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Bruce Pennington

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Everything posted by Bruce Pennington

  1. Well THAT's a new one! Now if 'CURLY' and 'JOE' show up, we've got a set!!! Ha!
  2. Quite an interesting piece. Leather ito. Can you tell what the mekugi is made of? The remains of the leather cover over a civil saya says, to me, at least the saya was original to the war period. I have seen a few showa stamped blades in civil fittings, then refitted for the war effort. No idea how or why the blade went civil first. But it's not unheard of. I'm impressed by how deeply that Showa stamp was imprinted! Maybe the nakago was still hot when struck? This is the first Kunishige blade I've seen with a stamp of any kind.
  3. The top sword is a Type 19 Cavalry sword, not a parade sword. That is a fighting blade not a dress blade.
  4. Yes, the fittings are Type 98. Can't see the tassel clearly enough to know for sure, but looks like a blue/brown of a company grade officer. If you pick it up, please post better pics. Looks like a large "W" stamped on the nakago?
  5. @Kiipu @BANGBANGSAN - anybody got a meaning of that stamp?
  6. Sorry for the double posts, but it should be noted on both these threads. I have updated the Mantetsu -- South Manchurian Railway article to include a better description and photos of the unique MRS fittings. It's a small change, but the original section was woefully understated.
  7. I have updated the Mantetsu -- South Manchurian Railway article to include a better description and photos of this unique set of fittings. It's a small change, but the original section was woefully understated.
  8. Thomas, quite unique! Is that silver plating on the non-gold half? If so, wonder how the craftsman made the patterns.
  9. My feeling is with Jussi, as the swords on the ground and normal sized. If the tall item standing on his left is the saya to the sword in hand, it is much longer/taller than the other one next to it. Of course, it could be both - short guy, longer than normal sword.
  10. There is a long line of post WWII documents posted by Stephen Thorpe - WW2 US Govt Archived Documents - that discusses the progression of Occupation Forces on sword confiscation, and the cessation of it. Discussions about National Treasure blades taken by soldiers and local police and the efforts to get them back. Very worth reading.
  11. As to the 'why', I have often asked the same question about the destruction of U.S. military planes after the war. The answer I got was that materials, like steel, were in short supply. Citizens, during the war, were constantly being encouraged to donate metal items, pots and pans etc, to build weapons. When the war was over, the shortage still existed. Vast numbers of aircraft were cut up and melted down for the steel, copper, etc. I imagine the same was true for post war Japan. Additionally, in 1946, an order came out prohibiting the troops from bringing home any more war trophies. And in Japan, a law was passed prohibiting war weapons.
  12. The Dawson and Fuller books, as well as other sword history books, say that approximately 500,000 swords were confiscated. About half were destroyed, either dumped in the ocean or cut up and melted. The swords in the photo of this post - Interesting Photo - were being cut up and melted. Many of the other half were granted to ranking officers and their staff (there's a photo in one of them, of a secretary receiving a sword). Recovery of dumped swords would be fruitless. The waters where they dumped weren't that deep, therefore the rust would be total.
  13. Sure. Part of my frustration in tracking these things, is guys often don't post a photo of the entire nakago when asking about a mei translation. Sometimes simply discussing a stamp will generate 1 or 2 more from guys reading posts, though.
  14. I must back-track on my earlier comment - this very well could be a kao/kakihan. I have been hyper-focusing on cut-test kao that all fit a similar pattern, that I forgot that the smith kao can be all over the place in style. And many of them incorporate a blend of kanji, often from their names, in the stylized logo. I'm going to save this one as a Naokatsu kao. When I add it to the the Stamps Doc, I'll call it a 'possible kao for...." @Ron STL - have you got a date, or estimate, on this blade?
  15. Whoa, there Nelly! Thomas, can you give me the smith name of this. I get the date - August 1832 - but no clue on the smith. The 5 'dots' or 'circles' are definitely going in the files!
  16. The first and last thing I do when I examine one of my swords, is to smell it! I LOVE that smell!!!
  17. Certainly a possibility. Never saw that arsenal mark before. I have 2 concerns, though. 1. I have never seen an arsenal inspector mark at the end of a nakago. But I have seen religious symbology and other markings there. On both of these, there is a small 'stem' at the top like a gourd: 2. Has anyone every heard of the Hiroshima Arsenal processing swords?
  18. I could find very little about that hand guard style in either Dawson or Fuller. Did they make this style hand guard into the Type 19 years?
  19. He was a prolifice smith and/or quite popular, as I have 6 of his blades Showa, 6 Large Seki, 3 NA, and 1 Gifu, and several non-dated. The Showa and Seki were all un-dated, while the Na and Gifu were '43-'44 blades. Can't say about gendaito blades, as I don't track them if they are un-stamped. Maybe someone has an idea.
  20. DOHH! (I thought we had a emoji for that!) Although.....technically speaking, the blade could have been refitted with 94 fittings. But, truthfully, when I typed that I was hyper-focused on the unusual fuchi and wasn't thinking about the date.
  21. If it's a kao, I've never seen one like it. Agree with Barry that it looks more like kanji. @uwe @Nobody
  22. @Kiipu - a head-scratcher!!! {I've edited my original post, as it was way wrong} Katsumasa is one of the few smiths with stamped numbers on the blade, that was not RJT. I have 5 of his blades with stamped numbers and they are all at the top of the nakago, with a NA stamp and number. They flow in sequential order by date, so I don't believe this was done by fittings shops, but rather by an Army system of tracking (reasons unknown). Jan '43 "143 Na" Jan '43 "168 Na" Mar '43 "1025 Na" May '43 "1550 Na" Dec '44 "245 Na" (started over in '44?) Good eye on the "Na" stamp @mecox mal. @kealpe - Keith, are you anywhere near Colorado Springs?
  23. I own mostly WWI showato, and out of curiosity would love to slice something, even a watermelon, with them, but knowing that cutting edges loose steel every time they are used ..... I just can't do it. So, with a nihonto, I'd doubly be reticent.
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