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Thread: New at this, need a little help
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01-05-2015, 10:29 PM #1
I'm sorry it's taken me a little while to get back to this. I've been away on vacation and didn't have regular time in front of the computer.
The Birmingham affiliation for the anchor mark is purely for sterling silver and doesn't have the same association on base metals.
That particular anchor is a fouled anchor, which has been use for a good long time and is usually associated with the Navy.
What did it mean on a razor, and who made razors with that mark?
Unknown. My quasi-educated guess is that these were sold as 'Navy Razors'. A generic term, probably made by a variety of manufacturers. The old Sheffield work system meant that the factories and workshops of all the 'name brands' also produced large numbers of cutlery stamped with the names of other companies (even competitors!), people or even just marketable slogans.
A fouled anchor would fall into the category of a marketable slogan in this case.
There might possibly be a more identifying mark on the top of the spine, etched in, but usually not.
The scales were also part of its marketability. There were a couple of prominent Sheffield families who specialized in scale production and they also made that variety of ornately pressed scales. Many of them have the scale-maker's name cleverly hidden in the borders of the design. V.W., was the mark of one of the Woofindin clan (probably Verdon), Wilson scales were made by Samuel and William Wilson, John and Thomas Morton made scales with a flowery 'Morton' mark, and 'Broadwell' remains mysterious. Since these scales were made with a metal mold, they were also copied and reused by others, but never with the maker's name copied as far as I can tell. There were, I'm certain, other manufacturers of these scales, but those are the names I've encountered.
The date range for all of these elements places it from about 1815 to about 1830, with it being more likely earlier than later.
I hope that helps!-Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.
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Utopian (01-06-2015)
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01-05-2015, 10:42 PM #2
Welcome to SRP Mitch. You know if that razor was made shave ready you could undoubtedly get a DFS (damned fine shave) out of it.
Andrew ........ don't salivate on the keyboard when you see that razor ! ...........Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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01-06-2015, 12:28 AM #3
Thanks JimmyHAD - have one of those downstairs...while the general agreement is that this Anchor stamp is made by, "Goodlad", I have one with that Anchor stamp made by, "I.Barber"...is there a name stamped on the tang of your blade?
Here's the pic of the I.Barber Anchor I have:
Last edited by Phrank; 01-06-2015 at 12:37 AM.
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01-06-2015, 01:06 AM #4
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Thanked: 2That's a great looking razor, I've seen that marking in some pictures before. This is a little different, the rope goes beyond the anchor in yours, it stops at the anchor on mine. I've put it under a glass and it never ran past the anchor, not sure what the difference is. I don't know if it was a miss-trike, a totally different marking or all the above. Mine has no other stamps or marking anywhere on the blade. I've been told these markings have been used by numerous makers dating back a couple hundred years. The unknown is both exciting and irritating at the same time. Thank you for sharing, please feel free to pass along any additional information you might find for either one.
Mitch
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01-06-2015, 01:18 AM #5
I wonder if part of the Anchor stamp is missing on yours, they look fairly close??
I think Voidmonster is correct as usual, that it is simply an early Navy razor, I have another one, just an Anchor, also with no maker, so methinks VM is correct. Here is another Anchor stamp then:
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01-06-2015, 01:28 AM #6
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Thanked: 2I've seen that stamp also, they are the same anchor just different variations of the rope.. I wish I had VM's knowledge, he was able to provide a lot of information that many others just had pieces of. This is a great site and appreciate everyone's willingness to share their knowledge. Pocket knives are a little easier to identify, but not as much fun.
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01-06-2015, 01:30 AM #7
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01-06-2015, 04:27 PM #8
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01-05-2015, 10:55 PM #9
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Thanked: 2Thank you very much.. I will check the scales for markings, I remember something being at the bottom of the front side. The blade is clean enough to see any markings and none appear. I've seen razors with the same anchor but none with the rope on it, is there a relation between the 2? I've also seen some with the rope but a lot longer one, that goes past the anchor it'self. I've collected knives for a long time, this razor thing is fascinating. would you consider this razor valuable?
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Voidmonster (01-06-2015)
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01-05-2015, 11:36 PM #10
Most likely, on the front scale it has something like "Justice" or "Liberty" to identify the figure in the cartouche. The scale-pressers marks are usually very small -- like get out your magnifying glass small -- and hidden in detail. Sometimes not, though. And like I said, some aren't signed.
Unfortunately, what the differences in anchors mean is unknown to me. Many people think that an anchor mark was George Brittain's mark, but that isn't true. It was a generic symbol used by multiple manufacturers.
We don't do valuations here because it's too subjective. Basically, it's worth is what someone will pay you for it. I know that sounds like an evasion, but it's actually the only answer that matters. People that assign a number value to an antique are people who are trying to sell antiques.-Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.