My father's (now mine) Queen Steel Barlow Single Blade knife. |
An Iconic “American” Folding Knife
A Barlow pocket knife was a treasure to our fathers and
grandfathers. It was designed to be a
hard-working, yet affordable, tool for everyday use at home, at work and on the
farm. I know I treasure mine, which was
a gift to my father from my grandfather.
My father later gave it to me, and while it may be a humble working man’s
knife, it holds a place of honor in my collection. That knife has cleaned more fish and skinned
more squirrels, rabbits and other small game than I can ever hope to in my lifetime. In many ways the Barlow pocket knife is the
Colt Single Action Army of pocket knives.
Designed as a working tool that had to be reliable every single time you
used it, it became the signature pocket knife of Americans from the Eastern
Seaboard to the Wild West of California.
Because of its iconic presence and its simple reliability, it has been
copied over and over. It has been
knocked off in Japan, China and Pakistan, in recent years. Some of those copies are even pretty nice,
although I would be hard pressed to carry a Barlow imported from anywhere but
the British Isles or Germany, and I would choose an American knife first if I
could.
“Barlow”, in this instance refers to both a style of knife
and an American company, the Barlow Company, which imported pocket knives,
money clips, key fobs, etc., and put logos on them for advertising
purposes. It is correct to use the term,
“Barlow” when referring to either of these, but in this instance, I am
discussing Barlow style folding pocket knives.
Barlow knives may have one or two blades, a large, distinctive metal
bolster, and a tear-drop shaped handle.
Barlow style knives are “bare headed”, meaning they have no cap at the
end of the handle, the scales form the rounded end. The large bolster often bears the Barlow name
stamped into it.
The actual history of the Barlow knife is difficult to
trace, but research reveals that the first Barlow knives were probably manufactured
in Sheffield, England, around 1670. They
were exported to the colonies. Soon
thereafter, cutlers in the American colonies began producing the Barlow style
knife. It soon became a very common
knife and was normally perceived as an American knife. George Washington is known to have owned a
Barlow knife. Mark Twain referenced
Barlow knives in his writings. At least
two Bluegrass songs have been written about Barlow knives. Barlow knives have long been traditional
gifts for men and boys in America. That
is how I came about owning my Barlow knife.
My father was given this Barlow knife by his father in 1956. He had joined the US Air Force at the age of
18 in 1955 and graduated from Basic Training in 1956. His father had been given a Barlow knife by
my great-grandfather when my grandfather was 13 years old, around 1911. My great-grandfather also owned a Barlow
knife. Not a surprising coincidence at
all considering the ubiquitous nature of Barlow knives in America through the
years. Essentially, if you were an
American with a penis, you either had or wanted a Barlow knife and a good
woman, almost necessarily in that order.
Of course, Barlow knives were, and still are, easier to acquire and keep
than a good woman.
My father’s knife, which I now own, was manufactured by the
Queen Steel Cutlery Company and it is a single blade knife. A Queen Barlow are a very unique design in the
Barlow knife world because it uses a solid chassis and a hidden or internal
spring. Most Barlow knives, indeed, most
traditional pocket knives, use pins to hold the springs, liners, blades and
grip scales together. This Queen Barlow
does not. The solid steel chassis
includes the bolster and the housing for the spring and blade. The pins for the grip scales are attached to
the chassis and do not go all the way through the knife. The spring simply drops into the chassis
through the blade slot and falls into two locking notches, one at the front and
one at the rear. There is one pin in the
bolster to hold the blade in. Once the
blade is pinned in it holds the spring in place. No more pins are required. Queen even made these knives with aluminum chassis
to reduce their weight. No doubt there
are Barlow “purists” rolling their eyes at the very thought of solid chassis
Barlow knives, but I see these Queen Barlows as American ingenuity at its
finest, simplifying a proven working tool and making it even more affordable
for the average man.
Queen Cutlery, also known as Queen Steel in the pocket knife
aficionado world (yes, there is such a group, and I have been assimilated), is
just one of many, many companies that made or make Barlow knives. The internet, flea markets, gun shows,
antique stores and even Walmart, are places to go to get a Barlow knife. They run the gamut from inexpensive Barlow
company advertising knives that display Remington, Winchester, Daisy Red Rider,
the Masons, RC Cola and Moon Pie on their plastic scales, to relatively
expensive knives in the couple hundred dollar range, made exquisitely with
fossilized Mammoth bone grip scales (no kidding!), exotic wood, stag, abalone
shell, scrimshawed bone, anything you can imagine. Well known knife companies produce these
knives to this day. Name an American
knife company that makes pocket knives and I will bet you they make Barlows. Queen Cutlery has been making them in the
same factory since 1902. For all you mathematics
majors (not) out there, that is one hundred and thirteen years.
My knife has seen better days. Its steel chassis has myriad tiny dings and
scratches in it from riding in my dad’s pocket, along with car keys, loose
change, a zippo lighter, and God knows what else.
The Delrin (synthetic polymer) scales are slightly cracked on one side
by the rear scale pin, and broken on the other side, and a chip is missing,
since my dad decided to use his knife for a small hammer at some point. Good job, Airman. Do push-ups.
The blade has a nice patina, as we aficionados say, which means that all
the lake water, fish and squirrel blood over the years have left the carbon
steel blade darkened a little, a little more in some places. The blade has a few nicks in it from cutting
wires and beheading a snake on a gravel road.
It still holds an amazing edge. I
keep it sharp out of respect for the knife.
As long as I own it, it will always be a useful tool.
