Summary
Part of a sailmaker's tool kit.
Physical Description
Steel blade with translucent yellow handle, possibly plastic (cellulose).
Significance
This object is part of a collection of hand tools and materials, related to the trades of shipwrighting and sailmaking. Shipwrights and sailmakers were a very important trade for the construction and maintenance of water transport, such as paddlesteamers and sailing ships. The early colony of Victoria relied on the skills of these trades for construction of new vessels as well as their ongoing maintenance.
There are close to 7000 objects, documents and images related to the Trades Collection, which is primarily a collection of the tools associated with various trades, such as baking, blacksmithing, bookbinding, boot & shoe making, bricklaying, broom making, butchering, carpentry & woodworking, coachbuilding & wheelwrighting, coopering, coppersmithing, drafting, founding & moulding, gardening, glazing, hairdressing, hat making & millinery, jewellery making, knife & blade sharpening, leatherworking, metal working, organ building, painting & decorating, patternmaking, plumbing, printing, saddlery, shipwrighting, stonemasonery, tailoring & dressmaking, tiling, tinsmithing, tool making, undertaking, upholstering, wig making, and woodturning.
More Information
-
Collecting Areas
-
Acquisition Information
Unknown Acquisition Method from Unknown Source, Before 04 Jan 1991
-
Manufacturer
Joseph Rodgers & Sons Ltd, England, Great Britain, 1870-1891
-
Inscriptions
On tang: ' [Maltese cross symbol] JOSEPH RODGERS & SONS / CUTLERS TO THEIR MAJESTIES / [6-pointed star symbol] No 6 NORFOLK STREET '
-
Classification
-
Category
-
Discipline
-
Type of item
-
Overall Dimensions
160 mm (Length), 25 mm (Width), 8 mm (Height)
-
Keywords