four.cycle
Well-known member
thanks humber and Dave455! 
Ahh!
Your reply was much more detailed though, I was leaving it so four.cycle had to go off and do some research.Beat me to it!
I don’t think you are doing anything wrong.okay... what am I doing wrong here?
Quite a task you have there!Could you gentlemen take a look at the file attached here and see if I've left anything out?
Your help with this project is greatly appreciated.
* Notepad *.txt file - currently just shy of 300kb. U.S. made stuff is at the top. Outside U.S. is listed below in alphabetical order by country name. (That arrangement seemed to make the most sense.)
Thanks again. BK
Dave455 said:Quite a task you have there!
Dave455 said:"If we are being pedantic..."
Dave455 said:"... and U.K. factories..."
I remember an old bloke in my village telling his grandkids that trowels came in “right hand” and “left hand”.^ William Hunt and Sons / Brades
Were the name for bricklaying trowels and what I still use, find good ones at boot sales occasionally, they had right and left handed variants as the sides were differently hardened and many different sizes, unfortunately the name still exists stuck on thin cheap trowels from Wilkinson Sword.
Known as "Work hard and Starve" by many old brickies.
I'm trying to wrap my head around the hardened edge... is the idea that the hardened edge side is used up against the brickwork when applying the mortar to lessen the risk of damaging the trowel?^ William Hunt and Sons / Brades
Were the name for bricklaying trowels and what I still use, find good ones at boot sales occasionally, they had right and left handed variants as the sides were differently hardened and many different sizes, unfortunately the name still exists stuck on thin cheap trowels from Wilkinson Sword.
Known as "Work hard and Starve" by many old brickies.
Good luck with your quest!It will never be finished in my lifetime. I've been online now about four hours and that list above is already out of date.
Stubs is puzzling. I need to revisit that.
re: "Jackdaw" - there is a referral to "Garrington" in the list. Originally, when the list was first created by GJ member PowderKeg, part of the objective was to make something along the lines of a "cross reference list" so that brand names could be connected to the manufacturer. (e.g., "Companion" or "Dunlap", both of which were brands marketed by Sears, Roebuck & Co.) Ergo: any name gets entered, with a reference to the manufacturer's name.
Pedant is my middle name.
Originally the objective was to create a list of mechanics hand tools.
As the list grew, it became necessary to add more and more names of manufacturers who delved into some specialty tool, even though 99.9% of their product line may have been completely unrelated. (e.g., C.E. Niehoff & Co. of Chicago, whose primary business was automotive ignition parts, but they also made a few small specialty tools.)
A little over a year ago, I started adding taps, dies, twist drills, and measuring devices because (as noted in the list) there's an inextricable link between "mechanic" and "machinist" tools. Ergo, you will find the inclusions of Starrett, Mitutoyo, Greenfield Tap & Die, etc.
I've tried to avoid delving into what are classified as "edge tools", simply because there are/were hundreds and hundreds of small independent makers not only in the U.S., but Europe as well, and (for the most part) these are extensively covered on other websites. This morning I added "Collins Axe Co." because I came across a Collins made tack puller.
The items I am doing my best to avoid are planes and braces, both of which are already covered extensively on collector sites, and also because what I am attempting here is already more than enough.
The same applies to woodworking tools, although "Buck Bros." got added a couple days ago because there was a connection to something else which was already listed.
The objective, if it is to be defined, is to create a source of reference for anyone who's found some widget at some garage sale (or boot sale in the UK), or in Grandpa's basement, and is looking for the who/what/where/when information. Every day a new member joins GarageJournal, posts a photo of his newly-found widget, and asks "What is this?" (and invariably "What can I get for it?")
This will hopefully lead those people in the right direction, because Google's web crawlers are all over this one, evidenced by the content in the text of listings on Ebay in which I find my own language copy and pasted regularly.
For that reason, you'll find some real screwball items in there. Over the last few days I added "Hurd's Patent Hog Tamer" and "Hill's Hog Ring Pliers", because to the neophyte, they look like "pliers" or "tongs". A year ago, I added a plethora of "Sanitary Flow Implement Wrenches" because they keep appearing online by sellers who have absolutely no clue that what they have is a device for working on milk trucks or milking machines.
If they were stamping out some sort of widget, then they belong in the list. You will note the entries for Rothenberger GmbH include their facilities in China, Dubai, India, and elsewhere. The problem there (with Stanley and Starrett) is that their websites do not include that information we would want in the list: location, dates of operation, etc.
Here's the updated list - current as of this posting.

The hardened edge is for breaking bricks. You just give it a clout and the brick breaks cleanly - if you’ve been doing it for years!I'm trying to wrap my head around the hardened edge... is the idea that the hardened edge side is used up against the brickwork when applying the mortar to lessen the risk of damaging the trowel?
Dave455 said:(Don’t ask me why)
Could be!Some British gentlemen have an affinity for birds.
Maybe he was a big fan of John James Audubon!
Thanks again for your help!
Thanks Dave, good explanation, that had not occurred to me.The hardened edge is for breaking bricks. You just give it a clout and the brick breaks cleanly - if you’ve been doing it for years!
I use right handed trowels even though I am a lefty because actually finding the left handed ones is near impossible nowadays, but I only do a little bit of brick/ block work so it doesn't make much odds, its different if you're laying full time and a good trowel only lasts a couple years.I remember an old bloke in my village telling his grandkids that trowels came in “right hand” and “left hand”.
They were convinced he was winding them up, even when he explained about the hardened edge!
Good trowels though. I have a pair of my Grandfathers, but sadly absolutely no aptitude for using them! Can do most things, but not anything involving cement or plaster!
That’s looking pretty good to me!have another look, Dave.
worked in a few new entries and edited a few others.
kind of a stab at Australian stuff as well - not so much.
haven't worked in all the bird names for Garrington's, but it appears there are fairly comprehensive lists of those available on the web.
BK



Very interesting.1974 Bedford Tool catalog now available for download at International Tool Catalog Library!
1953 King **** tools catalog now available for download at International Tool Catalog Library!
fabulous.
Thanks Mark!![]()


Beautiful tool box.Incidentally, the current King **** tool chests are British made.
What the quality is like, I don’t know, but I’m told they are a good deal better than most. Steel is supposedly decent and drawers are on ball bearing slides.
Price in the U.K. is the equivalent of about $850 (before tax) which is about right. Much less and it’s not going to be any good, much more and you’re getting close to Snap On money. Shipping to the U.S. would probably be prohibitive though.
Quite why they don’t actually tell anyone this, or go out of their way to advertise, I can’t say!![]()
I always believed King **** tools to be made in the U.K.King **** were originally the Abingdon Engineering Company.
They were a Victorian firm, and did all manner of things.
”King ****” was, I believe, the owners pet bulldog, and the name was chosen for the companies range of hand tools. They continued to make all sorts of things though, and I think were suppliers to the motor trade between the wars.
After the war, hand tools accounted for most of their production so the company name was changed to Abingdon King ****.

King **** tools are made in the U.K. - for the most part, but they only manufacture wrenches, socket wrenches, and accessories. Things like pliers and screwdrivers will be bought in. Always have been.