richarnold
Established Member
Hi folks.
my Christmas present to myself turned up in the post yesterday, and I have to say I'm well chuffed with it
Having done a bit of research, I am beginning to think it is a shipwrights rebate plane, which I have to say is something I have not come across before.
The maker, Samuel Tomkinson is one of my personal favorites. British plane makers has him down as a possible Birmingham maker due to the style of the stamp, but having found more info on the web, I now know he was a London maker who was working as early as 1763 and died in 1789.
The size of the plane took me by surprise. Its quite a beast at 16 1/2 " long. I cannot recall ever seeing a British made plane looking anything like this, and I did wonder if it was perhaps made for the continental market. Have any of you chaps from across the channel ever seen anything like it?
The other great feature about it is that it has the earliest looking double iron that I have ever seen to date. The iron itself has no makers mark, but the back iron is marked curiously enough on it's inside face by a John Butterworth. I had not come across this maker before, but having searched on the net I have found an edge tool maker in Sheffield listed in the 1787 trade directory with that name.
The iron itself has a simple rectangular slot. This means you have to remove the nut completely to dismantle the back iron. The face of the back iron is slightly beveled of at the edges.
The cut out hand grip at the rear of the stock reminds me of the Roman Silchester plane, and again I cannot recall ever seeing a British plane with this form of grip before.
All in all a fascinating example of 18th century plane making, and defiantly in the top ten of my collection
my Christmas present to myself turned up in the post yesterday, and I have to say I'm well chuffed with it
Having done a bit of research, I am beginning to think it is a shipwrights rebate plane, which I have to say is something I have not come across before.
The maker, Samuel Tomkinson is one of my personal favorites. British plane makers has him down as a possible Birmingham maker due to the style of the stamp, but having found more info on the web, I now know he was a London maker who was working as early as 1763 and died in 1789.
The size of the plane took me by surprise. Its quite a beast at 16 1/2 " long. I cannot recall ever seeing a British made plane looking anything like this, and I did wonder if it was perhaps made for the continental market. Have any of you chaps from across the channel ever seen anything like it?
The other great feature about it is that it has the earliest looking double iron that I have ever seen to date. The iron itself has no makers mark, but the back iron is marked curiously enough on it's inside face by a John Butterworth. I had not come across this maker before, but having searched on the net I have found an edge tool maker in Sheffield listed in the 1787 trade directory with that name.
The iron itself has a simple rectangular slot. This means you have to remove the nut completely to dismantle the back iron. The face of the back iron is slightly beveled of at the edges.
The cut out hand grip at the rear of the stock reminds me of the Roman Silchester plane, and again I cannot recall ever seeing a British plane with this form of grip before.
All in all a fascinating example of 18th century plane making, and defiantly in the top ten of my collection