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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 650

A FINE AND RARE LARGE FOLDING KNIFE FOR EXHIBITION, LOCKWOOD BROTHERS, SHEFFIELD, MID-19TH CENTURY

Schätzpreis
3.000 £ - 4.000 £
ca. 3.769 $ - 5.026 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 650

A FINE AND RARE LARGE FOLDING KNIFE FOR EXHIBITION, LOCKWOOD BROTHERS, SHEFFIELD, MID-19TH CENTURY

Schätzpreis
3.000 £ - 4.000 £
ca. 3.769 $ - 5.026 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

with two burnished broad folding blades, each double-edged over the upper portion, formed with a scalloped back-edge, stamped ?Lockwood Brothers? divided by an engraved running rhea above ?Pampa? on one face, stamped ?Lockwood Brothers Sheffield? at the base and with the letters ?CX? divided by a pair of vertically arranged crosses (small areas of staining), finely milled gilt liners and spring backs, highly figured exotic hardwood chamfered scales retained by seven rivets with German silver caps, one inlaid with the maker?s name ?Lockwood Brothers? divided by a running rhea above the letters ?Pampa? , with finely milled and engraved German silver terminals decorated with scrolls and foliage, those at the pivot end with a vacant panel, perhaps for the date, on each face, and remaining in fine condition throughout, 40.5 cm (closed) Literature David Hayden-Wright, The Heritage of English Knives, Atglen, Pennsylvania, 2008, p. 77. Stated to have been made for the 1851 Great Exhibition and shown at thirty one subsequent cutlery exhibitions until 1905. The apparent founder of Lockwood Brother Ltd was John Lockwood of Ecclesfield, who was apprenticed to file maker John Burgin and became a Freeman in 1767, when he was assigned the mark ?CX?. His two sons were John Lockwood Jun. (1769-1856) and William Lockwood (1775-1829). The latter moved to Sheffield in the 1790s and, in 1803, married Ann Sorby, linking his family to the local tool making dynasty. They had four sons, William (1806-1873), John (1813-1876), Joseph (1815-1902), and Charles (1822-1872). In 1817, Lockwood & Sorby are recorded as factors in Arundel Street and merchants and file manufacturers in 1822. William died in 1829 and his four sons who became the ?Lockwood brothers? ultimately continued the business, first recorded 1837. In 1861 Lockwoods employed 500 staff and in 1865 they expanded their premises at Arundel Street. The enterprise became more closely involved in cutlery and trade catalogues show a wide range of knives and pocket cutlery with an emphasis on complicated sportsman?s patterns, hunting and skinning knives. By 1862 German counterfeiting had forced the company to adopt another mark: a Pampas rhea with the words ?REAL KNIFE? and ?PAMPA?. The firm?s main trade mark was ?C:X?. Lockwood?s also acquired a Maltese cross ?L? mark. Three of the Lockwood brothers died in the early 1870s: Charles (1872), William (1873), and John (1876). Joseph continued the business and around 1891 they became a limited company. By the First World War, Lockwood?s was in decline and losing money, in 1919 it became part of Sheffield Cutlery Manufacturers Ltd and were acquired by Elliott in 1927. Part proceeds to benefit the Acquisition Fund of the Arms and Armor department, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 650
Auktion:
Datum:
29.06.2023
Auktionshaus:
Olympia Auctions
25 Blythe Road
London, W14 0PD
Großbritannien und Nordirland
enquiries@olympiaauctions.com
+44 (0) 20 7806 5541
+44 (0) 20 7806 5546
Beschreibung:

with two burnished broad folding blades, each double-edged over the upper portion, formed with a scalloped back-edge, stamped ?Lockwood Brothers? divided by an engraved running rhea above ?Pampa? on one face, stamped ?Lockwood Brothers Sheffield? at the base and with the letters ?CX? divided by a pair of vertically arranged crosses (small areas of staining), finely milled gilt liners and spring backs, highly figured exotic hardwood chamfered scales retained by seven rivets with German silver caps, one inlaid with the maker?s name ?Lockwood Brothers? divided by a running rhea above the letters ?Pampa? , with finely milled and engraved German silver terminals decorated with scrolls and foliage, those at the pivot end with a vacant panel, perhaps for the date, on each face, and remaining in fine condition throughout, 40.5 cm (closed) Literature David Hayden-Wright, The Heritage of English Knives, Atglen, Pennsylvania, 2008, p. 77. Stated to have been made for the 1851 Great Exhibition and shown at thirty one subsequent cutlery exhibitions until 1905. The apparent founder of Lockwood Brother Ltd was John Lockwood of Ecclesfield, who was apprenticed to file maker John Burgin and became a Freeman in 1767, when he was assigned the mark ?CX?. His two sons were John Lockwood Jun. (1769-1856) and William Lockwood (1775-1829). The latter moved to Sheffield in the 1790s and, in 1803, married Ann Sorby, linking his family to the local tool making dynasty. They had four sons, William (1806-1873), John (1813-1876), Joseph (1815-1902), and Charles (1822-1872). In 1817, Lockwood & Sorby are recorded as factors in Arundel Street and merchants and file manufacturers in 1822. William died in 1829 and his four sons who became the ?Lockwood brothers? ultimately continued the business, first recorded 1837. In 1861 Lockwoods employed 500 staff and in 1865 they expanded their premises at Arundel Street. The enterprise became more closely involved in cutlery and trade catalogues show a wide range of knives and pocket cutlery with an emphasis on complicated sportsman?s patterns, hunting and skinning knives. By 1862 German counterfeiting had forced the company to adopt another mark: a Pampas rhea with the words ?REAL KNIFE? and ?PAMPA?. The firm?s main trade mark was ?C:X?. Lockwood?s also acquired a Maltese cross ?L? mark. Three of the Lockwood brothers died in the early 1870s: Charles (1872), William (1873), and John (1876). Joseph continued the business and around 1891 they became a limited company. By the First World War, Lockwood?s was in decline and losing money, in 1919 it became part of Sheffield Cutlery Manufacturers Ltd and were acquired by Elliott in 1927. Part proceeds to benefit the Acquisition Fund of the Arms and Armor department, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 650
Auktion:
Datum:
29.06.2023
Auktionshaus:
Olympia Auctions
25 Blythe Road
London, W14 0PD
Großbritannien und Nordirland
enquiries@olympiaauctions.com
+44 (0) 20 7806 5541
+44 (0) 20 7806 5546
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