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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  • John Bamford

    What a shame, such sad news.

  • Jan Carter

    Dan,

    Like you I appreciate the efforts the Daniels family made to retain the Queen legacy and keep it going.  I also have heard that the company was forced to pursue chapter 7 bankruptcy.  My heart breaks for all the effort time and money.  It was Ken's dream and this has to be very difficult 

  • Carl Bradshaw

    I wonder if there is any chance that the Queen/S&M names can be owned, and knives still made by an American company. Even though they wouldn't be made from the same old factory, I hope that the brand is somehow able to continue.

  • Tobias Gibson

    It would be nice if perhaps the Pipes, Parker, or Watkins family ( or a combination there of) could see a way to revive the company. But it is a gamble for sure.
  • Don Schriver

    I absolutely love Queen//Schatt & Morgan knives. I know I have more of these than all other makers combined. I hope they return!!

  • Jan Carter

    Don,

    It seems to me that even if there is a chapter 7, we will someone buy Queen.  I just hope it is not Taylor Brand.  Although I have nothing against them, I feel Queen has had a special place in the knife world and would love to see it continue in it's factory

  • Don Schriver

    Someone, thats would be a concern as well. I would rather see the Daniels family make a smaller line, be even more select only producing their most popular lines and maybe take a stab (pun intended) at a line lesss costly and higher producing for everyday use.

  • Jan Carter

    Can anyone help with this ??  http://iknifecollector.com/forum/topics/seeking-info

    I have checked out the historical page but the 1989 catalog is not there

  • Jan Carter

    Did anyone else read the article in Knife Magazine?

  • David Clark

    Yes, and I talked to Ryan Daniels at the Pigeon Forge Show last month. He had a proto with him. Best wishes this time around.

  • Jan Carter

    Among the news I try to bring to all of you on anything knife related, I sometimes have to bring news I don't like.  But here it is

     Public Auction*Former Queen Cutlery


  • Featured

    Charles Sample

    I am sorry to see that!

  • jack walker

    Thanks for the information  Jan.  Sad news. A lot of history.

  • Jean-François

    Very sad indeed.

  • Tim

    Very sad to see this.

  • David Gallup

    Shame they are just breaking it up.  Creditors will get pennies on the dollar and any chance for new ownership or reorganization is gone.

  • Ashley

    It is very sad but will someone someday be able to own the rights to the name and start making them again? Even if it’s out of someone’s garage it would be better than someone in China picking up the name...
  • Jan Carter

    Well I hope they did whatever was needed to come out of this whole.  Wish I could have been at the auction but then again maybe not

  • Ashley

    It was very surreal being there for the end of such a historical company. It still doesn’t quite feel like it really happened....

  • Featured

    Andy Copas

    I have a Queen, Schatt & Morgan heritage knife, 1 of 20 that was recently given to me because the shield was missing, Could anyone steer me in the right direction to possibly acquiring a shield for this, it is the larger on about 1 5/16" long?

  • Ashley

    If you post a picture of the knife where the shield is missing I can look some time tomorrow and see if I may have an extra.

  • Featured

    Andy Copas


  • Featured

    Andy Copas

    Thank you Ashley, I'm new to the site and trying to upload via my phone, I think it posted it, if not i will try from a computer tomorrow.


  • In Memoriam

    Kenneth W. Hill

    I just bought this 2017 Schatt & Morgan Grand Daddy Barlow single clip blade Premium grade curly spalted Maplewood "factory sample" 1 of 1 knife !!!!


  • In Memoriam

    Kenneth W. Hill

    Here is my A.M.K.C.A.  1995 Schatt & Morgan  swing guard lock-back Sambar Stag with "black bear" shield knife   #37 of 50  !


  • In Memoriam

    Kenneth W. Hill

  • Billy Oneale

    Sweet

  • Rome D. Rushing

    I came across and old, abused and unwanted knife the other day.  After

    a little cleaning what i had bought was a Queen City large Toothpick with

    Winterbottom bone slabs.  It seems that in its other life the tip of the blade

    was broken off and one of the liners is bent. I worked on the tip and gave it

    a little curve but did not want to do to much to the blade.  Enclosed are a few

    pictures.

  • Rome D. Rushing

    I came across a knife the other day at an indoor flea market, it was a Queen

    electricians knife.  The tip of the blade had been broken of when someone used

    it for a screwdriver and it had a half moon broken off in the curve of the blade

    where someone used it for something it wasn't meant to be used for. 

    But as it was only $3 I had to bring it home.  I didn't take before a before picture

    but I reshaped the tip of the blade so that it could still be used.

  • Jan Carter

    Rome,

    I love that you rescued this knife.  You pay a little, spend some time making it all yours and it forever becomes a user you enjoy.  Glad the knife didn't end up thrown out and you did a great job on the blade!

  • Jan Carter

    Kenneth,

    That one of one is a beauty but you had me with the swing guard.  A good swing guard is just a beautiful pattern to me and that one is a stunner!


