woody 73
Well-known member
This is by far the hardest post story I have ever done since 2009 on the GJ. So please stay with me as the dates are guesses and the information is slim at best. This is the 4th and last installment of the tools that I received from my father-in-law. I had a devil of a time with the names on the following hand saw because it just reads as follows: A.Ashton warranted cast steel Sheffield. So, I started with that information and I then found Abraham Ashton, then I found Abraham Ashton & sons, then I found Abraham Ashton burnt Tree works. That was the easy part sigh....
Just who is Abraham Ashton? That one will remain a mystery to me and what he made, and sold, before buying a saw company is another mystery, but I have a few clues at best, so this is what I know. Abraham Ashton & sons had started their company in 1848 in Sheffield, Eng and it lasted till roughly 1951/or 1954?
I think (key word here) they must have started out making a wide range of cutlery goods, before they bought out the E. Pacey & Company and the Burnt tree saw works on Meadow Street. (Date unclear maybe 1888?).
Burnt Tree was the registered owner of the shark tooth trademark which the Ashton company now owned all the rights to it. What I do know is that John Pacey started making saws around 1841 and his family made saws up to 1890 I found some information that they made saws in Burnt Tree Lane in 1852 and Burnt Tree Works first appears around the 1878. So, now Abraham Aston must have made saws after 1890? It is somewhat confusing to me; I wish I had better records to look at.
What I do know for sure is they produced Cross cut saws, frame and pit saws, circular, hand, back and pruning saws.
A few links and some pictures for you on this hot August day.
www.backsaw.net
www.tooltique.co.uk
www.lumberjocks.com
www.backsaw.net
Just who is Abraham Ashton? That one will remain a mystery to me and what he made, and sold, before buying a saw company is another mystery, but I have a few clues at best, so this is what I know. Abraham Ashton & sons had started their company in 1848 in Sheffield, Eng and it lasted till roughly 1951/or 1954?
I think (key word here) they must have started out making a wide range of cutlery goods, before they bought out the E. Pacey & Company and the Burnt tree saw works on Meadow Street. (Date unclear maybe 1888?).
Burnt Tree was the registered owner of the shark tooth trademark which the Ashton company now owned all the rights to it. What I do know is that John Pacey started making saws around 1841 and his family made saws up to 1890 I found some information that they made saws in Burnt Tree Lane in 1852 and Burnt Tree Works first appears around the 1878. So, now Abraham Aston must have made saws after 1890? It is somewhat confusing to me; I wish I had better records to look at.
What I do know for sure is they produced Cross cut saws, frame and pit saws, circular, hand, back and pruning saws.
A few links and some pictures for you on this hot August day.
When was a sawmaker not a sawmaker?
Est in 1983 our aim is to advance the education of the general public in the history & development of hand tools & their use & the people & trades that use them
www.taths.org.uk
Abraham Ashton Sheffield | backsaw.net
Abraham Ashton Sheffield Tenon Saw Dated 1945
www.backsaw.net
Antique 19” Abraham Ashton 1881 Straight Back Cross Cut Panel Handsaw – Sharpened | Tooltique
Antique 19” Abraham Ashton (saw maker c. 1881) straight back cross cut panel handsaw with 7 tpi, fully refurbished and sharpened ready for use. The saw has been thoroughly cleaned including under the handle, jointed, resharpened and set by hand so that all the hard work of getting an old vintage...
Vintage Hand Tools
Industrial Sheffield and Rotherham
www.google.com
https://www.google.com/books/editio...am+ashton+saw+co&pg=PA754&printsec=frontcover
Abraham Ashton Ltd.
Hello All, You may well get bored with me saying this but there is always something about even the most mundane saw. I got this in place of my...
www.backsaw.net
Attachments
Last edited:



