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Thread: A very early WADE razor, plus new research.

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    Captain ARAD. Voidmonster's Avatar
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    Default A very early WADE razor, plus new research.

    Years ago SRP member Eaglesgift contacted me and asked if I could restore his Robert Wade razor.

    I was just about to pull up stakes in Oceanside and move to the Bay Area, but I said, sure, as soon as I get moved in and have my workshop up and running.

    Well, that took me over a year, and by the time I’d done it, he was having a real bad time of it. Another year passed.

    Last month, after a lot of false starts, he got the razors (there was also an I. Oxley to hone) from Thailand to me for restoration and honing.

    (This is not an advertisment that I’m available to do restorations.)

    This is the razor as I received it.

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    The scales were clearly patterned exactly on the original, but more interesting still, it had this wedge:

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    Wedges like this with the three extra holes I’ve seen exclusively on razors from before 1805, which this categorically is not. So whoever put this poor thing back together (with steel pins, which killed my poor, crappy flush cutters) was using parts from older razors still. IE, this was almost certainly rescaled in the early 1800’s.

    I ordered up some nice horn blanks from Masecraft and set about experimenting. My first thought was mockshell, but none of the transparent blanks I got had sufficient clariety and my experiments to bleach them were a total failure. So black scales it was to be.

    Next post: some groundbreaking new info on Robert Wade.
    -Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.

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    Captain ARAD. Voidmonster's Avatar
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    The story about Robert Wade has evolved significantly since I started collecting razors.

    In the beginning, he was reported to be an American businessman who formed a partnership with the Butcher Brothers. That never sat well with me because he made razors with his own name on them before he formed W&B, and why on earth was an American businessman making razors in Sheffield?

    Rather than recount the evolution of the story, I’m just going to present the facts on the ground as I now know them to be (all backed up with copious records — I literally gave myself a research hangover yesterday).

    Robert Wade was born on June 4th, 1773. He was the eldest child of Robert and Eleanor Wade. His father was a very wealthy corn factor or maltster — someone who sold grain. He owned a significant plot of land on Church Street right off the main square.

    Robert’s Brother Richard was a bookseller, and his brother William was an attorny. Richard would go on to be one of the founding members of Wade, Wingfield and Rowbotham. But that’s another story.

    Robert Jr. was a member of the Sheffield Volunteer Militia and was quite well thought of.

    In 1781, he still lived with his father on Church street. Apart from the elder Wade being a guest at a Cutler’s Company Feast, his family had very little connection to the cutlery trade — they were farmers.

    In 1795, the elder Robert died and presumably left his considerable fortune to his sons.

    Then, sometime late in the first decade of 1800, he met Jane Hives, neé Powell, widow of Joseph Hives razor manufacturer, and daughter of Robert Powell and Mary Glossop, both steeped in the cutlery trade. She had inherited the little money Joseph amassed and, presumably, his workshop.

    Robert and Jane were married July 26th, 1809 at the Cathedral of Saint Peter. She had bourne and lost three chidlren with Joseph, and would not bear more for some time.

    Instead the two of them set up a razor business selling goods stamped WADE. This razor was one of them. The most likely date for their business is 1816, when the Cutler’s Company relaxed rules on who could stamp what on what. Prior to that, a manufacturer had to be at least a Journeyman in the Company. They had only two hearths in the workshop, but Robert had plenty of money to fund the operation.

    Some time between 1818 and 1821, Robert and Jane formed a partnership with William and Samuel Butcher to create Wade & Butcher. William & Samuel had lost their father very young. William was 9, Samuel 5. Within two years, Samuel was apprenticed to Richard Nayler, razor manufacturer.

    Almost immediately after forming the Wade & Butcher partnership, Robert and Jane had their children Robert (1819) and Jane Elizabeth (1823).

    Like so many other things for these people, the partnership did not last long.

    Robert Wade died on December 8th, 1825. Wade & Butcher ceased trading shortly after.

    Jane continued to sell R. Wade stamped razors from the factory on Arundel street, but she didn’t survive her husband long, and died July 14th, 1829.

    Their son Robert went to work for William & Samuel Butcher and they continued using the Wade & Butcher mark for decades, even though the partnership was long defunct.

    And that, friends, is a portion of the Robert Wade part of this story.

    Next up, the restoration.
    Last edited by Voidmonster; 10-04-2017 at 03:37 AM.
    -Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.

