Texas Heritage Hunter

Jason Fry

Knifemaker / Craftsman / Service Provider
Joined
Jun 5, 2008
Messages
3,160
Back nearly ten years ago when I began the knifemaking journey, I was fascinated by the idea of making a knife from something special, not just from stuff you could buy on Ebay. While I've purchased a zillion dollars worth of supplies since then, the fascination for "story" never left. I'll admit that at first glance, this knife looks like what it is: a quality forged stick tang hunter in the ABS style. This is one knife where there is more to it than is immediately obvious.

For several months now, I've been planning a series of "story" knives that I intend to carry through the rest of my knifemaking career. I'm a Texan, with roots here back to 1855. I love Texas and its history, and I hope one day we can be an independent nation again. With all that in mind, this knife represents the initial public offering of my Texas Heritage knife series using historical materials from Texas. This series will be limited to three knives per year, including a bowie and a hunter. As my skills grow, the knife complexity will increase, but one thing will remain the same: Texas first, Texas forever.

This Texas Heritage Hunter features a forged blade of 5160 steel. The steel came from the first knifemaking workshop ever conducted by the Texas Knifemakers' Guild, in 2016. The guard on this knife is from the Shackelford County ghost town of Raynor. Raynor was founded in 1888 as the county seat, but abandoned by 1904 as Aspermont took over the county seat. The steel used here comes from the gate of the Raynor Cemetery. Although the steel is blued, the front of the guard retains some of the rust-pitted character that it came with. Right behind the guard, the fluted spacer is wrought iron from the rail of the first railroad into Dallas in 1872. The handle is spalted sycamore, stabilized with a slight brown dye, from the grounds of the Texas Capital building. My brother went to UT about ten years ago with a guy who worked grounds crew there, and this piece came home as firewood. All together, there's a lot of history in this piece!

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This knife will be available to my mailing list before Thanksgiving. Regarding ordering similar knives, due to my limited supply of these special materials, I will not be using them on custom orders at this time. I am always on the lookout for other materials with Texas historical links, and am willing to buy or trade.
 
Thanks. I've got a coffin handle bowie that I did out of similar materials, plus some 1836 silver. They're fun projects.
 
That is a beautiful knife, and very interesting story. It looks like it just can’t wait to make more glorious Texas history. Very nice work.
 
I like materials with a story. The knife is extremely nice too but extra special because of the history.
 
I'm kind of waiting on the pro pics before I show the bowie in detail. Here's a post I did on it a while back on a non-knife forum.

I was tasked by Doug Ritter at Knife Rights with making a knife for Greg Abbott to celebrate the implementation of the new Texas knife law. I finished the knife in time for the ceremony that was to be Saturday of Labor Day weekend. Because of hurricane Harvey, the event was postponed. Turns out the governor was busy governing, and it seemed like bad form to try and throw a party while everyone was cleaning up. The folks who organized the event tell me that I'll still get to present the knife to the governor, but we just don't know when.

Meanwhile, the local news station wanted to do a story on the new knife law. After they heard about the governor project, they came out to the shop for an interview. This aired Friday night 9/16 on the 10 p.m. news. You can see the governor knife at the end. It's a little funny, the header on the website says "Getting the Facts Right," but they missed a few things. She called the forge a "guild." I've made more than 300 knives. Finally, the handle isn't mesquite from Abilene. The knife does feature wrought iron from the first railroad into Dallas in 1872. They left out that the spacers are 1836 silver half dollars. The stand is mesquite from Abilene, with 1840's era wrought iron nails from a settler's cabin near Jefferson, TX. The handle material is stabilized spalted sycamore from the grounds of the Texas capital.

http://www.ktxs.com/news/new-texas-l...iers/621537074
 
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