Freed & Collins

Freed & Collins Arts & Historic Sundries - Blackball, Artistic Renderings and Prints, Antique Hand Tool Restoration

From The Deerskin Diary
09/26/2025

From The Deerskin Diary

“The persons may be supplied with said Stones, which are reckoned to be best ever found out for whetting Scythes,….” Pennsylvania Gazette, September 27, 1753 in referencing Crum Creek Scythe Stones

In a world where sharp tools had a profound effect on an ability to accomplish tasks, grinding stones, and wet stones were extremely important support elements for those tools. The above excerpt from the Pennsylvania Gazette reveals the notice of prosecution for people caught taking Scyth sharpening stones from a particular quarry. 

Most sharpening sequences in the 18th century seemed to focus on grinding and honing. This required several different types of stones and they appear to be stones that came from both Europe and the colonies.

Pennsylvania, Vermont, Georgia, and North Carolina all had documented stone types used for sharpening knives and tools.

Modern day Turkey and Greece had what appears to be the most valuable stones. They were imported into the colonies and often times referred to as Turkeystones or Turkey oil stones. These appear to be a finer grade of stone, possibly church, used for honing and fine-tuning a blade. 

Some of these can still be found today online at places like Etsy and high end shaving supply businesses.

Pictured are two types of stones actively used by Colonial Williamsburg in their joinery shop. Here are two examples of a coarser grinding stone and a finer honing stone.

Golf in the 18th century!  (Images from the book Better Golf by Newell, Poston, and Atha)
05/01/2025

Golf in the 18th century!

(Images from the book Better Golf by Newell, Poston, and Atha)

I am so encouraged by the pledge to buy my first offer for the Helene relief fundraiser, so here is my next offering.  I...
10/09/2024

I am so encouraged by the pledge to buy my first offer for the Helene relief fundraiser, so here is my next offering. I am raffling one of these 8x8 canvas prints because deciding which one makes my head spin so winner gets to choose the one they want.

To make this a little more special for this cause I am going to start a limited series of the one you choose so you will get #1 of the series of 50, so signed and numbered. It is $10 per chance and there will be 10 sold. I've also decided to go ahead and take Paypal for this effort as it is a special circumstance. I hate paypal but it is the quickest way. My goal to eventually raise $1000 to be donated to hurricane relief groups with a proven record and will happily share receipts. This one will go to Samaritan's Purse.

Prints are archival giclee printed canvas of my original watercolors printed and mounted by me and coated in a UV blocking varnish. They will tolerate light cleaning and modest amounts of moisture. They can be framed but all come with a sawtooth hanger so you can display or gift immediately. If displayed out of direct sunlight, they should outlast you.

To buy your spot/s, please send $10 for each spot via paypal to [email protected] (Friends and Family!) then PM me a screenshot of your receipt (I'll get a notification in my email as well). I'll give you a number on the list in the comments section. Winner will be chosen at random either by a random number generator online or a rugrat from a hat. ;-) This raffle will stay open until all 10 spots are sold.

Also, this link works as well - paypal.me/fasterpushycat

If you would like to purchase outright rather than by raffle, please PM me as I want to save paypal for raffles only and I need to stay under $600 so I don't trigger an audit.

Interesting 17th c tidbit on flatware
09/20/2024

Interesting 17th c tidbit on flatware

07/26/2024

PS. When you go to an art show, music festival, any kind of "fair" or "festival" or farmer's market or anywhere there are small independent business people in temporary booths, trucks, carts trying to make a living through the creations of their own hands, PLEASE BRING CASH. It is much appreciated and many of them do not take cards.

Edward’s new acquisition. An original horn handled folder. He got it from an elderly friend who had gotten in from an el...
07/07/2024

Edward’s new acquisition. An original horn handled folder. He got it from an elderly friend who had gotten in from an elderly person when he was young. It was with the original owner’s shooting bag kit that also contained ball molds, pow horn, of course the bag, and you can only imagine what else. The items in the kit were distributed to different family members and individuals. No idea on anything else about it. Probable origin SE Ohio where it is now.

