The
story of knives branded with the name Case encompasses dozens of markings and
as many members of a family who would make cutlery history. To study the brand
that is recognized by most collectors as the king of factory knife
collectibles, W. R. Case and Sons Cutlery, it is important to include
information of other companies.
Although
Job Russell Case was never directly involved with the manufacture or the sale
of knives, he is considered by many to be the grandfather of the several knife
brands that carried his name. The Case name is near magic to the ears of
collectors of factory-made knives. It’s a name that is best known, widely
respected, and intertwined with the American cutlery industry. Grandpa Job Case
was born in 1821 and spent his adult years as a farmer, horse trader,
freighter, and lumberman. It is through his descendants that he exerted so much
influence upon the knives we collect today. These descendants were introduced
to the cutlery business by their relatives who were knife makers and, in turn,
they influenced several other family members to become part of what was to
become a knife-manufacturing dynasty.
The
story of Case knives begins in the later part of the 19th century
and continues through at least a half-dozen significant stages in the industry
of the knives and the family that created them. To make them more meaningful to
collectors, knife stampings associated with these periods are included.
The Early Years
The
Case family was introduced to knife making when Job’s daughter, Theresa,
married a cutlery salesman named John Brown Francis Champlin. In 1882, Champlin
resigned from the cutlery-importing firm of Friedmann and Lauterjung to begin
his own business as a knife broker. In this capacity, he contracted for knives
to be made and then sold them under his own brand name. The brand, J. B. F.
Champlin, Little Valley, New York was so successful that four of his wife’s
brothers joined the business in 1866. When Champlin’s brothers-in-law, William
R. Jean, John D. and Andrew Case, joined his firm, it was renamed Cattaraugus
Cutlery Company. The company continued to do well with Champlin and his son,
Tint, directing its manufacturing.
The
case brothers’ employment with Cattaraugus was short lived, but its impact upon
their lives was not. When they left in 1887, they took with them the desire to
be involved in the cutlery industry.
Entering The Knife Brokerage Business
The
first cutlery company to use the family name was Case Brothers Cutlery Company,
a brokerage firm also located in Little Valley, New York. The company owners
were Jean, John and Andrew but did not include the brother and former
Cattaraugus associate, William R. Case. The new company contracted with various
knife manufactures to make knives and sold them marked with several tang
stampings.
Beginning The Manufacture of Knives
The
Case Brothers’ cutlery business was so successful that in 1900, they built
their own factory in Little Valley, New York. Sales responsibility belonged to
Jean Case and he apparently was doing an outstanding job because sales
continued to increase along with the number of knife models produced. The
brothers’ specialty was hand-forged cutlery and they were justly proud of the
company’s high-quality products. Desiring to impress their customers with a
trademark signifying excellent quality, the brothers began to use the XX mark
that is so well known today. Knives of this 1900-1914 period were stamped with
the XX mark usually near the middle of the blade but sometimes on the reverse
tang. It would also occasionally appear as Tested XX.
Not
only did the Case Brothers factory produce high-quality knives, but it also
served as a training ground for the family’s succeeding generation. When in
1912, the Little Valley factory burned, relocation to Springville, New York was
attempted. Within a couple of years, the company had failed and in 1914, the
famous XX trademark was transferred to the competing family firm of W.R. Case
Cutlery Company. During the tenure of the Case Brothers Company, a large number
of tang marks were used.
In
the mean time, as Case Brothers Cutlery Company was getting well established,
Case family members started a new knife brokerage company. Dean and Elliot,
sons of Jean Case, had been involved in the early years of Case Brothers, but
they left that company to start their own business in 1901. Upon Elliot’s death
in 1903, the business closed and their only trademark used was the company
name, Standard Knife Company.
W. R. Case & Son Cutlery – The Beginning
As
stated earlier, W.R. Case was not involved with his brothers’ business, but the
Case Brothers Company served to train his son. During the years 1900-1902, John
Russell Case had worked for his uncles and earned his indoctrination into the cutlery
business. Through the support and financial assistance of his father, Russ Case
founded a knife brokerage firm in Little Valley, New York in 1902. In an effort
to have customers perceive his new business as being well established, he not
only used his grandfather’s (Job R. Case) picture in the company’s advertising,
but he also used his father’s name in naming the company W. R. Case & Son.
Russ
Case purchased knives for his brokerage business on contract from Platts
Brothers Cutlery Co., Cattaraugus Cutlery Co. and others. Consequently, there
were many pattern variations during the 1902-1905 period preceding the
establishment of their own factory. They were various tang marks on the
contract knives during this period.
W. R. Case & Sons Knife Manufacturers
Russ
Case was an excellent salesman and flourishing business encouraged him to move
to Bradford, Pennsylvania, and to build a knife factory there. Another family
member, by marriage, would provide the manufacturing expertise needed to
complement Case’s sales ability. The husband of Russ’s sister, Debbie, had come
from a family well established in knife making. So in 1905, H. N. Platts joined
with his brother-in-law in combining their operations under one company name.
Since Platts was a son-in-law of W. R. Case, and since Russ Case had
established strong brand recognition, the SON in the company’s name was simply
replaced with SONS, making the new name W. R. Case & Sons Cutlery Company.
