Saturday, February 2, 2019

The Finnish Butterfly


After college and having found a real job I discovered I had a little extra spending money.  I was entranced by a red handled folding knife that could be best described as a butterfly knife from Finland.  Of course I satisfied that itch.

Puukko Folder, Finish butterfly knife
Hackman Folding Puukko

The blade doesn’t have a tang stamp and the only identification is “Hackman Finland” molded into the red plastic handle.  The 3.75 inch blade is a saber grind with a small secondary bevel that forms the actual cutting edge. 

The blade is an unknown stainless steel.  I’ve had it for years and no evidence of rust has appeared, despite the minima care I’ve given it.  And the plastic has also held up quite nicely.  I filed a small choil in the blade to separate the edge from the ricasso.  It was thought, with some justification, that without the choil you would damage your sharpening stone by chipping away it’s edge. 

In retrospect I realize was all I really accomplished was to add a stress riser in the blade.

Hackman was a cutlery and cookware company founded in Finland in 1790.  Later it was bought by the Iittala Group.  In 2007, littala was swallowed by the Fiskars Corporation.  Fiskars never, in my opinion, understood the American knife market and even now needs to make up for lost ground.


Finnish, Folding knife, linkkupuukko
The folding Puukkko closed and latched

The Hackman butterfly knife was better known in Finland as Linkkupuukko, or "latch-knife". The marketing boys positioned it as a retkiveitsi or "camping knife" and later as Eräpuukko or "wilderness puukko."  By now you should associating puukko with Finnish for knife.  I want to thank the unknow commenter who told me veitsi is Finish for knife.  They were kind enough to inform me thay puukko is a particular type of veitsi.

The Hackman story begins when Johan Friedrich Hackman was awarded the right to establish a trading house in the Hanseatic city of Vyborg.  He soon had a successful timber goods business on his hands, but like most businessmen he sought out new opportunities.  West of him was the territory now known as Finland.

In the early 1800s Hackman bought Sorsakoski – a small factory community in eastern Finland.  The purchase included a sawmill, flourmill and a brick factory.  Hackman’s cutlery business began in nearby Vyborg in 1876, headed by his son also Johan Friedrich Hackman.

Junior moved their entire cutlery manufacturing business to Sorsakoski in the early 1890s. The factory community was a mirror of Finnish society at the beginning of the twentieth century.  Companies like Hackman took full responsibility for providing basic services to their employees.  Sounds a little like the American coal mining companies and the company store, doesn’t it?

In 1902 Hackman began manufacturing new low-cost cutlery items forged from a single workpiece. The introduction of quality stainless steel in the 1920s revolutionized the entire cutlery business.  By the 1960s design legends like Kaj Franck and Bertel Gardberg had designed iconic cutlery collections for Hackman.

The black handle version of the knife seems to have a sordid past or excellent present day marketing.  There are rumors, highly unsubstantiated rumors, that CIA agents were issued the knife for Vietnam.  If anyone has any real knowledge I’d sure like to hear from you.

This makes some limited sense.  The knife isn’t made in the USA and being caught with one might not brand you as an imperialistic agent.  The mechanism is simple and robust, perhaps perfect for undercover work.  Being inexpensive, ditching the knife if you were being followed or mouse-trapped didn’t require a huge sacrifice on your part.

However, it isn’t likely you can call up the CIA and speak to the quartermaster and expect to get a straight answer.  That’s where the marketing comes in.  It’s easy to say on ebay that the knife is from the CIA / Vietnam issue era.

Recently, Spyderco added some credibility to this story in their April Newsletter:
" While the Finnish Hackman Camp Knife, a balisong-style folder rumored to have been issued by the CIA in Vietnam..."

There’s a story here and perhaps one day we’ll know it in its entirety. 

Post script:  At the Novi, MI April 2023 show, I saw a black handled Hackman butterfly knife.  Like the red one, the blade did not have a tang stamp or other markings.  But the knife wasn't completely sterile as I had expected.  Impressed on one side of the black handle, where the words Hackman Finland in very small letters, about half the size as the embossing on the red handled knife.

The knife was in very bad shape and I now have buyer remorse that I didn't buy it.  

Does this resolve the CIA story.  No, with out some province from someone who was issued or worked with a agent and saw the knife, the question remains unanswered.

Damn it, I should have bought the knife!

12 comments:

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butterfly knife said...

Butterfly knife is a knife with two handles and one concealable blade. It is sometimes known as a balisong knife. It is a dangerous knife to handle for the beginners.

Unknown said...

I just discovered a beautiful one while organizing my father's workshop last month. A little wear on the plastic handle, but the blade is in great condition and very sharp! I'm from a long line of Royal Navy and Royal Army officers, so who knows where he got it from. Good blog, thanks for the info!

knife said...

Hello Unknown, I always see these little treasures as a connection from father to son. Very Icey! I hope you enjoy using your dad;s knife.

TKT said...

I have 2 of the Hackman "butterfly" knives and a black-handled pukka. One butterfly is stored away and the other is my EDC which I modified so it can flip open and I grooved the handle for a better grip. I love the way the blade cuts. Even when it doesn't feel really sharp it cuts surprisingly well. I've had all 3 so long I forget exactly when I bought them but it can be measured in decades. I'm 73 so people are a bit surprised when it quickly emerges for use. I am surprised at what they are selling for these days. I carry the EDC in a belt sheath and a No. 8 Opinel in my left pocket.

TKT said...

I have 2 of the Hackman "butterfly" knives. One is EDC, the other backup. I modified the EDC to handle like a regular butterfly for opening and closing and grooved the handle for a better grip. Years ago I show it to a Phillipino who mentioned they tested theirs on a quarter, silver quarters. I laid a composite quarter down and stabbed it. The knife penetrated enough I had to knock the quarter off the blade. The tip was undamaged. I was relieved since I hadn't previously attempted it. I also have the black-handled pukka.

knife said...

Hi TKT,
Could you tell me a bit about any marks or stamps on the handle and blade. If you could a take a couple of nice pictures, it could possible make a nice blog. I have always been fascinated that the black handled knife could be part of the CIA field kit.

Unknown said...

"Knife" in Finnish is "veitsi." "Puukko" means a particular type of veitsi.

knife said...

Thanks for the proper translation!

Sam Hollingsworth said...

I have a red handled one still in original packaging, new never opened. Would you be interested in the knife?

knife said...

Thanks Sam! I'm going to pass and keep my eyes open for a black one. I did see one and the handle had Hackman molded into the plastic. That's not exactly what I thought of as sterile.

TKT said...

I haven't seen one or a picture of one that didn't have Hackman Finland molded into each arm of the handle. I don't know how old most of you are but I was buying these things when Nam was still in session and the CIA connection was debunked even then. The knife originated in the late 50s/ early 60s. In new, out-of-the-box form they are too stiff and tight to be much tactical use until fooled with as I did with one of mine so it could be flipped open. A Ftlipino was telling how they used to test theirs by stabbing a quarter, a silver quarter. I laid a laminated quarter on a table and jammed the tip through it. I had to tap the coin off. The tip was undamaged.