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Hammer time!

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scubadoober

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Joined
Aug 15, 2017
Messages
511
78 oz. Halder soft faced deadblow. 2-3/4" across the face. She is a brute!
 

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SilverDeck

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Joined
Jun 7, 2016
Messages
481
Got one I cant identify the makers mark and Im hoping one of you can. The logo is hard to make out. I think I see an anvil surrounded by an oval of letters.

Based on your description it sounds like you have a Champion Dearment cross pein hammer. See the attached image of the logo. Champion is one of my favorite hammer makers. In the 1960s they changed their company name to reflect their best-selling groove joint pliers: Channellock
 

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SilverDeck

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Jun 7, 2016
Messages
481
Got one I cant identify the makers mark and Im hoping one of you can. The logo is hard to make out. I think I see an anvil surrounded by an oval of letters.

Looking closer at your photos, I can make out the “Tool Co.” below the anvil so I would agree with your assessment that this hammer is an earlier Champion iteration before their name changed to Champion Dearment.
 
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msgtsmithret

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Joined
May 5, 2013
Messages
409
Location
Raleigh NC
Well . . . I may have answered my own question here. Please add info if you have it. The logo is CHAMPION TOOL CO (later Champion DeArment then Channellock). According to the manufacturers history on their web page, they started making hammers in 1914 and changed the company name in 1925. So this hammer was made between those two dates. I'm ecstatic!
I find it curious how details of tool manufacturing becomes unclear over time.

According to the Chanellock History webpage, the Champion Tool company did not produce hammers until 1914. HOWEVER . . .the 1908 issue of American Blacksmith, page 39, clearly offers this very hammer for sale! Now I am not criticizing anyone at Chanellock. I thank them for a well wrirtten and interesting history of their company. I guess my purpose for writing this is to show that it is difficult to pinpoint dates. Mr. DeArment may very well have made hammers and sold them out of his wagon in the late 1800s for all I know.
 

RagTopTA

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Joined
Feb 26, 2015
Messages
1,892
Location
Wichita Falls , Texas
when I'm out at the Fleas and sales I'm always looking for unique hammerheads. I have found two I liked this year and put them on new sticks : } I did one a while back and got to this newer one with the M& H castings on its sides today. I decided Red is the color for my "special find" hammers.
 

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American Iron

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Joined
Nov 24, 2015
Messages
89
Location
NY Upstate
Well I'm usually good at making an ID of tool marks but this one stumps me. I plan on keeping this nice sledge. It's on an old 12lb Sledge Hammer that's painted red. Looks very similar to a Verona Tool mark but looks to have been not stamped completely on this hammer head. Any idea's? Thanks in advance..
 

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Jim C.

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Joined
Jan 8, 2010
Messages
2,598
My 32 oz. Nupla ball peen. I’ve had it for about twenty years, and got it from a DRMO surplus facility. It does a pretty good job of resolving “stubborn situations.”

Jim C.
 

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don long

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Joined
Mar 31, 2012
Messages
8,841
Location
southern california
Here is an old hammer that I pulled out of the pile to clean up and put with my tire machine and tool holder

2019-02-18 14.25.02 by don long, on Flickr

2019-02-18 14.25.12 by don long, on Flickr

After a lot of grinding and polishing and a little paint. I have a hammer that is presentable and ready to display with my other tire tools

2019-02-21 08.57.20 by don long, on Flickr

2019-02-21 08.57.11 by don long, on Flickr

2019-02-26 11.45.18 by don long, on Flickr

2019-02-26 11.43.15 by don long, on Flickr
 

Jim C.

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Joined
Jan 8, 2010
Messages
2,598
Hey Don,

Nice job on the hammer restoration! I’m not afraid to ask a potentially dumb question..... Is that hammer designed for tire/wheel service? I’ve never seen anything like that. It fits in well with the other tools and looks like it’s part of the set.

Jim C.
 
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freudianfloyd

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Joined
Feb 12, 2015
Messages
3,426
Location
Nowhere
Finally got around to cleaning this old hammer head up and putting a handle on it. It had some major chipping so had to regrind the head and decided to do a mix of polishing and wire brushing. I cant completely make out the name, but it appears to be a C.F. Dimon or something like that. I'm sure one of you know the manufacturer.

Before:
View media item 92818After:
View media item 92817
 

tym

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 5, 2016
Messages
2,427
Location
MA
Found this abused hammer last week. It is dual marked "H. Cheney / Hammer Co. / Tool Steel" and "Pierce Arrow"! Looks to be from a tool kit c. 1901-1917. I glued/clamped the handle split and also wicked CA glue into some of the cracks. I'm currently giving it a couple of coats of BLO.
 

