The online community of knife collectors, A Knife Family Forged in Steel
One of the things that I notice missing is photos and discussions on the older Queens.
I thought maybe I could start a discussion on them and show a few pictures of some of
the Queens that I have collected over the years.
But First I will explain why I decided to collect Queen.
My parents were brought up in the Tylertown, Mississippi area and moved to Vicksburg in the
mid 50's. Because family and friends still resided in Tylertown we would occasionally go for a short
visit.
One day before we left Tylertown to head home my father said he had to stop at the hardware
store for something. When re returned to the car my mother asked him what he had gotten and he
pulled out a brand new Queen Steel #9A stockman. When I saw that knife I thought that the
yellow/amber handles were the prettiest thing I had ever seen. I asked to look at it and was rewared
by them letting me hold the closed knife in my hands for just a minute with the cautionary warning "be
careful".
After that time I was a Queen fan, even though I wasn't but about 5 years old it didn't matter, I was
hooked for life. Over the years when my father stopped for his knife they didn't always have the #9A
in stock and he would have to settle for just the standard #9 with the fake winterbottom bone
handles, but he always bought Queen. The reason he had to wait and buy one in Tylertown was that
Vicksburghad no Queen dealer, in later years this changed.
So for the first of the Queens of the Past is a #9a
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1 more to show, I was at my grandfather's today and he showed me this one. It is a Queen 1986 canoe pattern, with handles hand jigged by Bob Cargill, and blade etching done by Adrian Harris (Colonel Coon). This is a prototype knife made for my hometown's bicentennial anniversary of it's founding, that my grandfather proposed to the town council. They liked the knife, but by the time they decided to order it, it was too late to get the knives made, so they had to go with a more simple design, metal handle lockback.
Pretty rare to have a Queen/Cargill/Colonel Coon knife!
Now that puts the R in rare Carl. Truly a special knife!
Carl,
Thank you so much for sharing this one. Please Thank your grandfather also, what a rare opportunity to see something like that canoe
In the 20's, this shield was leased to a company. The knives had the Queen shield shown and a tang stamp that was for the Henry Sears Co. It is the only time that shield was used, to the best of my knowledge. Ken Daniels brought this one to me today and asked that I share it here in this discussion. What a beauty and another rare opportunity to hold and see a 20's unique shield in such excellent condition. By the way this IS a Queen Winterbottom, one of the ones that took on the color of time in a way unique to only a few bones
Carl, that's an original tang stamp circa 1901-1948. Very nice looking knife.
Thanks Ken. I guess I shouldn't have put it in here under the Old Queen section then. :)
Carl, there is a Robeson section under "Box full of Knives" - you could put it there for all the Robeson fans.
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