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#22 | |
Arms Historian
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Route 66
Posts: 10,194
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Matt Easton is an excellent researcher so his coverage on this is great. The issues brought forth by Thomas Gill were indeed as you describe, but the matters at hand involved in many clandestine dealings and issues which were deemed unsavory, thus considered scandalous. While not specifically labeled by that term in references, the conditions using the term were my own description (though I have seen it used in reference in other sources in the same manner). So actually I am not confusing history, but used a common term which described the events I referred to, and specified in my comments exactly the period to which it applied. I am sorry you misunderstood, so thank you for clarifying. Yes, I have had Richard's book since it came out, and his chapters on the Gill's and especially Runkel are brilliant!!! I cannot say enough on the excellence of his research and the thorough coverage. For years, since I first began using Robson (1975) that was my primary resource as in those days I was collecting every British cavalry pattern (took a while but I did it ![]() Richard's book does not supercede Robson directly, but perfectly augments it, which is why "new perspectives" is included in the title. Having discussed Gill as one of the apparently numerous makers of the British 1804 pattern cutlasses, in interesting detail, I hope we can see more examples, marked, by other makers of the period. On that note, if these were as suspected, around in some from before the 1804 regulation I wonder if Thomas Gill II might have been involved. It seems in the 1788 period of the 'scandals' his swords were primarily for officers, while those by Wooley were with simple name stamp on back of blade. It would be most interesting if Thomas Gill II might have made a cutlass prior to his death in 1801. The others marked Gill (by John) would seem post 1806 or thereabout? Last edited by Jim McDougall; 8th November 2022 at 05:52 PM. |
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