I picked up this razor this weekend and would like your input on the manufacturer and/or date of manufacture.
http://i522.photobucket.com/albums/w.../PC300173b.jpg
http://i522.photobucket.com/albums/w.../PC300173a.jpg
Thank you in advance.
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I picked up this razor this weekend and would like your input on the manufacturer and/or date of manufacture.
http://i522.photobucket.com/albums/w.../PC300173b.jpg
http://i522.photobucket.com/albums/w.../PC300173a.jpg
Thank you in advance.
And who was George Brittain?Quote:
Would this be a George Brittain?
Nice, old razor was made by Brittain, Wilkinson & Brownell. The company was in business 1780-1840. They used the trademark "France".
http://manah.strazors.com/gb_1.jpg
I found this snippet on the web yesterday:
The mark
http://homepage.eircom.net/~lawed/Image96.jpg was entered in July 1784 by George Brittain & Co., a partnership comprising four cutlers, George Brittain, Jonathan Wilkinson, Peter Brownell and Joseph Ibberson who entered into a fourteen year partnership from 1st January 1784 to manufacture cutlery in the existing workshops of Brittain. None of the partners appear subsequently in the silver register. The only items noted in the day-book are blades.
I think there's a good chance that your razor is a "George Brittain".
:-)
Nice one too!
Acier Fondu means something along the lines of "Molten Steel".
I'd date it anywhere between 1784 and 1840.
Edit:
I saw the page I took this from is copyrighted, so I'll mention the source:
http://homepage.eircom.net/~lawed/SILVERSMITHSPART2.htm
Hope they don't mind. We use this for noble purposes.
Acier Fondu is Cast Steel.
According Standart Guide, the stamp "Acier Fondu" was used till 1820's. But the tang of this razor looks like near to 1840's.
Hi! Sell me the big GB anchor George Brittain, anyone))
There's one on Ebay right now if you need it that urgent. Needs quite a bit of work though.
Where exactly? Do you have an address?
Boys, not really suppose to be doing this over the open forum. Just saying.