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I can't find any markings on the knife itself, but the sheath seems to be distinctive. Can someone identify the maker?

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Maybe give the tang area a bit of a rub, or try using a piece of paper and pencil to get an imprint of anything there? No markings at all will make it extremely difficult to ID. Doesn't look familiar to me, but I'll do some poking around.

I've used some metal polish and can't find anything that looks like a name. I was hoping the design on the sheath would be familiar to someone.

Thanks

Steve Scheuerman (Manx) said:

Maybe give the tang area a bit of a rub, or try using a piece of paper and pencil to get an imprint of anything there? No markings at all will make it extremely difficult to ID. Doesn't look familiar to me, but I'll do some poking around.

I may have gotten lucky here...gimme a couple minutes to run this down...

No hurry.

Steve Scheuerman (Manx) said:

I may have gotten lucky here...gimme a couple minutes to run this down...

Okay...what I am finding on this is that it was made by EG Waterman during WWII. Some were stacked leather handles, others were wood like yours. Some had the sawback spine, others did not. Some had a tang stamp of EGW with KNIFE underneath, and USA on the other side, some were made with no markings. Seems one of the only things that is somewhat constant is the bottle opener. As for the sheath, I believe this is just an after market sheath that someone used because it fit. I am unsure on the value of this since there are so many variations of it and it is hard to judge condition from a photo. Hope this helps!

It helps a lot. I would have had no idea where to start looking, and the sheaf was misleading, since I was looking for a "D".

Thank you very much.
Steve Scheuerman (Manx) said:

Okay...what I am finding on this is that it was made by EG Waterman during WWII. Some were stacked leather handles, others were wood like yours. Some had the sawback spine, others did not. Some had a tang stamp of EGW with KNIFE underneath, and USA on the other side, some were made with no markings. Seems one of the only things that is somewhat constant is the bottle opener. As for the sheath, I believe this is just an after market sheath that someone used because it fit. I am unsure on the value of this since there are so many variations of it and it is hard to judge condition from a photo. Hope this helps!

No problem. Fairly sure these were never issued to military personnel, but many took their knives with them. You'll be able to find more, I am sure, with a quick Google search. Hard part was finding the name...lol.

Great work Manx!!

Wow that was impressive Manx!  Nice work and quick!

Thanks Jan and Bryan. :-) Sometimes obtuse Google searches pay off. Always happy to help a member out!

Bill...hope you stick with us! Was good to see you in Chat yesterday.

Oh, I'm with you. I sell a lot of knives on ebay and I try to research each one. I keep a few for myyself as well.

I have seven up right now and more to come. I shall stick around.

Watermans have a dedicated fan/collector base -- I'm just not sure if refurbishing the knife is desirable or not (be conservative & don't clean it up until you find out for certain that this is the better thing to do, if you plan to sell it -- if not, do whatever you want, because it's yours).

Even from this photo, I can see some tang stamp on the ricasso, so it's there...

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