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LesserSon

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Feb 7, 2016
Messages
5,047
Location
PA USA
Snap-on & Blue-Point hammers. I re-hafted the shiny Snap-on. I’ve painted but not hafted the Blue-Point. Most of the soft face hammers I’ve found are missing one or both of the plastic faces, and if there is one, it’s usually worn beyond further use. Some day, I’m going to find a box of them, and get them all face-lifts.
 

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LesserSon

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Feb 7, 2016
Messages
5,047
Location
PA USA
Bonney hammers. The last three in the center photo are not Bonney. The red one is Stanley (identical in all respects but name and paint to the Bonneys); the last two no-names.
The last photo is a tack hammer and a rip claw hammer that is identical to a same-era Stanley, but the head is a bit more finished. From the mushrooming, I guess it was used for beating on vintage USA machinist vises.
 

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LesserSon

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Feb 7, 2016
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5,047
Location
PA USA
Other hammers. Theres a Blackhawk, a Plumb, a couple Vaughns. And some intriguing mystery hammers. My grandfather had the ornate head in a drawer for as long as I can remember. A few years ago (before I knew what I was doing) I made a handle from green ash. Dunno who “R Wuchter” is, nor what the very last hammer is for.
 

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LesserSon

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Feb 7, 2016
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PA USA
An all-iron tack hammer or box-making hammer, with multiple pullers and a hook. It was my grandfather’s.
Yesterday I found at a yard sale for $1, the wood-scaled tack hammer patented Dec.10,1867, by Thomas A Conklin of New Britain CT. The age surprised me, and caused me to re-think how old my grandfather’s iron hammer might be.
US patent number 0071986 - “Improvements to manufacture of tack hammers.” I have straightened the as-found bent malleable iron shank, and am putting shellack on the wood scales. They’re a little narrow to judge the grain, but they may be chestnut.
 

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OP
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Outlawmws

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Joined
Aug 9, 2011
Messages
39,095
Location
The Badlands
An all-iron tack hammer or box-making hammer, with multiple pullers and a hook. It was my grandfather’s.
Yesterday I found at a yard sale for $1, the wood-scaled tack hammer patented Dec.10,1867, by Thomas A Conklin of New Britain CT. The age surprised me, and caused me to re-think how old my grandfather’s iron hammer might be.
US patent number 0071986 - “Improvements to manufacture of tack hammers.” I have straightened the as-found bent malleable iron shank, and am putting shellack on the wood scales. They’re a little narrow to judge the grain, but they may be chestnut.

LS, do you think your grandfather's hammer has the wood inserts once upon a time?

Cool Stuff! :thumbup:
 

freudianfloyd

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Joined
Feb 12, 2015
Messages
3,426
Location
Nowhere
Can anybody tell me about this hammer? What is it used for? It's fairly soft, and poorly constructed. I've cleaned it up and removed the mushrooming on the heads. There are no makers or engravings anywhere.
View media item 92865
 

LesserSon

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Feb 7, 2016
Messages
5,047
Location
PA USA
LS, do you think your grandfather's hammer has the wood inserts once upon a time?

I think no, because the profile of the heavy edge is round. The edge on the one with scales is beveled on the inside (the edge of the scales is beveled to match). Plus, the scales would run the entire length of the handle.
But I could be wrong; once removed, there’d really be no obvious trace it was ever there.
I’ll add a pic or two when I get a chance.
 

LesserSon

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Feb 7, 2016
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5,047
Location
PA USA
Today I came across the same tack hammer, for nearly eighteen times what I paid, though admittedly, this one is in better “as found” condition. Probably a later date, because there is no raised space and no mention of the patent. Also, the finish appeared to be a plating instead of black japanning (though from a cursory glance, it might have been a good silver paint). The scales seemed to be a different species of wood.
 

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Tylermorris

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Apr 10, 2019
Messages
112
Location
Enderby bc Canada
Old sledge hammer, was found between the walls in a friends barn
 

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ClarkShort

Member
Joined
Apr 13, 2019
Messages
23
Location
San Diego, CA
I recently picked up a few old ball pein hammers at the swap meet for $3 each. I am in the middle of restoring them by removing the rust, new handles and generally fixing them.
Here is a photo of my work-in-progress.
Notes: (from Left to Right)
1. polished the rust off and re-formed the shape of the hammer face to have a convex shape (it was flat when I got it); painted the center portion, re-finished the handle
2. Polished all of the sides; bought and installed a new handle
3. Wire-brushed the rust off. Planned: install a new handle

showthread.php
 

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