This old German firm was founded in 1892. For the
most of their existence the company was little known in the United States,
producing a very diverse line of quality pocket and fixed blade knives for the
European market, as well as contract work for better-known brands. Their main
trademark, “Weidmannsheil” is German for “good hunting,” and often appears in
conjunction with the head of a stag or a boar. (Reportedly, those with the stag
head were made for the German market, while those with a boar’s head were made
for a large customer in Austria.) Other trademarks used by the firm over the
years included “Konig” “Laufbrunnen,” “Springer,” and the image of a double
spouted well.
The company trademark is a detailed graphic of a
stag’s head crowned by a semicircle of uppercase lettering “WEIDMANNSEIL” It is
etched in a two tone gold and green, deeply stamped in the tang in an uppercase
italic is this: “W. Welterbach, Solingen”.
I have a Wilhelm Weltersbach catalog from 1931
and they made some of the finest switchblades I have ever seen. They are all
springer’s and have stag handles. When you open them, they really snap to
attention.
The last in the Weltersbach line of cutlers died
in 1991, and all output had stopped by 1994. In October of 1997, James F.
Parker received a call from Kurt Gronauer, senior president of the Friedrich
Olbertz cutlery firm in Solingen, Germany. The owners of the Weltersbach
estate, two elderly widows, were finally prepared to sell. Parker hopped a
plane to Germany the next day and sat down to talk with the widows, Gronauer
serving as the translator. It soon became apparent that they intended to sell
every single item on the order of one at a time.
Hours later, Parker was finally able to purchase
everything in the Weltersbach factory, including inventory, parts, and raw
material such as handle scales. Then, after everything was agreed on, the two
widows started bringing out cartons of finished knives, including many unique
pieces such as those made of Damascus steel; these weren’t part of the deal. In
the end, Parker was able to obtain everything, but he later stated, “With forty
years of trading experience, I have negotiated with Pakistanis, Indians,
Mexicans, Africans, Japanese, and American traders. I left that day knowing
that I was no match for these two German widows.”
The unfinished Weltersbach parts were cleaned and
finished by Gronauer in the Olbertz plant and later sold by Parker. The
“Weidmannsheil” trademark is now registered in the United States, and thanks to
Parker’s effort it has become well known to collectors worldwide.
Jim Parker passed away in November of 2004.
Today’s Weidmannsheil knives are still produced in the Olbertz plant in
Solingen for Parkers Knife Collector Service of Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Any chance you would sell a copy of the Weltersbach catalog?
ReplyDeleteUlf
http://thebladeblog-ulf.blogspot.com/
Any chance you would sell a copy of the Weltersbach catalog?
ReplyDeleteUlf
http://thebladeblog-ulf.blogspot.com/
Jim was wonderful. He bought the land in Chattanooga for the NKCA museum, displayed at my two Miami shows and loved to talk knives. He passed way too soon and the void still smarts.
ReplyDeleteI read that after Weltersbach went out of business the Diefenthal Solingen company bought the WEIDMANSHEIL logo and is using it on their knives... Seems like either now or lately Diefenthal is fixing to go out too!??!
ReplyDeleteI am the proud owner of a Weidmann folding pen knife , one blade , bottle opener and toothed saw with stag horn scales it has a stag head emblem on the blade.previously owned by a German minister.
ReplyDelete