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Found in a box, can you help identify?

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    Posted 12 years ago

    Stevo1099
    (1 item)

    found this in a box at a yard sale. It appears very old, Length is about 17" and widest point is 3 1'2. the blade sticks below the wood 5/8" at the edges and 1 1/4 in the middle. The blade is 7 1/2" and dull. It does not appear to have ever been sharp.There is a mark of some animal in the 3rd picture.

    Thanks for your help

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    Comments

    1. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 12 years ago
      When you said it was never sharpened, that blew my theories! So, I figure it must be for pressing something into seams such as caulking on boat hulls.
    2. Stillwater Stillwater, 12 years ago
      My guess is kitchen instrument. I just saw stuff like this in an issue of Antiques Magazine. I don't think its for caulking something, you wouldn't need force from both hands, would you?
    3. LOUMANAL LOUMANAL, 12 years ago
      Possibly for skinning animals....separating the fur from the flesh. I'm from Up North and natives used these and similar tools for hundreds of years. RER (LOUMANAL)
    4. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 12 years ago
      Stillwater, I can't see kitchen. With a dull blade, what could it be used for? Not mashed potatoes. For pressing tarred cord into boat seams, it would be ideal & it is obviously made for heavy use, not veggies. Boat caulking cord is started with a dull screwdriver (or such) but that can't give the smooth even pressure this would. I don't know, but can't see something that strongly made being used in the kitchen so I'm looking to other practical used.
    5. Stevo1099, 12 years ago
      Loumanal, I have also heard it could have been used for cleaning hides. Maybe that's a wolf in picture 3.

      Thanks everyone
    6. Stillwater Stillwater, 12 years ago
      Ah-ha, I was right, this is an early fleshing tool for animal hides

      http://dakotalinesnares.com/store/images/wiebe%20fleshers.JPG
    7. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 12 years ago
      Ah-ha Stillwater, Loumanal was right, probably. I trapped as a teen & this would be good on tacked-out pelts. PS: The wolf was the common marking on Solingen knives, swords etc..
    8. Stillwater Stillwater, 12 years ago
      Kitchen is closer than ship-caulker
      :P *thbbb*
    9. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 12 years ago
      Neither is close.
    10. Stillwater Stillwater, 12 years ago
      I knew it was related to food/kitchen/meat
    11. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 12 years ago
      Scraping hides is not meat. Why don't you simply give LOUMANAL the credit due to him?
    12. maryh1956 maryh1956, 12 years ago
      Looks Native American to me
    13. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 12 years ago
      Not unless from the country of India is it made by "Indians".

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