Mine is just a chunk of rail.
![]()
All that effort, get a real anvil, you will love it
Mine is just a chunk of rail.
![]()
Hey guys. I bought a couple of anvils at a sale this morning. So far I found half a logo on one and was wondering if anyone recognized it. The small one is 130lbs and the large one is 200lbs. Ask my back how I know this. My blacksmith friend is coming over in a day or two so hopefully he will help me learn a bit more about them. I bought them from a guy who was helping out at a garage sale I attended. He had them in the back of his truck with a bunch of scrap metal that he was hired to clean out of a old building. He wouldn't name a price and kept telling me to make an offer. I suspected he was going to counter anything I said so I offered $100 to which he immediately said $150. We settled on $120 for the pair.
just got one after years of searching, paid way too much according to some posts here but I will beat out my frustrations on top of it so it will pay for itself in no time, not to mention the chipped concrete and bent metal edges of machines that thankfully wont happen any more. These are the advert photos, I havent had a chance to take my own
had this one for about 15 years
My father gave me his the other day. It weighs about 127 lbs. according to the old sheep scale.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Huh?Don't hit on this one
All that effort, get a real anvil, you will love it
I would guess he is thinking the collectability.
I would say dont work cold metal on it, baby the edges, and have fun
Lots and lots of fishers out there


She was absolutely floored when I showed it to her. Can't say I have ever seen her more happy than that in 20 years being together. Really is kind of funny giving an anvil to your wife as an anniversary present but it was something she wanted more than anything else in the world and i am a firm believer in giving gifts that are practical and something that someone wants and will use. Nothing worse than getting a present that you have no use for.
as to the hundredweight versus pounds, as our UK friends said, depends on where the anvil was made - Peter Wrights, Alsop, Mousehole, other made in England anvils, all were marked with the hundredweight system....but anvils made in America were marked in pounds. My 1820 Mousehole Forge anvil from England is marked 124, so it weighs 112 + 56 + 4 or 172 pounds, whereas my 1880 Fisher is marked with a "6" and weighs 60 pounds....
These are mine. Friends call this my "anvil tree". Don't have enough spare floor space to have them on their own stands, so they sit stacked on my welding table till needed.
Top down: 5# Buffalo, about a 55# Vulcan, 200# M&H Armitage mousehole and a junk 300# Grizzly.
The M&H is dated 1830, boy if that thing could talk the stories it would have.
![]()
Can anyone identify this anvil? It's about 100# and has a beautiful ring to it. I don't see any markings.
