Tool Talk
General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: Ken W. on June 05, 2011, 07:20:16 PM
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I found this interesting hatchet / ax at an estate sale this weekend. There is no name on it other than "NYCRE" stamped on it. The stamp is faint and looks like someone used a letter stamp set to put it on with. I'm not an ax expert but I have not come across one of these before with the nail puller on it.The handle is defiantly not original.
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That is a Very Cool looking Hatchet/Claw Hammer combo, the likes of which I have never seen before. I think it is a great idea for whatever production work it was designed for. I'm thinking box, or roofing application? And of course, I would have to guess the first 2 letters in the stamped name to be New York, but have no clue on the other 3.
Wayne
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In A Dictionary of Hand Tools, by Alvin Sellers, there is one by Plumb, called a claw hatchet with a width of cut of 3 1/2 to 4 5/8 inches, with handle length of 12 1/2 to 14 inches. Page 228.
There is another couple of them on page 231 that is called packing hatchet used for assembling wooden boxes and crates. These have a width of cut of 2 1/4 to 2 3/4 inches, with handle length of 11 to 13 inches,
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Papaw is right on, claw hatchet is what I have seen the referred to in old sales literature/catalogs.
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That is a Very Cool looking Hatchet/Claw Hammer combo, the likes of which I have never seen before. I think it is a great idea for whatever production work it was designed for. I'm thinking box, or roofing application?Wayne
This is one of the two oldest designs for mass produced hatchets, the other being what is often called a shingling hatchet. Eric Sloane, in A Museum of Early American Tools, dates the patterns to 1845. They were manufactured well into the 20th Century, and may be still in production somewhere. They were a standard issue for the US Army in the 1850s.
I've bought several over the years, and passed by others. The trick is to find one with the claws intact. The claws are fragile when you miss your stroke on a big nail... I've got one with one broken claw that I'm thinking about turning into the shingling hatchet that came out at the same time. I think I have another that's missing both claws.
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The width is 3 11/16". Are these that rare or were the claws that weak that they scrapped most of these ?
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> "NYCRE" stamped on it
Is it possible the E is an R ?
(NYCRR New York Central Rail Road)
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The width is 3 11/16". Are these that rare or were the claws that weak that they scrapped most of these ?
I don't know how rare is "that rare." I run across them from time to time. The Baker & Hamilton catalog still listed them in 1949 -- they sold three brands of the claw hatchet. Apparently a lot of people found them perfect for the job, since the claw hatchet was in production for over a hundred years. Check and see if they are still made somewhere. I wouldn't be surprised.
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Well, I haven't found a traditional American claw hatchet currently in production, but China is manufacturing their rendition.
There are several on eBay currently. (there's also a German made perfect handle hatchet, not that anyone here would be
interested...)
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perfect handle hatchet
on Ebay?
I put in a search for that and no joy- got a link?
I DON'T KNOW ANYONE who would be interested!
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wvtools has a really neat one. (presumably marked for the railway express agency)
http://cgi.ebay.com/Claw-Hatchet-w-Applied-Wood-Handle-Marked-RY-EX-AGY-/400091963182#vi-desc
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wvtools has a really neat one. (presumably marked for the railway express agency)
Speaking of wvtools, where are you John? We know your watching, so get back in the game!
Wayne
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John hasn't returned since the recent forum disaster, but I think it is only because he is out on his rounds selling at different venues. His Ebay auctions note that he is unavailable until June 16th.
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> "NYCRE" stamped on it
Is it possible the E is an R ?
(NYCRR New York Central Rail Road)
It is possible that the E is an R. The last letter is stamped very light.It's hard to tell.It would make sense tho.
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The one John has is Railway Express Agency, I believe.
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perfect handle hatchet
on Ebay?
I put in a search for that and no joy- got a link?
I DON'T KNOW ANYONE who would be interested!
Item number 310323459307 Vintage German Hatchet
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perfect handle hatchet
on Ebay?
I put in a search for that and no joy- got a link?
I DON'T KNOW ANYONE who would be interested!
The link ought to be:
http://cgi.ebay.com/Vintage-German-Hatchet-Scabbard-Tool-D-G-M-5664-87-/310323459307?_trksid=p5197.m7&_trkparms=algo%3DLVI%26itu%3DUCI%26otn%3D5%26po%3DLVI%26ps%3D63%26clkid%3D481489264681019983
The item number is : 310323459307
You'll notice that the leather carrier has a scabbard for a knife that is missing. Could make an interesting repurposing project.