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Queen knives what have you got,whats your thoughts.

Johnnythefox

Gold Member
Joined
Feb 16, 2017
Messages
4,614
This is the only one I have ever seen let alone bought (yesterday) so I am interested to see what you have.

Living in England we just dont see them around.


I would be interested in any history of facts about my Queen knife. 😁

Age,material,model that sort of thing.














 
That's a beauty.
I think I have three. My recollection is that Queen were more expensive than Case, which were more expensive than Camillus. I never bought one new.
Maybe I have four...
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Here's a little less glare on the melon tester:
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Mom brought the melon-teter home and told me she wasn't giving it to me.
The stockman I got for ca $40 in Coloma MI. The lockback was more than reasonable at one of Sarah's estate sales. The missing bit of bone must have registered stronger with her than the brand name. It was still there when I got there, though, so she must have had some strange shoppers. The trapper was a quite recent acquisition, and a steal. I should replace the handles, but the pins are holding, so I'll try just trowelling some epoxy around what's there.

Wait, I have six. I have two of those aluminum monolith Barlows downstairs.
 
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Yes it is a stockman. A proper stockman with three blades, being clip, sheepfoot, and spay.
Thanks its the only knife I have like this.

Maybe I should gets some boots and a Stetson. 😁


I have been following Cowboy Kent Rollins for years,interesting videos/food/coffee/storys,a great character and he always thanks the veterans at the end of his videos.


 
Unless they are a Queen made contract knife (Did Queen even make knives for other cutlery companies or advertising knives?) my accumulation lacks a Queen ... so I guess my Kings (Case, Western, Old Timer, Imperial, GEC) are bachelors? 🤔
 
I have been following Cowboy Kent Rollins for years,interesting videos/food/coffee/storys,a great character and he always thanks the veterans at the end of his videos.
Its always a good time to buy a Stetson! I enjoy Rollins too, have copied some of his black iron recipes. My meager collection of Queens;
A 1995 built #43 penknife (imitation Winterbottom bone).
Queen__43_Penknife_-_1995.jpg


A #15 Half-Congress which was in a toolbox full of old tools that I inherited from a friend.
Queen__15_Half_Congress.jpg


A 1974 Texas Jack issued for the 1774-1974 Kentucky Bicentennial celebration. This is the only one of the three that I bought new.
Queen_Kentucky_Bicentennial_Texas_Jack_Knife_1774-1974_(2).jpg
 
I've got a few. Made around the early 2000's I think, in cocobolo.
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Unfortunately, the backspring gremlins got to the Stockman..
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Fortunately, I had a spare:
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Here's an old one marked Queen City. (unfortunately, not mine)

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Queen started out as contractors, making knives for other companies before they even had a name, let alone a brand of their own. I don't recall ever seeing a Queen knife when I was growing up in the sixties and seventies even though they'd been making knives since before my dad was born. I need to get mine out for a new picture, I've added a few more since I snapped this shot.



Those are in numerical order by pattern number. Top row between the little equal end penknife and the teardrop jack are #9 stockman knives like yours. Well, mostly predecessors of yours.

As you can see, they made quite a variety of patterns.
 
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I would be interested in any history of facts about my Queen knife. 😁

Age,material,model that sort of thing.
Others commented on age. But that was commonly known as the Queen medium size stockman pattern. Tang stamp shows it has D2 steel blade (usually Queen used the same material for both spring and blades on a release). That was one of Queen's most common knives made over the years. The first started making that pattern in 1947, and kept making it all the way until they closed in 2018. Often, once DFC became owner of Queen, they used the new DFC-D2 stamp from 2013-2018. So good chance yours is from 2002-2012 range, but no guarantees.

Can you tell if that is jig bone, or jig Delrin material? If Delrin, it is likely the "Jigged Black Cherry" color handle.

A brief history of Queen. Schatt & Morgan moved from NY to Titusville, PA in 1902, setting up in a new factory that the town built for them. Around 1922, 5 of the department heads started collaborating on making specialty knives after hours and on weekends. When the S&M owners found out, all 5 supervisors were fired. Those 5 guys started Queen City Cutlery Co. (as Titusville was known then as the "Queen City" of Pennsylvania"). Without their knowledge and leadership, S&M fell on hard times, and by 1933 they went bankrupt. Those 5 ex-employees bought out S&M at the bankruptcy sale, and moved back in to the very building they were fired from. Around 1974, the last descendants of the original 5 men sold ownership of the factory to Servotronics, who also owned Ontario Knives (among others). Queen was one of the first knife companies to use Stainless Steel (Queen Steel) blades, and had a full time metallurgist who worked with Cyclops Steel on tweaking alloys to get the best results. In 2012 Servotronics was struggling with the old factory and old equipment, and sold the Queen factory to DFC, who ran it for 6 more years before all operation ceased in 2018. Cooper Cutlery bought the rights to the name, which he then sold to Smoky Mountain Knife Works, who is now having knives made under that name in either China or by Bear & Son in Alabama.

(Did Queen even make knives for other cutlery companies or advertising knives?)
Queen was one of the biggest contract knife makers there has been in the US. Over 100 knife companies have been identified as having knives made for them by Queen, not including Knife Clubs and special groups (Ducks Unlimited, NRA, etc.) All together, probably 60%+ of Queen's work was done under other brands.

I don't recall ever seeing a Queen knife when I was growing up in the sixties and seventies even though they'd been making knives since before my dad was born.
Not sure what area of the US you grew up in. Queen sold a huge majority of their knives to the Gulf states, especially southern farming communities. In order to get away from competing with Case, Schrade, Cattaraugus, Camillus. I live in northwest PA only 30 minutes from the factory, and never saw a Queen knife for sale in a hardware store around here my entire life. My grandfather worked at the Queen plant in the 70's and 80's, and said the company motto was "Build them up north, ship them down south".
 
Very nice group of copperheads, Mike. Are five of them single blades as they appear to be in pic? Slim single blade copperheads are a pattern I really like but at least for me seem to be hard to come across outside of Case models.
Thanks Greg. That is correct, they are all single blades except the black micarta at the far right. The far left knife is a button lock. The one next to it is a liner lock. The rosewood has 1095 steel and has been carried quite a bit. The two blade has been carried a little and the others have been safe queens (see what I did there 😃)
The spalted maple S&M and the rosewood Queen were purchased new from dealers. The button lock, stag S&M, and the micarta were fished out of the bay. Off the top of my head, I don't remember where I got the amber bone linerlock.
 
Queen started out as contractors, making knives for other companies before they even had a name, let alone a brand of their own. I don't recall ever seeing a Queen knife when I was growing up in the sixties and seventies even though they'd been making knives since before my dad was born. I need to get mine out for a new picture, I've added a few more since I snapped this shot.



Those are in numerical order by pattern number. Top row between the little equal end penknife and the teardrop jack are #9 stockman knives like yours. Well, mostly predecessors of yours.

As you can see, they made quite a variety of patterns.
Now thats a collection,thanks for sharing. 😎
 
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