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Queen Cutlery & Friends

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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

Website: http://queencutleryhistory.com/
Location: Titusville PA
Members: 225
Latest Activity: Mar 20

Discussion Forum

Queen Cutlery Guide website goes public

Started by Dan Lago. Last reply by Dan Lago Feb 9, 2021. 2 Replies

After five months of preparation I am pleased to announce a new website…Continue

Tags: database, SFO, Catalog, Cutlery, Queen

Dave Shirley Northwoods knives made by Queen

Started by Jan Carter Feb 1, 2020. 0 Replies

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

Tags: by, Queen, made, knives, Shirley

EVIL-BAY S&M TEARDROP CARBON SPEAR BLADE LINER LOCK KNIFE

Started by Kenneth W. Hill. Last reply by Jan Carter Oct 3, 2019. 1 Reply

 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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Comment by Jan Carter on December 29, 2020 at 11:10

Hey Bob thanks for the update!

I knew that Mr. Cooper was in the process but the community as a whole kind of kept our mouths shut until we saw some kind of announcement, not wanting to overstep and let excitement over ride reality. Now that we have an announcement from Austin WOOOOHOOOO!!!!! Let's see if I can get him to give us some kind of a heads up on what and when?

Comment by Bob Welch on December 29, 2020 at 10:41

A new Historical Knife Spotlight has been posted to queencutleryhistory.com. This months topic is the series of rare pocketknives with satin-finished blades made by Queen in 1960, as a marketing experiment. Some mis-conceptions about these knives have been cleared up and detailed photos are included.

Comment by Ashley on December 29, 2020 at 4:09
Yes Gilbert Cooper bought most of the equipment at the auction last year and will be making Schatt and Morgan knives in Ohio they will be coming out next year. Unfortunately the Queen name ended up with SMKW and they are the same standards as the rough rider knives.
Comment by Fred Kemp on December 28, 2020 at 22:30

Hello all, Schatt and Morgan/Queen knives have been a favorite of mine for several years. My other favorite knife is Great Eastern Cutlery.

Recently I ordered a framed picture of GEC knife labels from Traditionalpocketknives.com/C. Risner Cutlery and when it arrived, in the box was a paper stating that: "We Are Back!" Coming 2021... Schatt and Morgan Cutlery Company. Below this statement was printed: Cooper Cutlery LLC. Winchester, Ohio.

Has anyone else heard of this? I sure hope this happens!

Comment by Jan Carter on December 11, 2020 at 9:45

Rare and collectible knives from S & M, Queen, Robson, CC...for...

Just thought I would let you know, looks like an older collection has come up for sale...All are in new condition in their original box unless otherwise stated.   A must see this week is the 80th Anniversary Queen knife.  It features a  Stanhope viewer displaying an image of the founders built into the knife handle! 

Comment by Bob Welch on November 30, 2020 at 16:23

This month's Historical Knife Spotlight on queencutleryhistory.com is focused on Queen Cutlery’s # 11, 11EO utility and # 24 slim trapper knives. At a quick glance, the patterns look essentially the same, but there are subtle and not-so-subtle differences. You will see details and photos of several of these fine knives.

Comment by Dan Lago on November 24, 2020 at 11:49

Drake Well Commemorative Barlow 1972. Some good information about Queens first Collector knife. Drake-Barlow-1972.-11-24-2020.pdf (secureservercdn.net) double posted

Comment by Dan Lago on November 16, 2020 at 19:04

Robeson Boxes by Queen Cutlery by David Krauss and myself. Here is the final installment of our eight-part series of Queen boxes. This set covers from 1900 - till 2017 (with the usual gap for Queen City products from 1922-1945). This set of articles now contains 96 pages of previously undocumented uses of knife boxes by Queen Cutlery and its forerunner Schatt & Morgan. https://secureservercdn.net/.../Robeson-boxes-11-16-2020.pdf

Comment by Bob Welch on October 28, 2020 at 13:54

Queen Cutlery’s elusive Smoked Pearl pocketknives are in the Queen Cutlery History, Historical Knife Spotlight this month. Discover facts about these rare and beautiful knives and enjoy the new photos.

Comment by Dan Lago on October 23, 2020 at 9:05

Still figuring out posting... here is a basic image...

 
 
 

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