Part of my recent distractions.
While I cleaned the iron and the body, a few marks started to shows up.
The iron is stamped W Butch.. which is the abbreviated stamps of Williams Butcher of Sheffield England.
Butcher made excellent laminated blades. Many plane makers used his irons and planes are often mislabeled W Butcher because it is the obvious stamp on it, sometimes the only one visible.
In the 1830s his business exporting edge tools to the US was booming, he had a US agent established in New York.
His irons have been used by English, Canadian and American planemakers. In order to establish its provenance we need more clues from the plane itself. Length (long standardized at 9-1/2 inch long), Width 1 inch, Style of constructions, material used Beech, style of the wedge finial, maker stamps on the nose (Incluse or Sig-Zag borders) versus owners marks, Model Number and size stamped in the back etc.
Hard to see but I detected a faint imprints on the nose.
Could only made out a few letters, but could read Amherst Mass.
So off to my book American Wooden planes.
to look it up and turns out it is a
GEO BURHAM JR.
AMHERST
MASS
There also another arching mark above and something else in the lower banner.
Not to be confused with a owners mark, this one really look like an overstruck mark.
Probably a hardware store sellers marks or overstruck with a new name after a merge of business, as was common practice until old stock was used up.
The ones I've seen in my research are Union Factory (Chapin) over a D Copeland stamped plane, and Arrowmammett Works over others.
What else can the body reveal?
9-1/2 inch long, the new standard for wooden moulding planes, so 19th century, 1 inch wide.
We already know that Geo Burnham Jr made planes from 1841-1860 (1844-1853 for that particular stamp)
So lets assume 1850 until we find something else
The cuts are clean and well executed, commercially made.
The body is beech but seems to have a brown coat of paint (residues in non wear areas) over its original brown stain. Will probably end up removing some on the nose to better see the trade names stampings
The wedge throw be off a bit.
According to what I have seen so far, in books and on line, my wedge shape is wrong. But it sure fit perfectly and has the right coloring marks to appears genuine or has been there a long time.
So how could that happened? Numerous plane makers made parts or complete planes on contract for other plane makers. Some both under their own imprints and under various other stamps, others simply, their own personal production and stamps.
Back in those days, they were also more frugal than we are today. Waste not, want not. As the various business merged or sold out, their own inventories were not wasted, they simply overstruck the new trade stamps on it. Add a hardware store ( resellers) stamp and various owners stamps, some quite ornate and we have a lot of stamps confusing the issue of who made it???
Each plane makers had its own preferred wedge finial shape. In a world of countless look like planes, the wedge finial was their signature so to speak. Each would have its own wedge template, ensuring they all look alike. Since they also did contract works for other plane makers (parts or complete plane), the same shop would be making different wedge shape for different shops, could this one slip by in error?
Each wedge is final fitted to each plane, they would not had waste time and the wrong wedge by making a replacement. It fit, it work, it goes out for sale.
Will the real Georges Burnham please stand up :-)
Will need to dive in deeper into his history to make more sense of this slip up.
17XX Luther Fox is
born------------------------------------------Age 21 in 181X 1
1792 James Kellog is born. Amherst MA -----------------------Age
21 in 1813 2
1794 Daniel Copeland is born. Sturbridge MA (D1854) ------Age 21 in 1815 3
1799 Hermon Chapin is born (D1866) -------------------------- Age
21 in 1820 4
1807 Truman Nutting is born (D1891) -------------------------- Age 21 in 1828 5
1807 Austin Baldwin is born (D1886) ---------------------------
Age 21 in 1828 6
1808 Aaron Ferry is born
------------------------------------------ Age 21 in 1829 7
1814 Benoni Thayer is born --------------------------------------
Age 21 in 1835 8
1817 Georges (Geo) Burnham Jr is born (D1893) ----------- Age 21
in 1838 9
1818 Hiram Fox is born Son of Luther Fox -------------------- Age
21 in 1839 10
1822 (3) D&M Copeland Hartford CT until 1825. Daniel, Melvin, were brothers also with Alfred
1822 (4) Hermon Chapin apprenticed May 22nd at D&M Copeland (Daniel
& Melvin)
1826 Copeland (Daniel) & Chapin (Hermon)
1826 Melvin and Alfred Copeland. M&A Copeland until 1830
1828 H Chapin buy out Copeland (Daniel) and establish Union factory in CT.
It will becomes the most important plane manufacturer in
New England. Will operate under various names until 1929
1829 (5) Truman Nutting start making plane. Will last until 1852
1829 (7) Aaron Ferry turned 21 and is known to have work for T
Nutting
1830 Melvin & Alfred, M&A Copeland cease becomes Daniel
and Melvin Copeland. D&M Copeland
1830 (6) Austin & Elbridge Baldwin. A&E Baldwin New York,
until 1841
1831 Luther Fox made planes in Amherst MA until 1843
1834 Nutting & Fox June 19 1834 to Sep 14 1836 (Luther and Truman)
1834 (10) Hiram Fox works for Truman Nutting and Luther Fox, Nutting
& Fox. Must be apprentice
1834 (8) Benoni Thayer made planes for Truman Nutting shop (as
apprentice?) and Nutting & Fox
1835 (2) J. Kellog started making planes at Eli Dickinson's faucet
shop. in Nuttingville, part of Amherst MA . During the same period, 1835-67 he also operated a mercantile store. Would had finished his apprenticeship at 21 in 1813, a late comer to the field or simply lack of documented info?