  • In Memoriam

    Kenneth W. Hill

    Schatt & Morgan  Humpback Whittler lock-back  MADE IN NEW YORK 

  • Ashley

    Sorry it took so long for me to get back to you Andy but I do not have a shield for that knife. It’s been crazy the last month!


  • In Memoriam

    D ale

    A favorite of mine.

  • Rome D. Rushing

    I went to a gun show today and there was a man selling his collection.

    I ended up buying 2 black bone Winchesters, 1 older Queen, 1 large Eye Brand

    trapper, 2 NKCA stag handled knives one of which was a Klass Kissing Crane.

    Seeing as this is the queen group I will only post a picture of the Queen.  Oh the

    best part was I didn't pay more than $30 for any 1 knife.

  • Rome D. Rushing

    Well went back to the gun show today and picked up 5 more knives.

    1 was a 4 blade S&M Sow Belly

    1 was a Buck 110 stag handled custom shop with sv30 blade.

    1 was a Case stag Sharktooth

    1 was a Gold Coast Chapter club 3 blade stockman Frank Buster Fighting Rooster

    1 was a gold Coast Chapter club stag trapper Frank Buster Fighting Rooster

    And how this is the Queen group here is the S&M

    I will post the rest on the box of knives group

  • Rome D. Rushing

    When I posted the first group i did not know that the NKCA 1981 was a Queen knife.

    It is not marked with the manufacturer and I had to look it up.

    Also I new but forgot that the black bone Winchesters were made by Queen under

    contract.

  • Serge S.

    I have so far only one this small knife. The name of Queen steel #15 has become a little inconsistent with the name of the company now, but the font is very similar, maybe it was in some specific years of production?

  • Carl Bradshaw

    Queen had to use the name "Queen Steel" starting in the 50's because the term "Stainless Steel" was trademarked.  Your knife has no tang stamp, only blade etch, which would date it to 1961-1971 timeframe.

  • Serge S.

    Carl, thank you very much! 

  • Rome D. Rushing

    Here are a few pictures of some Queen Steel knives that don't see much collecting or talking about.

    This one has seen to much dishwasher time.

    The Winterbottom bone delrin has faded .

    This slicer has real Winterbottom Bone.

  • Rome D. Rushing

    I also came across a set of Marks brand scissors that were marketed by if

    not made by Queen.  I have a brochure that shows the scissors in a Queen

    display along with kitchen knives and pocket knives.

  • Jan Carter

    Rome,

    That real winterbottom is a treat to see.  I also believe there was a time when Queen made scissors but I have never been able to verify it

  • Rome D. Rushing

    Here is a poor scan of a Queen brochure that shows them selling

    Marks brand scissors.  It is the only thing I have seen that shows this

    and I do have a pair of Marks scissors somewhere.


  • In Memoriam

    D ale

    No photo description available.

    Courtesy of Fred Fisher.
    Those pictured are out of his personal collection.


  • In Memoriam

    D ale

    From the collection of Fred Fisher.

  • Rome D. Rushing

    Well now I can say I have seen Queen Cutlery scissors.  The only scissors

    that I had ever known of were the Marks that were listed in the

    brochure and I once saw a large display in an old Western Auto

    that had a place for the scissors but they were not there.

    Sometimes the wealth of knowledge on this site is amazing.

    I guess now I will have to pay attention to the other types of

    cutlery at the flea markets and places I go.

    Thank you for posting these photos, they mean I learned something

    new today and that is always good.

  • Rome D. Rushing

         I just realized that the first pocket knife that I ever saw was a amber

    handled Queen and I still think they are one of the prettiest knives ever

    made.  I guess that is the reason I have bought them for so long and will

    continue to pick them up when the price is not unreasonable.

         In this area Queen Cutlery was usually sold by Western Auto Stores,

    every once in a while you would run across a small hardware store that

    sold them, but not often.

         I was always told that they were mostly a northern knife and that the

    salesmen down in this area were few.  So this makes them hard to find

    around here, especially the older ones.  And when you do find them most

    of the time they were used hard.  But it hasn't stopped me from looking.

  • Carl Bradshaw

    That's funny. Growing up here in PA, only 20 miles from the Queen factory, there was never a single hardware store or dealer that you could buy Queen knives from. The story was always that Case had the market cornered around here, so the bulk of Queen knives were shipped down south to the Gulf states for the majority of their sales, at least 1950's - 1980's era.

  • Rome D. Rushing

    All I can say is that Queen Cutlery has always been hard to find.

    Out of six hardware stores that used to be in town only 1 had a small

    Queen display.  I found a large display about 4 ft tall by 5 ft wide in a 

    Western Auto in a small delta town and bought a lot of knives from

    there.  I found another Western Auto in another small delta town that sold

    some queen but they said it had been years since they had seen a salesman.

    I found a 10 knife display in a grocery store in Ms and a small 2x3 cabinet

    in a Louisiana Western Auto.

    Sometimes its like looking for chicken teeth.  They are supposed to be here

    but where is here.