Business
was excellent and many new knife patterns were introduced during the 1905-1914
period, but the prestigious XX symbol still belonged to Case Brothers. With the
failure of that company in 1914, W. R. Case & Sons was able to acquire the
trademark, one that has been a standby for the company to this day.
Due
to his failing health, H. N. Platts left the company in about 1910 and moved to
Colorado where he started a new cutlery company called Western Cutlery Company.
At about the same time, Russ Case’s other brother-in-law Herbert Crandall
merged his Crandall Cutlery Company with W. R. Case & Sons.
Russ
Case had no children but for many years his company would remain under the
ownership and leadership of family members. When he died in 1953, majority
ownership of W. R. Case & Sons Cutlery Company passed to his niece. Rhea
Crandall was the daughter of Theresa (Case) and Herbert Crandall, Russ Case’s
early partner. Rhea was first married to Harold Osborne, to whom she bore a
son. After the elder Osborne’s death, she married John O’Kain. O’Kain led the
company as president until his retirement in 1971. At that time, he became
chairman of the board and Rhea’s son Russell B. Osborne, became the company’s
president.
Ending of Case Family Ownership
In
1972, ownership of the W. R. case & Sons Cutlery Company was passed from
the Case family members to American Brands Inc, but leadership influences of
the Case family would remain for yet a while. Russell B. Osborne continued as
president until his death in 1975 and his son John served as vice president and
new products manager.
American
Brands’ ownership of the famed cutlery giant continued until the end of 1988.
The cutlery business, which the conglomerate had purchased sixteen years
earlier, had enjoyed a reputation built over several decades. Although it may
not have been recognized by the parent company in maintaining that image. They
were, therefore, not surprised when American Brands had made public its
interest in selling the old company. By the beginning of 1989, W. R. Case
&Sons Cutlery Company was under the ownership and leadership of James F.
Parker, an enterprising businessman who had already built a thriving cutlery
business of his own.
The Parker Influence
The
Case family had made a tremendous impact on the knife industry over a period of
a hundred years. At the beginning of the 1990’s, Case was again guided by
cutlery-oriented ownership and leadership. The change marked a turning point
that will likely be significant for collecting generations to come.
Knife
patterns, stampings and handle materials used many years ago but discontinued
over the past several decades were reintroduced. Among the handle materials
used on “the new Case” knives were Rogers Bone, Christmas Tree Celluloid, Gold
Stone Celluloid, Red Bone, Green Bone, Curley Maple and India Stag. The
reintroduction of old-time patterns and stampings was accomplished through a
series started in 1989 and known as Case Classic. This series was announced as
“basically handmade just as they were in the late 1800s” and the knives were
made using many of the original dies. Collectors should be aware that a company
other than Case made knives in the Classic series for Parker. After Parker’s
ownership of the Case Company ceased, he retained marketing rights for the
Classic for several years.
The
earliest Classic knives with revived stampings were patterns ROG639 (Case
Brothers), G6391 (W. R. Case & Sons), CT1072 (Case Tested XX), ROG61050SAB
(Case Brothers), 51050SAB (W. R. Case), G62075 (W.R. Case & Sons), and
ROG62075 (Case Brothers). The handle materials, shields, blade pulls, and blade
marks were matched to the original period of the knife’s production by the old
companies. Their stamping included the year of manufacture. These knives were
limited in production to 3,000 of each, and 500 of each was reserved for the
Centennial Mint Set. Retail prices of these early Classic releases ranged from
$120 to $150.
The
Centennial Mint Set contained a total of one hundred knives with a wide variety
of patterns and handle materials. Most of their blades were etched “Case XX
Tested Centennial 1889-1989”. Retail price of the complete matching serial
number sets was $5,000.
Perhaps
one of the more significant actions taken during this time was the sale of the
Case Factory Collection of knives, along with other knife-related items of
historical and collector value. A considerable number of extremely rare knives
were sold into the collector market. They quickly found “homes” in the
collections of a number of lucky Case fans. Some, of course, have since been
traded or sold, thus adding several fine and expensive old knives to the
marketplace.
Case’s
tenure as a Parker company was relatively short lived. In March 1990, Case
joined other of his companies in bankruptcy proceedings. The company was sold
to a Chattanooga; Tennessee based investment firm known as River Associates and
operations of the Bradford factory resumed.
Although
short, the Case-Parker years were significant ones for the famous old brand.
For too many years preceding the Parker ownership, many collectors believed
that the knife manufacture had failed to live up to its generations long
reputation for quality. The turn into the 1990’s marked the beginning of a
turnaround in product quality. Once again, collectors and users alike could
join the company’s employees in their pride for knives marked “Case”.
The 1990s and Beyond
In
May 1993, River Associates sold W.R. Case & Sons to Bradford,
Pennsylvania’s other manufacturing icon, the Zippo Manufacturing Company.
Ironically, the company known worldwide for its cigarette lighters had been
Case’s sister subsidiary when they were both owned by American Brands.
Under
Zippo’s ownership, Case has paid particular attention to the desires of their
collector base and has grown by leaps and bounds as a result. Among the
testimonies to this growth are the Zippo/Case Museum in Bradford, Pennsylvania,
the biennial Zippo/Case International Swap Meet, and the burgeoning ranks of
the Case Collector Club, currently the world’s largest organization of knife
collectors.
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