On use of table knives and forks by French and English custom, quotes and sources provided by Steve Raynor, copied with ...
05/31/2024

On use of table knives and forks by French and English custom, quotes and sources provided by Steve Raynor, copied with permission. Photo by Greg Shipley of his private collection.

“In England the fork is always held in the left hand and the knife in the right. The fork holds the meat down, the knife cuts it, and the pieces may be carried to the mouth with either.” - Barthelemy Faujas de St. Fond, 1783-84.
18th century accounts differ in opinion in whether the fork, or the knife, should be used to convey food to the mouth. It seems that social class as well as national origins played a role and of course, nations loved to critique each other's manners.
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"Fork... an Instrument commonly made of Iron with Prongs, to stick into and hold Things fast, and when made about 5 Inches long are used to take up the flesh or Victuals we eat, and when larger have commonly some Appellation added to it to distinguish it, such as Flesh-Fork, Dung-Fork, &c."
Dyche, Thomas, and Pardon, William; "A New General English Dictionary: Peculiarly Calculated for the Use and Improvement of such as are unacquainted with the Learned Languages." Second Edition. Printed for Richard Ware. London. 1737.
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Baron Ludwig von Closen, in the French service in America. Rhode Island, December 25, 1780.
“Another peculiarity of this country is that in the majority of homes, even in rich ones, no napkins are used, and every one uses the table-cloth, of course the edges are worn out by this. Furthermore, almost all people here eat, just like the English, with their knives (which are rounded at the end) without using forks - and they have only two points." p. 109.
"The Journal of Baron von Closen"; translated and edited by Evelyn M. Acomb, William and Mary Quarterly, X (1953), pp. 196-236. The Revolutionary Journal of Baron Ludwig von Closen, 1780-1783. Translated and Edited with an Introduction by Evelyn M. Acomb. Published by the Institute of Early American History and Culture at Williamsburg, Virginia. The University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, 1958, 392 pp.
https://loyolanotredamelib.org/.../Report30Schulzp107-111...
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Barthelemy Faujas de St. Fond, at the Duke of Argyle's at Inverary, Scotland, ca 1783-84.
“After breakfast, some walked in the parks, others amused themselves with reading and music, or returned to their apartments. At half past four, the dinner bell was rung, and we went to the dining room, where we always found a table of twenty-five or thirty covers. When all the company were seated, the chaplain according to custom made a short prayer, and blest the food, which was ate with pleasure. Indeed, the dinners were prepared by an excellent French cook, and every thing was served up in the Paris manner, except a few dishes in the English form, which made a variety and thus gave the epicures of every country an opportunity of pleasing their palates.
I was particularly pleased to see napkins on the table, and forks of the same kind as those used in France. I am not much disposed to risk pricking my mouth or my tongue with those little sharp tridents, which are used even in the best houses in England. I know that this kind of forks are only intended for seizing and fixing the pieces of meat while they are cut, and that the English knives being rounded at the point, may answer for some of the purposes to which the French forks are applied, particularly in carrying meat to the mouth; but I must confess that I use their knives very awkwardly in this way. It is well however to accustom oneself to the usages of different countries; and it seemed to me that at table, as well as in several other instances, the English calculate more accurately than we do. In England the fork is always held in the left hand and the knife in the right. The fork holds the meat down, the knife cuts it, and the pieces may be carried to the mouth with either. The motion is quick and precise. The manoeuvres at an English dinner are founded upon the same principle as the Prussian discipline. Not a moment is lost.
In France, the first manoeuvre is similar to that of the English: but when the meat is cut in pieces, the knife is laid down on the right side of the plate, and the fork is changed from the left to the right hand, with which it is lifted to the mouth; thus our table tactics are more complex than the English and require more time. The English method is certainly the best; but large knives with rounded points are necessary to put it in practice. And why not have them? There would then be an arm less in the hands of the vitious or the foolish.” p. 252-254.
Saint-Fond, B. Faujas; “Travels in England, Scotland, and the Hebrides...” Two Volumes. Volume 1. Printed for James Ridgeway. London. 1799. https://tinyurl.com/2p96r###
Date from an extract from the account of “...M. Saint Fond, a learned Frenchman, who travelled in England and Scotland in 1783[-]4, for the Purposes of Natural History...” At the Duke of Argyle's, at Inverary, Scotland. “Observations of a Foreigner on the Manners and Customs of Great Britain.” In “The Edinburgh Magazine, or Literary Miscellany, for April 1799”. Vol. XII. New Series. Edinburgh and London. 1799. https://tinyurl.com/ke92tnw7
“They are fully convinced that the English all eat with their knives, and I have often heard this discussed with much self-complacence by those who usually shared the labours of the repast between a fork and their fingers.” - Helen Maria Williams, an English woman writing of French customs and the impressions the French had of England, 1792-1795.
"The fact is, living in England is expensive: a Frenchman, whose income here supports him
[p. 57.]
[p. 58.]
