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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2017
Location: Tyneside. North-East England
Posts: 702
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Hey Jim.
All hollow bladed colichemardes have a groove, which means they come from SB as there was only ever one machine until, possibly, the Oleys and Moles moving to Birmingham left it behind in SB and built a new one. This is highly likely as it would be a simple task for them in Birmingham. I am still convinced they were supplying Gill… if not actually working for him, but this is an area I need to search. I've asked Mark Cloke a few times for some help but have had no response. Somebody elevated Gill's forging to Solingen standards – and higher, and I've always wondered who. Here's that Naval smallsword; I've seen others. PS, the hilt is almost certainly from Matthew Boulton's Soho factory. Last edited by urbanspaceman; 20th June 2025 at 09:32 PM. Reason: ps |
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#2 | |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2017
Location: Tyneside. North-East England
Posts: 702
|
![]() Quote:
When the syndicate were given their royal charter there was a clause that provided for marking the smallsword blades from SB and fines plus confiscation of any unmarked hollow blades traded in the UK. There was no such mark... why? Because only SB could produce the rolled groove, so anything else was easy to spot and confiscate. In the past I had wondered about that mark until I realised all SB hollow blades had the groove. Incidentally: one of the bundles of blades confiscated when Mole was arrested for smuggling was all hollow blades, probably for the Newcastle cutler Thomas Carnforth and his customers who didn't like the groove. Never could understand why Mole was smuggling those blades in. There were also hundreds of munition's-grade blades but they were for the Jacobites, as by then, the entire output from SB was going to the Tower and Parliament. |
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