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Markings On Old Tools

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ferlew | 14:33 Fri 31st May 2013 | How it Works
13 Answers
Son got a job lot of old tools from a boot sale.
A few of them have the mark S, then old crown, then O.
Anyone know what these marks signify please?
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HM Stationary Office mark. Though why they should be using tools sounds a bit strange. Normally you'd find the mark on rulers and compasses, for example.
Question Author
Thank you very much.
Also, several of the hammers have notches burned into them, is there any significance to this?
That probably just signifies they were scheduled for destruction after use in the clean up of the Windscale nuclear reactor fire

Nothing to worry about

;c)
@heathfield.....Are you positive that the mark is that of H.M.Stationary Office. I would have thought that HMSO would have been the initials.

Al.
Question Author
Bit of an update for you, there was a 1938 halfpenny in the bottom of the box, also, the tool with SO on it, appears to be a letter opener someone has converted. You can see 2 holes where the original top and bottom sections of handle would have been.
Alston...No. They more often than not simply used the initiails 'SO'. See the example book cover here...

http://www.lightstraw.co.uk/gpo/hmso/
heathfield....I am going to concede that you have proved your original comments and should, IMO, be awarded 'Best Answer'.

Initially ferlew gave the impression that the S(crown)O was marked on a number of items, but that now appears to be down to a single article. Furthermore, she has identified it herself as the blade of a 'Letter Opener'. Understandable therefore that it could have originated from HMSO who supplied Stationary etc. to Government Departments; prior to its privatisation.

Cheers.....Al.

Question Author
Sorry, there is another item with the same stamp. whether it's another home made jobby, we are not sure. See what appears when we clean it up a bit. (When I say "we" I don't really mean "me" :)
Keep us posted ferlew. I am certainly intrigued with matters.

Al.

Question Author
I will.
I am beginning to think someone with a Heath Robinson streak owned these tools previously.
By the way, the notches on the hammers may just be identity marks to show who they belonged to. Many who use tools do this, e.g., I'd file a couple of notches on each of my spanners in a set to show they were mine, and not someone else's.
Question Author
Hmmmm, we had already decided he was a murderer, and the notches on the hammers were to denote the number of his victims ;)
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