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Union Cut Co. Olean NY....who apparently changed their name to Ka-barWhat’s the tang stamp on the knife? Kinfolks, Marbles, or Remington or something. It’s worth some money.
VermontThat's AWESOME!!
Is she in a gun-friendly state?
Vermont
You sent me down the rabbit hole on this one. Looks like it was at 430 N Main St in Bristol CT, it was torn down and there's a parking lot on the spot where the factory stood now with what looks like a pharmacy behind it. Apparently Ingraham was one of the major clock makers in the US from the mid 1800s through the mid 1900s. Oddly the only way I was able to find the actual street address was from a nuclear regulatory commission paper on a project searching for radium contamination. https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML1700/ML17006A098.pdfThe Ingraham Clock box she found them in. Built by American Craftsmen. The Ingraham factory - I wonder what's there today.
Humor with a hint of fear...People in MA are so conditioned. I hear fear in some of these posts like they think the atf is in the way as soon as you touch someone like this.
Awesome find. Hope it is enjoyed.
Those photos are like touring Hunter's Rendzvous during the .22LR ammo drought.
You can see the old factory on this topo map.Looks like it was at 430 N Main St in Bristol CT, it was torn down and there's a parking lot on the spot where the factory stood now with what looks like a pharmacy behind it. Apparently Ingraham was one of the major clock makers in the US from the mid 1800s through the mid 1900s. ... Its quite a contrast from the photo of the old plant from the historical society
You sent me down the rabbit hole on this one. Looks like it was at 430 N Main St in Bristol CT, it was torn down and there's a parking lot on the spot where the factory stood now with what looks like a pharmacy behind it. Apparently Ingraham was one of the major clock makers in the US from the mid 1800s through the mid 1900s. Oddly the only way I was able to find the actual street address was from a nuclear regulatory commission paper on a project searching for radium contamination. https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML1700/ML17006A098.pdf
Its quite a contrast from the photo of the old plant from the historical society here: E. Ingraham Clock Company
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