The
IXL Bowie from the...
George
Wostenholm & Son, archives
circa mid 19th Century.
On
March 6, 1836, Colonel James Bowie was
killed defending the Alamo from General
Santa Ana. According to the I.XL Wostenholm
archives, the Bowie knife found on his
body bore the famous I.XL trademark (originally
granted to Wostenholm's in 1787), and was
stamped "Made by George Wostenholm,
Sheffield, England". We are proud
and privileged to offer a knife produced
by G. Wostenholm & Son, Washington
Works, Sheffield, England; based on a pattern
from their archives circa mid 19th Century.
These knives are handmade by their own
Sheffield Craftsmen using the traditional
methods. They are hot forged from 7/16" carbon
steel (NOT stainless steel) into a heavy
& broad shaped .. 2" wide x 10" long
blade which is hardened and tempered before being
hand ground, finished, and polished. The coffin shaped
handle scales are fitted to the through
tang of the blade using brass linings and solid brass
rivets. Every step of the manufacturing process is
done to exquisitely tight standards, and metal parts
and blade are hand polished to an unbelievable mirror
finish.
These
knives are meant for the serious collector
and historians who wants to feel the history
from an item produced by the original manufacturer
from the original archive plans made in
the original handcrafted way.
Please
Note: George Wostenholm and Son has recently
sold out and the IXL trademark sold to
a distributing company. So these will
be the last true IXL knives we will be
getting in.
Stag Handle
... Item # IXL6060
Sword Armory Price
- Sorry, out of stock
Plus $5.90 for UPS ground shipping to anywhere
in the lower 48 states.
Order
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888-783-7805