Cheshirechappie
Established Member
Some years ago, I inherited a collection of old tools, among them a very rusty and pitted hatchet with a crudely made replacement handle. Last week, I decided to do something about it, so I ordered a new hickory 14" handle for it (still waiting....) and ditched the old one. Derusting in vinegar followed - lots of scrubbing and working rust out of pits with a 3" nail - followed by a good rinse, a soak in bicarbonate of soda solution, rinse, dry and a rub of Renaissance wax.
What I have is a Kent pattern hatchet head of 1 1/4lbs in weight, 3 3/4" wide on the cutting edge, and 6 1/4" from poll to edge (which I'm fairly sure is close to full new length). Stamped on the blade is "The Criterion No3", the words being arranged vertically, "The" above "Criterion" above "No3". The lettering is in plain capitals, sans serif (which suggests 20th century rather than 19th), and 3/16" high. As far as I can tell, it's of one-piece construction; I can't find any evidence of laminating, or of welding a steel edge to a softer body. (I may when I sharpen it, but derusting sometimes shows differences between steel types, and I can detect none.)
Some rummaging on the 'net revealed that William Hunt and Sons (The Brades) used 'Criterion' as one of their trade marks - I think for second-quality tools, but the catalogues I've found so far don't have pattern numbers corresponding to a No3 hatchet. Also, their 1941 catalogue (thanks, Toolemera) suggests they only supplied hatchets starting at 1 1/2lbs, with no reference that I could find to my 1 1/4lb example. Some examples of 'Criterion' branded hatchets surfaced on internet auction sites archives (notably in Australia - is that significant?) but all were wedge pattern, not Kent.
Can anyone shed any further light on possible vintage? Is it of Brades origin, or did they absorb another manufacturer and continue the trademark?
Any information gratefully received!
What I have is a Kent pattern hatchet head of 1 1/4lbs in weight, 3 3/4" wide on the cutting edge, and 6 1/4" from poll to edge (which I'm fairly sure is close to full new length). Stamped on the blade is "The Criterion No3", the words being arranged vertically, "The" above "Criterion" above "No3". The lettering is in plain capitals, sans serif (which suggests 20th century rather than 19th), and 3/16" high. As far as I can tell, it's of one-piece construction; I can't find any evidence of laminating, or of welding a steel edge to a softer body. (I may when I sharpen it, but derusting sometimes shows differences between steel types, and I can detect none.)
Some rummaging on the 'net revealed that William Hunt and Sons (The Brades) used 'Criterion' as one of their trade marks - I think for second-quality tools, but the catalogues I've found so far don't have pattern numbers corresponding to a No3 hatchet. Also, their 1941 catalogue (thanks, Toolemera) suggests they only supplied hatchets starting at 1 1/2lbs, with no reference that I could find to my 1 1/4lb example. Some examples of 'Criterion' branded hatchets surfaced on internet auction sites archives (notably in Australia - is that significant?) but all were wedge pattern, not Kent.
Can anyone shed any further light on possible vintage? Is it of Brades origin, or did they absorb another manufacturer and continue the trademark?
Any information gratefully received!