Total Members Voted: 20
Who cares!?
Good one Nix. Would make a great story to have more details about the knife. I see there’s a phone number for the park on their website, may help to try and see if there’s a curator or manager you can link up with? Looks like a really nice park to visit.
Going by the first photo, observe the boots, the mighty fine hat, the rifle, the canteen/binoculars thing, hes on a horse, the horse has a mud knot...this guy would have loved a 110
The only way we can know for sure is to send one back in time and ask Teddy what he thinks about it. I will volunteer to be one of a team of brave Chrononauts to carry out this important task.Who's with me?
. Me! The only problem is I won't be coming back!!
The 1700's sounds like fun.....until you remember that Tabasco hadn't been invented yet.
To distribute his sauce, Edmund McIlhenny initially used discarded cologne bottles sourced from a New Orleans glass supplier. On his death in 1890, McIlhenny was succeeded by his eldest son, John Avery McIlhenny, who expanded and modernized the business, but resigned after only a few years in order to join Theodore Roosevelt's 1st US Volunteer Cavalry Regiment, the Rough Riders
Buck 110 and Tabasco bully good.
Although, Barry, that's not a Buck 110......