Well, here I just was trawling through sites looking for images of Victorian groom's knives ,for a PM to see if the measurements would agree or not with the victim's wounds..and all of a sudden the most horrible shiver ran through Me and I had to sit back.;
Those 'typical' folding knives used by horse men and hunters were known as
'JACK knives' (it shouldn't have been a surprise because they were known as that well into the 20th century -although I think of them as 'Switch Blades'-
and of couse the term 'To Jack Knife' has passed into the language concerning traffic accidents with articulated lorries etc.
The penny suddenly dropped for me though that 'Jack' in the letter, is not referring to a person, but the actual knife itself.
Those 'typical' folding knives used by horse men and hunters were known as
'JACK knives' (it shouldn't have been a surprise because they were known as that well into the 20th century -although I think of them as 'Switch Blades'-
and of couse the term 'To Jack Knife' has passed into the language concerning traffic accidents with articulated lorries etc.
The penny suddenly dropped for me though that 'Jack' in the letter, is not referring to a person, but the actual knife itself.
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