1835 Williams Lyman (WL) Wasburn makes planes in Amherst MA until
1840
1835 Fox & Washburn 1835-36. Luther and Williams. Reportedly bought plane and parts from (Truman) Nutting & (Luther)Fox
1835 Fox, Nutting & Washburn a partnership of planemakers
1836 Aaron Ferry began work for Kennedy & Co
1836 Austin Baldwin establish the Arrowmammett Works in
Middletown CT.
Arrowmammett was the trade name used by The Baldwin Tool Co for planes produced there.
They also produced planes irons under Baldwin Tool Co
(BTC)
1836 Nutting & Fox cease operation
1837 Benoni Thayer is listed as a grocer. Was employed at
Nutting & Fox prior
183X In the 30s Luther Fox made planes with his son Hiram, L.
Fox & Son
1838 (9) Geo Burnham Jr apprenticed at H Chapin in CT.
Born 1817+14 = 1829+3 1831. 1817+21= 1838.
So probably apprenticed between 1829 and 1838
1839 Kellog, Fox & Washburn
1839 J Kellog move from South Amherst to a part of Amherst known
as Kellogville, were he erected two factories, one wood, one
brick.
1840 Kellog & Fox cease. J. Kellog will continue to operate
under his own name, J. Kellog
1841 Geo Burnham arrived in Amherst MA. Work as Journeyman for Luther Fox
1841 A&E Baldwin cease, Elbridge will operate a tool store
until 1852
1842 Aaron Ferry moved to Kent OH
1842 Luther Fox sell to 4 partners
- Geo Burnham Jr
- Hiram Fox (his son)
- Benoni Thayer. Made planes for T. Nutting and Nutting &
Fox 1834-36. Start making planes again 1842-1844
- Aaron Ferry, who left for Kent OH same year. Silent partner or
sold out before leaving?
1843 Geo Burnham buy out his partners. Now trade as Geo Burnham
Jr
1849 J. Kellog listed as plane manufacturer in Amherst MA
1849 Globe Manufacturing Co established will operate until 1885.
Incorporated 1849, decertified 1905
1850 Benoni Thayer is listed as a Journeyman
1850 Arrowmammett Works produced 40,000 planes that year
1850 Geo Burnham listed as plane maker and axe handle
manufacturer
1852 T Nutting leave Amherst MA for Olean NY where he did carpentry
1853 Geo Burnham Jr stop making planes under his stamp
1854 T Nutting move to MN where he operated a hotel, farm and manufactured brooms.
1854 Middletown Tool Co until 1878
1857 Arrowmammett
Catalog of 1857 illustrate the large quantity of different
tools produced.
1857 (some says 1858 or 1860) Austin Baldwin sold the Baldwin
Tool Co of Middletown CT (Arrowmammett Works ) to the Globe Mfg Co
of Rhodestown CT (probably Middletown CT), who made only hardware
and plane irons. Have yet to find Rhodestown on the map??
To add to the confusion; Other sources says the Globe Mfg Co was also started by Austin Baldwin in 1856. Doubt that.
1860 Baldwin Tool Co cease operation
1860 Geo Burnham Jr listed as plane maker and axe handle manufacturer
1865 J Kellog made planes with his son under J. Kellog & Son
(Williams) until 1867, at which time James, now 73 retired.
1869 Williams Kellog listed as plane maker
1878 Middletown Tool Co cease operation. Declared insolvent in 1879, decertified 1905
1885 Globe Mfg Co cease operation. Decertified 1905
1886 After a flood carried away the mill dam and damaged the factory, W Kellog will cease operations
1929 The last incarnation of Chapin's Union factory cease operations.
The way the multiples planemakers listed interacted among the various shops may help explained the "wrong" shape of the wedge. Have yet to figured out how a plane made by Geo Burnside Jr between 1843 and 1853 ended up overstamped by Arrowmammett works later, but it is not without precedent.
Most likely explanation was that he sold some of his production to Arrowmammett Works, which by the 1850s was becoming a big enterprise
And lastly, the wedge finial shape resemble a lot more like a Arrowmammett finial. Coincidences??
I think not. There must be a connection there I have yet to find documented.
The wedge is in fact original to this plane.
Meanwhile the iron has been cleaned, the body washed and some small booboos fixed.
The blade after three dunking in Evaporust, wire brush and some sanding 120 grits in between to expose fresh rust. When the flash does not reveal anymore brown spots I call it done and finish with a wiped coat of Autosol. Surfaces as is now. Will sand more when it get sharpened.
Look amazingly sharp as is, lets try it :-)
Wow Bob, that's some serious investigative journalism. You've got more patience than I have. Thank goodness you have the resources to figure it all out.
ReplyDeleteHi Bob, have you come across anything from Billings Forge? That was near me and was recently a restaurant until Covid killed it's business. Lots of plane and tool making happened in a 15 mile radius of where I live.
ReplyDeleteNo i havent heard about Billings Forge. Where are they located??
ReplyDeleteBob
I Matt
ReplyDeleteYes, the written text books from Sellens, Pollak, Walters and al are a great resources. Problems are similar, but not as bad as they can be online, there is some confusion at times and that is why I went thru that exercise of getting a straight timelines to uncover some facts. I also thought it was interesting to match the age 21 when most would finished their apprentices,. with what the timelines reveals. Mind you the limited sources of info uncovered so far, leave some holes, but it pretty well match up. Some were not full time plane makers, some were also farmers or carpenters turned tool maker later on in their life. Probably supplying parts pieces or complete plane to bigger tool makers enterprise, like Union Factory, Arrowmammett Works etc.
Bob