as a gentleman, goes over and finds all his habits of œconomy insufficient to keep him from exceeding the limits he had prescribed to himself. His decent lodging alone costs him a great part of his revenue, and obliges him to be strictly parsimonious of the rest. This drives him to associate chiefly with his own countrymen, to dine at obscure coffee-houses, and pay his court to opera-dancers. He sees, indeed, our theatres, our public walks, the outside of our palaces, and the inside of churches: but this gives him no idea of the manners of the people in superior life, or even of easy fortune. Thus he goes home, and asserts to his untravelled countrymen, that our King and nobility are ill lodged, our churches mean, and that the English are barbarians, who dine without soup, use no napkins, and eat with their knives. - I have heard a gentleman of some respectability here observe, that our usual dinner was an immense joint of meat half drest, and a dish of vegetables scarcely drest at all. - Upon questioning him, I discovered he had lodged in St. Martin's Lane, had likewise boarded at a country attorney's, and dined at an ordinary at Margate." p. 58.
"A French man or woman, with no other apology than 'permettez moi,' will take a book out of your hand, look over any thing you are reading, and ask you a thousand questions relative to your most private concerns - they must enter your room, even your bedchamber, without knocking, place themselves between you and the fire, or take hold of your clothes to guess what they cost; and they deem these acts of rudeness sufficiently qualified by "Je demande bien de pardons." - They are fully convinced that the English all eat with their knives, and I have often heard this discussed with much self-complacence by those who usually shared the labours of the repast between a fork and their fingers. Our custom also of using waterglasses after dinner is an object of particular censure; yet whoever dines at a French table must frequently observe, that many of the guests might benefit by such ablutions, and their napkins always testify that some previous application would be by no means superfluous. Nothing is more common than to hear physical derangements, disorders, and their remedies, expatiated upon by the parties concerned amidst a room full of people, and that with so much minuteness of description, that a foreigner, without being very fastidious, is on some occasions apt to feel very unpleasant sympathies. There are scarcely any of the ceremonies of a lady's toilette more a mystery to one s*x than the other, and men and their wives, who scarcely eat at the same table, are in this respect grossly familiar. The conversation in most societies partakes of this indecency, and the manners of an English female are in danger of becoming contaminated, while she is only endeavouring to suffer without pain the customs of those she has been taught to consider as models of politeness." p. 257-59.
Williams, Helen Maria; "A Residence in France during the years 1792, 1793, 1794, and 1795: described in a series of Letters from an English Lady..." Two Volumes. Vol. I. John Gifford, editor. J. Plymsell for T. N. Longman. London. 1797.
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ca 1832.
"...in our own memory, men and women both ate with knives, for, as then, silver forks were little known..."
A review of "Domestic Manners of the Americans", by Mrs. [Frances Milton] Trollope. An extract from this work follows.
"For many of Mrs. Trollope's sorrows, we can have but little sympathy. The want of the arts and the graces, which embellish life, are set down as the source of all her woe: the afflictions which prey sorest upon her, are six in number - viz. servant girls persist in calling themselves helps; 2, Men smoke and spit; 3, Colonels keep stores, and majors gin-shops; 4, Men, when they sit, put their feet on the backs of the chairs; 5, Gentlemen and ladies eat with knives; 6, The whole United Provinces agreed in calling the authoress "The old woman." Now, had Mrs, Trollope chosen, she might have found much of the same sort of thing in her native land: here, labouring men persist in calling their masters their employers; here, many men of rank and education both smoke and spit; here, members of parliament are tailors and brewers, and editors of periodicals; here, in our own memory, men and women both ate with knives, for, as then, silver forks were little known; and here, not only ladies in years are called old, but we have heard, without either sense or propriety, ministers of state and reverend bishops called old women." p. 187.
"The Athenæum: Journal of Literature, Science, and the Fine Arts. Jan - Dec. 1832. Printed by James Holmes. London. 1832.
The passage relevant to eating that earned Mrs Trollope such a censorious review is from her relation of her trip up the Mississippi in January, 1828.
“The total want of all the usual courtesies of the table, the voracious rapidity with which the viands were seized and devoured, the strange uncouth phrases and pronunciation; the loathsome spitting, from the contamination of which it was absolutely impossible to protect our dresses; the frightful manner of feeding with their knives, till the whole blade seemed to enter into the mouth; and the still more frightful manner of cleaning the teeth afterwards with a pocket knife, soon forced us to feel that we were not surrounded by the generals, colonels, and majors of the old world; and that the dinner hour was to be any thing rather than an hour of enjoyment.” p. 24.
“By Mrs. Trollope”; “Domestic Manners of the Americans”. 4th edition. Gilbert and Rivington. London. 1834.
https://archive.org/.../b29350384_0001/page/24/mode/2up...
Image: In this composite view of the men on both sides of the table, one conveys food to his mouth with a fork, while the other uses his knife. This suggests the ongoing change in habit from using the fork to hold the food while being cut, but conveying food on the rounded end of the knife; to the more modern custom of using the fork.
William Dent, "The Constitutional Society", 1783. Lewis Walpole Collection, Yale University Library.
https://findit.library.yale.edu/catalog/digcoll:552798

