is to GEC's primitive bone.

  • John Bamford

    That teardrop jack does look like a winner and I like the choice of blade steels that are available .

  • David Gallup

    Was just going through all my ebay purchases for the last year and it's been 9 months since I bought a Queen or Schatt & Morgan knife.  I better get on the stick!  I kind of specialize in PA made cutlery.  With Case, Queen and a couple of others in the state there is no shortage to choose from.  I don't let is stop me from buying a choice Buck or other knife though.

  • Jonathan emrich

    Just wanted to say I'm a big fan of queen cutlery. Just joined the site and this group and looking forward to getting to know some of you all and very excited for the queen steel knife days this year!
  • Don Neiman

    Several years ago I found this knife at a yard sale. This is the smallest of my queen knifes. The handle material is jigged bone. Both blades have very strong snap. I'm not sure when this was made...maybe someone can tell me what model this was called and approximately when it was made. Would this be a "collectible" knife or just considered a common knife. Thank you all.

  • Carl Bradshaw

    Most people refer to those as an "Equal End Pen Knife" or a "Senator" pattern, I think for Queen that would be a #5 pattern.  I'm not a Queen expert, so I'm sure someone with more knowledge will correct me if I'm not accurate.  To date the knife, you need to look at the tang stamp, and compare it to this chart, it will help narrow it down.

    The knife looks in nice shape, as long as the handles on both sides are not cracked.  The blades look in good condition, main blade looks like it was sharpened a bit. If the knife is earlier (mid-50's or before) the handles would be winterbottom bone.  If the knife is after that, the handles are likely Delrin plastic made to look like bone.  It's hard to tell from just one picture, you really need to hold it in your hand to get all the info from the knife. Nice catch either way.  I would call it collectible.  Book value on a mint condition knife would be about $40 or so.

  • Richard Schuchman

    Hello, second post! I already posted this in the general discussion area, but thought this group may have a better insight.

    Like most people, I'm looking for some info from an expert. I used to collect traditionals and have recently turned to more modern knives. My collector half would like to keep everything, but my practical financial half (read: the wife) wants me to fund my recent acquisitions by selling off a few dust collectors.

    SO, having purchased these a few years ago, one on the Bay and one from a collector on AAPK and needing to sell them, I realize I know NOTHING about them and I can't find anything online about either of them; not the type of steel, not the type of handle, nada. I think the Mountain Man is delrin and it says "stainless" on the blade, but that could mean anything. The KKCA handle "looks" like it could be jigged bone, but I could be wrong.

    Lastly, I don't know if this forum has a thing about estimated values. If so, just don't comment. I know other forums do. But if it's not taboo, a general range would be nice since I can't find anything to compare them to.

    Thanks for any info!

  • Tobias Gibson

    Richard, I'm far from an expert on Queen knives but I believe their stainless steel is normally 420HC. If nothing else, my comment will generate a discussion. How long ago was a few years ago. Was this back when Ontario owned Queen?
  • Richard Schuchman

    I bought them maybe 2 years ago, but that has no bearing on their age. The Mountain Man has Q78 on the base of the blade, but I'm not sure if that refers to a model number or a year. The KKCA is from 1994 (obviously).

  • Tobias Gibson

    Q78 would be the model number. 1994 would be the Ontario era of Queen.
  • Steve Pfeiffer

    Q78 is the tang stamp with the year made - 1978.

  • Jan Carter

    Well Historian David Clarke has done it again!  Check out the early Grindstone information and enjoy! http://www.queencutlery.com/uploads/Early_Cutlery_Grindstones_3-25-...

  • Howard P Reynolds

    Thanks, Jan.  Great information, especially for me.  My father-in-law purchased some Potter County Pennsylvania mountain property back in the '60s.  It is a mountainous area by eastern standards.  Most of Potter county is up and down with relatively few flat areas.  The property was intended as a "hunting camp" as there were/are plenty of deer and turkey. 

    However, early inspection of the property showed signs of quarrying - shallow, almost insignificant quarrying of flagstone.  One of my brothers-in-law, along with a local native of Potter Co. got interested in trying to sell this "Pennsylvania Bluestone flagstone in the late '90s, as it is harder than the Arizona type of flagstone.  So they bought a stone cutter and worked the quarry for a time until the bottom fell out of the flagstone market.  

    So, this article says that some nice hard (and soft) flagstone (sandstone) was found in the 1800s in the UP of MI (Grindstone City) that made excellent grindstones when cut and shaped into wheels for grinding knife blades.

    I am wondering if the guys working the quarry on the property ever had the flagstone analyzed for content of silica, etc.  It is a very fine-grained sandstone, and might make excellent benchstones - since carborundum ruined the grindstone business.  Now, there doesn't seem to be any of that hard Arkansas stone for fine work, but maybe a coarse or medium benchstone material might be just lying there waiting to become a natural benchstone.  It won't compete with Norton benchstones, but might be a "cottage" industry to make a buck here and there.