bluegrass

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Feb 1, 2008
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Is anyone familiar with this company? I was wondering what anyones impression was. I can not tell from a photo is the handle/shaft is solid steel or hollow. Thanks.
 
do you have a picture or website for reference? i have never heard of bluegrass.
 
Bluegrass used to be a trademark of the Belknap Hardware Co. in Louisville, Kentucky. I sold a lot of Bluegrass tools in the mid-1970s. They always seemed to be of good quality. Belknap was a wholesale company that supplied stores in many states with tools. What follows below is from the first entry I read on Google.


William Burke Belknap founded this historic hardware company in 1840, along the banks of the Ohio River in Louisville, Kentucky. It started in a small shop that produced iron products, such as horse and mule shoes, nails, spikes and other forged items.

The first building was a three-story brick on the corner of Third and Main with three employees. When Belknap celebrated its 100th anniversary in 1940, it had grown to a complex of 37 buildings, covering 37 acres of floor space under one roof. It had underground passageways and covered bridges. Belknap Hardware and Manufacturing was among the nation's largest wholesale enterprises with nationally recognized quality brands

W.B. Belknap was an astute businessman. He was able to quickly discern the needs of his clients and community, focusing on what goods and services would best serve to make his business grow. He began his venture at a time when rivers were the transportation freeways and horsepower was real: mules and carts, horses and wagons. He built on this, providing quality, affordable tools, with brand names such as 'Belknap, King of the Bluegrass' and Thoroughbred, reflecting Kentucky's own pride in its unique topography and its love of fine horseflesh.

Some of Belknap trademarks are John Primble (1931), Cyclone (1952), Crusader (1935), Belmont, Old Kentucky Home, Pride of Kentucky and Pine Knot. Nap (1909) Blue Ribbon (1949). Spotless Town (1951) Homemaker (1958) Slumber Deep (1959) Speedmore (1962-83) Cap’N Nap (1964) Knap (1982)

Mr. Belknap's savvy business acumen was quite an asset. And he would need every asset he could muster, seeing as he favored the Union during the Civil War while living deep in Dixie. Being president of a bank in Louisville and married to the daughter of its former president would also prove to be another asset. This gave him the solid financial base necessary to support the health and growth of his business

Being another of that same breed of venture capitalists as E.C. Simmons and A. F. Shapleigh, he was the right man, in the right place, at the right time, with the right goods and services. He rode on the dual waves of an expanding frontier and the industrial revolution. His business philosophy was that whether his clients needed builder's hardware, house wares, mechanics or farming tools, or even pocket knives, Belknap would fill that order with quality merchandise, that came to be known as "goods of honor". Like these other men, he started small. His first catalog was a 3" x 5 ½", 16 page pamphlet. Belknap's inventory in 1880 was a mere 100 items. In 1940, the company's catalog had grown into a 3000-page tome, containing over 75,000 items. Still going strong! This was quite and accomplishment seeing that the immediately preceding years had seen the disappearance of such giants of the industry as Simmons Hardware, bankrupt in 1939. The 1957 catalog provided 90,000 items. When it closed its doors in 1986, under bankruptcy, Belknap's inventory had reached more than 117,000 items, mostly Blue Grass tools.

The Company was W.B. Belknap from 1840-1860; W.B. Belknap and Co. from 1860-1880; W.B. Belknap and Co. Incorporated from 1880-1907 and Belknap Hardware and Manufacturing Company Inc. since 1907

Belknap, while obviously a hardware and manufacturing leader, is also remembered for its pocket knives. By the 1800's, pocket knives were some of its primary lines of merchandise. The company carried Russell I*XL and LF & C, then introduced its own brands; Blue Grass, Pine Knot, Jas. W. Price and most noteworthy, the John Primble. This trademark was used as early as 1890, and probably before. It is also found on cutlery. Pine Knot knives were most likely made for Belknap by Robeson. The Primble knives (not those stamped Prussia or Germany) were manufactured under contract by Camillus, Boker, Schrade, Utica and Case.

A business consortium in Maysville, Kentucky purchased the Primble India Steel Works trademark. This group also operates the Blue Grass Cutlery Corporation in Manchester, Ohio. In the late 1980's they released new knives bearing John Primble- India Steel Works with the date of manufacture. (Editor’s note: The new cutlery company has continued the pocket knife traditions of the old. Blue Grass Cutlery made brand new pocket knives, etc. that includes the John Primble, Blue Grass and Winchester brands)

The Blue Grass trademark pocket knife was made for Belknap until the 1950's (with the Barlow pattern continuing on for a while). This trademark was purchased by S & T Hardware which issues a limited edition collector knife about every two years.

Belknap, like other major historic hardware houses, faced many challenges undergoing many changes over the course of more than a century of operation. However, it is said to have retained a "family" approach with its employees and their dependents, providing picnics, parties and doing all of its promotions from within the company. Belknaps' final demise was in 1986.
 
Thank you. I had located a new Bluegrass hatchet for sale. The seller advertised them as being of a super quality, USA made, and very rare. It appeared to be built along the lines of a eastwing, but with a rubber or kraton overhandle instead of the stacked leather. While I think of it, anyone looking for a new eastwing should check out the Sears website. They sell them for less than $30, which is less than anywhere else I have seen, except for auction sites.
 
Is someone still making these? I find a lot of buegrass hammers for sale, which appear to be newly manufactured.
 
I have a Belknap Bluegrass double bit that I like very much. The steel is good, but not better than other quality axes of a similar vintage (Kelly, Plumb, Keen Kutter, etc.)

Depending on where you live, they may be more rare than many other antique axes, but they are certainly available. There are at least 4 on e-bay right now....
 
Is anyone familiar with this company? I was wondering what anyones impression was. I can not tell from a photo is the handle/shaft is solid steel or hollow. Thanks.
I picked-up a single bit Blue Grass axe this weekend at an estate sale for $5. Quick wire-brushing, worked the edge w/ puck for about 10min, and then started limbing a black cherry tree that came down in storm on Friday. Sweet axe, especially for the price lol.
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Ohh, that's a nice one!.:)
Thanks, mate! I was just using 'er right now, finishing the clean-up on those fallen trees. I forgot to mention that the handle is super-warped ... so badly bowed you could probably notch & string it and hunt deer here w/ it in Sept. lol. I'll grab one of those $10 Ames True Temper handles from Lowe's this week and rehang the head. I want to try removing the varnish w/ a spoke shave and need the refinishing practice anyway, so no big deal. I think I'll cut out the section of the original handle that has the "Blue Grass" label on it, maybe drill a hole at one end and then loop some leather cord through it to keep as a souvenir. I love axes!! :D
 
I picked-up a single bit Blue Grass axe this weekend at an estate sale for $5. Quick wire-brushing, worked the edge w/ puck for about 10min, and then started limbing a black cherry tree that came down in storm on Friday. Sweet axe, especially for the price lol.
CzZi6Ge.jpg


m48m40V.jpg


BkdUsGu.jpg


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That's a beautiful axe! It looks like a replacement Bluegrass handle because of the hump under the eye. The shape of the handle is excellent while the condition is just fair because of the overstrike damage. But it's completely serviceable and I wouldn't replace it. Just rasp off the hump and the roughness underneath and then oil it with BLO. Should be good for several decades.

Isn't it a pleasure to use one of those old handles with the great swell?
 
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