woody 73
Well-known member
In my many tool hunts around central Ohio sometimes I am very amazed at the tools that I find. This tool has traveled from the shores of England to my home town, indeed that has been a very long road to travel.
Because the tool was so very rusty and I did not want to touch the original patina, it has taken me two weeks in order to free it up and still preserve the patina. Plus the fact when I first bought it I thought it was some kind of clipper for pruning roses! How wrong I was it took me a lot of searching and it turns out it was a World War l trench tool for cutting through all that nasty barb wire.
I did find a link showing that it was for the first World War in case someone might have thought it was for the second World War. (although it is stamped with a 1917 mark on it).
I apologize for the pictures but it took me forever and a day just to make out the name and the other hall marks, so it will be very hard to see all those tiny marks stamped into the tool itself.
Now this next part is a partial History of the company and I will need all the help from our GJ brothers/sisters living in England to give me some insight in the next few questions.
I found a ton of these wire trench tools and many of them were the exact same copy only under different company names.
First question did they not have any patent infringement laws in England to protect the original first patent? Or had the idea run out ?
Did the British Government need these in a hurry and maybe they gave their designs to many companies in order to produce them?
What is a British War Department accept Stamp (Broad arrow) as stamped into the tool ?
Next question as I write the story it would seem there were two companies involved the first company was the George Plumpton company that was part of the Herbert Plumpton company were they brothers?
Ok the story in question...
From what I could find George Plumpton Ltd, was a maker of telephone requisites.
Thewlis, Griffith, and Edelsten Ltd, maker of Lancashire files (est. 1813), and Lancashire Tool Co. was part of the Herbert/Plumpton Company.
Herbert Plumpton was a tool and plier manufacturer of 171 Liverpool Road, Warrington.
In 1920 both were Incorporated into Sheffield Steel Products Ltd (SSP).
In 1959 they became part of Arusha Industries Ltd.
In 1970 George Plumpton added counting machines to its range of tools.
I found some very nice links that you might find very interesting should you get the chance to look them over.
No information about either Man in Question I apologize for that, and again the pictures of all the stamps is very hard if not impossible to make out.
http://www.midlifexpress.com/i-was-a-world-war-1-wire-cutter-what-were-you/
https://www.ozwrenches.com/vintage-military.htm
http://www.deactivated-guns.co.uk/i...ton/prod_3204.html?_a=viewProd&productId=3204
https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Sheffield_Steel_Products
https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/George_Plumpton
https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Herbert_Plumpton
Because the tool was so very rusty and I did not want to touch the original patina, it has taken me two weeks in order to free it up and still preserve the patina. Plus the fact when I first bought it I thought it was some kind of clipper for pruning roses! How wrong I was it took me a lot of searching and it turns out it was a World War l trench tool for cutting through all that nasty barb wire.
I did find a link showing that it was for the first World War in case someone might have thought it was for the second World War. (although it is stamped with a 1917 mark on it).
I apologize for the pictures but it took me forever and a day just to make out the name and the other hall marks, so it will be very hard to see all those tiny marks stamped into the tool itself.
Now this next part is a partial History of the company and I will need all the help from our GJ brothers/sisters living in England to give me some insight in the next few questions.
I found a ton of these wire trench tools and many of them were the exact same copy only under different company names.
First question did they not have any patent infringement laws in England to protect the original first patent? Or had the idea run out ?
Did the British Government need these in a hurry and maybe they gave their designs to many companies in order to produce them?
What is a British War Department accept Stamp (Broad arrow) as stamped into the tool ?
Next question as I write the story it would seem there were two companies involved the first company was the George Plumpton company that was part of the Herbert Plumpton company were they brothers?
Ok the story in question...
From what I could find George Plumpton Ltd, was a maker of telephone requisites.
Thewlis, Griffith, and Edelsten Ltd, maker of Lancashire files (est. 1813), and Lancashire Tool Co. was part of the Herbert/Plumpton Company.
Herbert Plumpton was a tool and plier manufacturer of 171 Liverpool Road, Warrington.
In 1920 both were Incorporated into Sheffield Steel Products Ltd (SSP).
In 1959 they became part of Arusha Industries Ltd.
In 1970 George Plumpton added counting machines to its range of tools.
I found some very nice links that you might find very interesting should you get the chance to look them over.
No information about either Man in Question I apologize for that, and again the pictures of all the stamps is very hard if not impossible to make out.
http://www.midlifexpress.com/i-was-a-world-war-1-wire-cutter-what-were-you/
https://www.ozwrenches.com/vintage-military.htm
http://www.deactivated-guns.co.uk/i...ton/prod_3204.html?_a=viewProd&productId=3204
https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Sheffield_Steel_Products
https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/George_Plumpton
https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Herbert_Plumpton
Attachments
Last edited:


