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Thread: Calling on the historical experts, I'm stumped! An unassuming mystery razor.

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    wow, what a read. Sorry I am lazy, but this is the same Farady as in "Farady Cage" the direct lineage to the anti-static bag most electronics come in?
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    Quote Originally Posted by LameBMX View Post
    wow, what a read. Sorry I am lazy, but this is the same Farady as in "Farady Cage" the direct lineage to the anti-static bag most electronics come in?
    The very same. And on top of all that, he seems by all accounts to have been a really genuinely good guy.

    (Also, the 'farad' as a unit of capacitance is named for Faraday.)

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    Stoddard, a variation of Stodart is my mothers maiden name.. wonder if my geneology lies with some old razor makers. Would be cool, I'll have to keep my eyes peeled for a Stodart

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    Quote Originally Posted by JordanM View Post
    Stoddard, a variation of Stodart is my mothers maiden name.. wonder if my geneology lies with some old razor makers. Would be cool, I'll have to keep my eyes peeled for a Stodart
    This might be of interest to you then.

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    Re James Stodart-Voidmaster, I have just returned from Edinburgh & visited the Old Calton Cemetery. The Scottish Records Office at Edinburgh have a record of the inscriptions for James & David. - Jas Stodart Esq FRSL late of Russel Sq London 11-09-1823 age 63 (Note he d... at house of his uncle Rob S Esq of Queen Street);
    David S Esq formerly of the island of Tobago died at Portobello 18-08-1831 age 69, wife Dorothy Ligerton 16-04-1844 age 66. The records state David is buried within these tombs in the Old Calton Cemetery, next to Burns 69. James Esq of Russel Sq London from No 52 Queen Street, 64, buried the South side within R Stodart Esq grounds. Robert Stodart buried within the West side of Stodart tomb, it appeared the tomb was at South Leith Church, but we could not find it in the cemetery! So David is buried at the Old Calton Cemetery, James is buried within his uncle Roberts grounds/tomb. The David buried at O-Calton C is not the David from 401 Strand, unless he remarried! So 3 steps forward and several to the side. Phil Stodart.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Stods713 View Post
    Re James Stodart-Voidmaster, I have just returned from Edinburgh & visited the Old Calton Cemetery. The Scottish Records Office at Edinburgh have a record of the inscriptions for James & David. - Jas Stodart Esq FRSL late of Russel Sq London 11-09-1823 age 63 (Note he d... at house of his uncle Rob S Esq of Queen Street);
    David S Esq formerly of the island of Tobago died at Portobello 18-08-1831 age 69, wife Dorothy Ligerton 16-04-1844 age 66. The records state David is buried within these tombs in the Old Calton Cemetery, next to Burns 69. James Esq of Russel Sq London from No 52 Queen Street, 64, buried the South side within R Stodart Esq grounds. Robert Stodart buried within the West side of Stodart tomb, it appeared the tomb was at South Leith Church, but we could not find it in the cemetery! So David is buried at the Old Calton Cemetery, James is buried within his uncle Roberts grounds/tomb. The David buried at O-Calton C is not the David from 401 Strand, unless he remarried! So 3 steps forward and several to the side. Phil Stodart.
    Superb! That doubly verifies what I'd found about James passing away at his uncle Robert's house in Edinburgh, it provides his wife's name (which is a lead I'd been unable to find anywhere) and it provides a new mystery about their son David.

    It's possible that David was one of Robert Stodart's children, I guess. Tobago, eh? That will help considerably.

    I wonder if this investigation is going to run into this branch of the Stodart family?

    Thank you so much for the trip to Edinburgh. I know this is more personal to you, but my curiosity hasn't ebbed since I first discovered what the name on my razor is!
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    If you google Medical Antiques .Com and Surgical Instrument Set ca 1830; it displays several photos of a David Stodart case and instruments etc. If you have the computer expertise, perhaps you can transfer it to the Straight Razor site?

    Cheers Phil Stodart.

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    Yes! This was a great thread to read. History is linked to all things and all people and discovering it and learning about it is great. Those razors are beautiful just the way they are.

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    I got another tiny piece of data for my Stodart razor today -- a late 1700's Bengall Cast Steel.



    There are a goodly number of similarities. They have similar 'trigger' type tails, though the Stodart is longer. The tangs and blades are, but for the rounded toe, very similar in design.

    Now I'm only guessing, but I am guessing that the Bengall dates to the 1780-1800 range, and I would guess the Stodart is not much newer, which puts it squarely in James' time. I'd love to know when he started stamping the blades with the Sanskrit WOOTZ, but there are lots of things I'd like to know and don't.



    Having them both in-hand makes me strongly suspect that the Stodart is late 1700's. You don't get it from the pictures, but they feel like contemporaries, despite the considerably greater wear on the Bengall.



    I'm pretty certain the scales on the Bengall are original despite the fact that it's been repaired at the pivot. Certainly the scales are of a similar age to the blade. Believe it or not, they're black horn -- just with 200 years of heavy use.



    Unusually, it's a single piece of horn that's been bisected, not two pieces bonded with the pin.



    I do wish it still had the decorative washer at the pivot, but I'm happier still to actually have the razor. The pins, by the way, are iron. Even the replacement, which suggests to me that it was fixed a very, very long time ago.

    And yes, really. It's horn.
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    I read in the discussion that these famous razors with the punch in Sanskrit were just the result of experiments of Faraday and Stodart. I think if they did make a punch, it is the purpose of selling them. If I am right, it's good because it has a chance to find other copies

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