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    Thanks for the history lesson. It's nice that I don't have to do the research.
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    Quote Originally Posted by drsmoothak View Post
    Thanks for the history lesson. It's nice that I don't have to do the research.
    Oh, but you do!

    I’ve only scratched the surface!

    You don’t know about Spence Broughton yet. Or the bombing. Nothing about the treason plot. I got nowhere near the part about Nanny Biddle or the Dymaxion car or even the creation of the Times New Roman typeface!

    There’s so, so much more.
    -Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.

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    Default A very early WADE razor, plus new research.

    Quote Originally Posted by Voidmonster View Post
    Oh, but you do!

    I’ve only scratched the surface!

    You don’t know about Spence Broughton yet. Or the bombing. Nothing about the treason plot. I got nowhere near the part about Nanny Biddle or the Dymaxion car or even the creation of the Times New Roman typeface!

    There’s so, so much more.
    That all sounds very intriguing.
    So much history that happens around these antiques that makes them part of history themselves & for me that’s the attraction.
    I’ll now have to try & find info on this bombing, this Nanny Biddle & treason plot?
    Wow!
    Never a dull moment back in the day eh? Lol
    Amazing!
    Next stop, google! Lol [emoji6]
    Cheers Zak

    P.s.
    Google shows nothing, could you point in right direction please? Lol

    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    Last edited by GabrielMartin; 10-07-2017 at 07:32 AM.

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    That is a classy restore Zak. Awesome research work as well. Really nice to know the history behind W & B. Thank you very much. You sure gave a big cliffhanger with the remark on the bombing and treason plot...
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    Quote Originally Posted by GabrielMartin View Post
    That all sounds very intriguing.
    So much history that happens around these antiques that makes them part of history themselves & for me that’s the attraction.
    I’ll now have to try & find info on this bombing, this Nanny Biddle & treason plot?
    Wow!
    Never a dull moment back in the day eh? Lol
    Amazing!
    Next stop, google! Lol [emoji6]
    Cheers Zak

    P.s.
    Google shows nothing, could you point in right direction please? Lol
    Here's a tiny, tiny bit from the very tail end of the Wade story.



    Nanny Biddle was Robert Wade Jr. (Jr. Jr.?)'s granddaughter, born to his daughter Maida and her husband Richard Dale.
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    Anna Hope Dale was her full name. She married young to Edward MacFunn Biddle Jr. They had three children.

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    But Nanny had other plans than to be a normal housewife.



    And that's just the beginning of her very interesting story.
    -Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Voidmonster View Post
    Oh, but you do!

    I’ve only scratched the surface!

    You don’t know about Spence Broughton yet. Or the bombing. Nothing about the treason plot. I got nowhere near the part about Nanny Biddle or the Dymaxion car or even the creation of the Times New Roman typeface!

    There’s so, so much more.
    Great, there goes my productive day at work. Down the google worm hole it is. Good thing it's slow today in the oil patch.
    Voidmonster likes this.

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    Mark specifically requested only a light restore on the blade, mostly he wanted appropriate scales and a razor he could shave with.

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    It took a luscious edge.

    The pewter wedge is the one that was in the wood scales it came with, the washers are Ajkenne’s period replicas. The scales are patterned after typical 1810’s razor scales (I was able to simply use the old wood ones as an outline).

    It was impossible to tell what the original surface treatment of the metal was, but getting a good crocus finish would have required significantly more grinding and some of the tang stamp would have been lost, so I simply gave it a glaze finish and left it at that.
    Last edited by Voidmonster; 10-04-2017 at 03:03 PM.
    -Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.

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    An addendum to the history of the Wade razors:

    For a long time the story was stuck on the fact that I could not find any records that recorded Jane's maiden name, and as such, she was just a wife.

    Having finally found the record of their wedding, the entire thing broke open, including a lot more information about Joseph Hives than I'd previously found. He only produced razors for 5 years before he died, and I feel pretty confident that Jane produced HIVES razors after his death.

    It's also not entirely clear that all of their children died. At least one definitely did, but two of them are born and then seem to generate no further records at all (though it's possible Joseph Jr. went on to be a criminal who was imprisoned for larceny in 1820, but there were a weirdly large number of Hiveses running around).

    Also: fun fact! Hives is the same name as Ives.
    -Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.

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