They said Transylvania is the place you want to be so they packed up their bags and moved to Ken-tuck-ee
05/25/2024

They said Transylvania is the place you want to be so they packed up their bags and moved to Ken-tuck-ee

Twenty million acres, for 10,000 pounds of goods.
A group of wealthy investors spearheaded by Judge Richard Henderson of North Carolina formed the Transylvania Company. Their goal was to colonize the rich lands around the Kentucky River and establish Kentucky as the 14th colony. To that end, they hired Daniel Boone to blaze a new trail through the Cumberland Gap. To confront the issue of Native American aggression, Henderson decided to approach the Cherokee directly, and in March 1775 his associates negotiated with the Cherokee to purchase the land between the Cumberland and Kentucky rivers, a total of some 20 million acres, for 10,000 pounds of goods.

Mr Collins' tool display at Campus Martius in Marietta OH. Open until 4 pm today. If you are nearby stop by. Lots of ven...
02/17/2024

Mr Collins' tool display at Campus Martius in Marietta OH. Open until 4 pm today. If you are nearby stop by. Lots of vendors and displays at Campus Martius and Ohio River Museum.

The place to be Friday (tomorrow) and Saturday!  We're excited to set up and let you see what we've been working on over...
02/09/2024

The place to be Friday (tomorrow) and Saturday!

We're excited to set up and let you see what we've been working on over the past several months.

01/24/2024

History friends, mark your calendars for the frontier arts/Longrifle show in Marietta at the Campus Martius and Ohio River Museum on Saturday Feb 17th that Bill Reynolds puts together. I haven’t seen a flyer for it yet so I don’t even know what to call it, but I’m registered for it and I’ll be there UPSTAIRS! Some folks didn’t realize there was an upstairs, but yeah, Mr. Collins and I will be up there with the art display with plenty for you to take home, his restored antique hand tools, books, baskets, etc.

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