My dad's Queen Steel Barlow, sharpened many times, stained by years of honest use and chipped from being used as a hammer. |
I would love to tell you stories about how that knife came
over from England on the Mayflower with my great-great-great X10 grandpappy,
Jedidiah Obiwan Smith, how he used it to carve his name in Plymouth Rock, how
generations of my family used it, to kill Pocahontas’ Powhatan lover, defeat
the British with it at Yorktown, skin a bear in the Wilds of Kentucky, how it
drove the last railroad spike, how it discovered gold in them thar hills… but if that were true it would be in the
Smithsonian Museum of American history, and you would have to pay homage to it
on your way to see Lincoln’s top hat.
The truth is that knife traveled around the world
in the pocket of a US Airman. It went to
electronic warfare school in San Antonio and God only knows what it did in Olde
Mexico. It saw duty on the forested
hillside of a US Radio listening post in West Germany during the cold war, it
traveled through Holland, where my dad met my mom, it lived in Japan for three
years and it flew over Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and North Vietnam in an EB66. The knife I carried in Iraq is far less
elegant than dad’s Barlow and none the less worse for wear. My dad carried that knife through my
childhood, in Japan, Florida, Nebraska, Germany (again), and Saudi Arabia, cleaning
fish and squirrels along the way. This
old knife is a tangible fragment of my childhood and it always reminds me to
call my father.
Now, when I got this knife from my dad all he really could
tell me was it was a “real Barlow knife.”
At that time, I didn’t even know what that meant. After a little research, it started to become
clear. This may come as a shock to some
of you, but the internet is just full of people who know everything! Of course they don’t all agree on what they
think they know. At this point, I firmly
believe there is no such animal as a “real Barlow knife” any more than there is
such a thing as a “real American”. There
are so many knives out there, and so much of what one person likes or dislikes
is subjective. I eventually had to start
doing real investigative work. Most
Barlow knives have a convenient “BARLOW” stamped into the bolster. That helps.
Many other have commemorative stampings or company name stampings like
CAMILLUS. All of that helps identify the
manufacturer and time period. Mine doesn’t
have any of that. Most blades have some
markings that identify the country of origin or type of steel. Mine doesn’t.
The only markings I could see were a seven digit number and some very,
very worn letters that I could not make out.
So I started with an internet search of the seven numbers. Phone numbers have seven digits, but doesn’t
seem logical. I learned that in
numerology, the number 7 represents virginity…
OK getting off track here. Well,
it turns out US Patent numbers are seven digits. OK, now we’re on to something. Maybe.
I also searched for photos of Barlow knives with saw-cut grip
scales. That led me to a picture, among
hundreds, that looked very similar to my knife.
Then the distinct style of chassis became evident on that knife and on
mine. That was different. In the law enforcement world, we called that
a “clue.” That knife was made by Queen
Steel. Another lead. Other Queen Steel knives had etchings on the
blades. Mine doesn’t, at least, not
anymore. Damn squirrel blood! Then I see a Queen Steel knife that has
legible markings on the blade. That
picture leads me to believe the unreadable markings on mine probably say, “PAT.
NO.”, right above the legible seven digit number. OK, now I know I have a patent number. Either that or this knife was given to a guy
named PAT by a woman who refused him, but still wanted him to have a knife. Well, that’s not a wise thing to do. I try the sensible lead; over to the US
Patent Office web site I went, where you can search patent numbers. I find a patent for a knife by a man named
Eric C. Ericson, from Titusville, PA.
Another hit. Queen Cutlery is
located in Titusville, PA. The patent
drawings, however, do not look exactly like my knife. They seem much larger and longer. I am confused again. The internal spring was the same. The patent was applied for on August 21,
1953, and approved on December 27, 1955, which we know is suspect because NO
federal employee actually does work between Christmas and New Year’s. He must have approved it and post-dated it so
it would appear that he was working two days after Christmas… but I
digress. On this patent is a reference
to another US Patent, so I search that one.
It is from 1914 and belongs to a man named Isaac E. Hotchkiss. This patent seems to be the genesis for the solid
chassis that Queen perfected. It has the
internal spring, more closely resembles the shape of my knife and the clip
point blade, but it is still not 100% correct.
Being a gunsmith by trade, reading the patent documents was actually
fascinating. But, I’m still not
there. So, based upon all available
evidence, I determined this knife was manufactured no earlier than December 27,
1955, and probably in 1956, by the Queen Cutlery Company. Knives with that patent number on them could
not have occurred before that dated. It
turns out, Queen Cutlery used that patent number on all of its internal spring
knives. Mine was obviously among
them. The similarity of documented Queen
Steel knives to mine, combined with the patent, seems incontrovertible. What I
have not yet determined is what model number this knife is. I believe, based upon other documented knives
that are close (but no cigar) to mine, it could be a model number 60. I found such a knife on line. It is described as “Mint”, has a clear etching
on the blade, and could be my dad’s knife as it was nearly 60 years ago. I might just buy it for shits and giggles…
Um, I mean, for its research value.
“Why go through all this?” you ask. “Can’t you just enjoy your dad’s knife?” Yes, I can.
But my curiosity is peeked, you see.
My family “history”, or legend, to be more appropriate, places this
knife much, much closer to the Smithsonian version of events, and I just cannot
perpetuate the legend in good conscience.
Not only that, I am a former cop, and mysteries intrigue me.
Here is the bottom line.
Barlow knives are a proven, hardworking, affordable, American
knife. If you are an American and you have
a penis, you should have a Barlow knife, regardless of whether you have a good
woman. Just don’t get one from
Pakistan. A knife either.
42nd TEWS at Takhli, Thailand, 1970. My dad is standing on the EB-66 Electronic Warfare Aircraft, back row, behind the pilots window, at Parade Rest. |
For more information about the history of Barlow-knives in America, check out the Barlow Knives website at http://barlow-knives.com/. I used this website as a source for information in this article.
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