I bought this knife at a little antique shop in the middle of Missouri today because I am a sucker for knives. It is probably not very old. The tang is full length and it has 4 steel pins. The tang is thicker at the top edge than the bottom edge, matching the taper of the blade from top to edge. Handle wood is fine grained and could be beech. As you can see the length is 11" of blade, upswept. It is nicely tapered all the way to the tip. No markings on the blade, but if it was handmade it was well done. On the handle is stamped FBH and it was done with individual letter stamps, I think (maybe the owner, maybe the maker). It has no to little wear.
Thoughts on what it is, and whether you'd re-shape it or just use it? It would be a great meat slicer, but for "mid to late 18th century period use" what would you suggest to do with it?
I'm guessing I'd need to cut the rear of the tang off at the rear rivets and taper the tang to a thin edge at the rear, replace the handle slabs and put new pins in forward of where they are now. Or could I just cut the tang off 1/8" to 3/16" behind the rear rivets, grind it to a nice taper, and keep the existing handle?
Then how much reshaping of the tip and where to reshape it to make it a "scalper" or general purpose knife for the common man?