condeesteso":2n0uttlw said:
and further Scouse... very well researched!! It's the 1893 patent that is stamped on the tool - mine has Nov 28th 1893. Makes me feel odd as I handle it... just 28 years after the Civil War ended.
That's the joy of old tools, for me at least. I often return from car boot sales/ charity shops/ ebay visits with cheap old tools I know nothing about and don't need, but researching their history and thinking about the work they have done and who did that work over the 100 years or more of their life does give a sense of something, I'm not sure what. It's not nostalgia or sentimentality although it might sound like it! It maybe some perspective of my own work and skill, or lack thereof, with hand tools, but also some humility, that the tools worked, produced things, outlasted their original owner and will outlast me, while still being put to work.