CORINTH - John D. Hamilton, 33° Mason, 87, passed away February 19, 2023, at a Bangor hospital. He was born on September 15, 1935, in Buffalo, New York, the son of Kenneth and Ione (Brown) Hamilton.
John attended Amherst Central High School and graduated from the University of Buffalo in 1958 with a degree in American History. During his high school and college years he was an active AFLA (Amateur Fencing League of America) fencer, skier in winters, raced 6-meter sailboats on Lake Ontario in summers. Upon college graduation, he attended Naval O.C.S. at Newport, RI and served twelve years in the U.S. Navy as a line officer with a communications sub-specialty.
His first service as a communications officer for Com Service Squadron Force 3 (there were twelve of us junior officer under the Adm. ships (USS Haleakala AE-25 ammunition ship, as ship’s navigator, and Viet Nam service as circuit control officer aboard the major communications relay ship USS Arlington (AGMR-2) on Yankee station in the Gulf of Tonkin as assigned by Congress in its Gulf of Tonkin Resolution of August 7, 1964. Yankee station was in the northern sector of the Gulf, almost opposite Hanoi, and Zulu station in the southern sector, which was covered by our sister ship whose capabilities were considerably less than the Arlington’s. The Arlington also participated as a recovery vessel in the Apollo 10 (several hundred miles off American Samoa) and Apollo 11 Manned Spacecraft Recovery Missions (July 24/25, 1969) for which the crew received the Meritorious Unit Commendation, and John later also received the Navy Achievement Medal. As the primary recovery vessel for Apollo 10’s “splashdown” (near American Samoa) the Arlington crossed the equator in King Neptune’s’ Realm for which John was made a Trusty Shellback. As the Vietnam war ended the Arlington was ordered into mothball status in San Diego. John’s next duty assignment was as Executive Officer of the Navy’s largest Reserve Training Center in Boston.
John and his wife Martha, nee Martha Wendy Wilson of Chatham, Ontario are the proud parents of son Kenneth who was born at the U.S.N. Naval Depot, Concord, CA, and is now resident of Corinth, ME, and daughter Kathryn Mary who was born at U.S.A.F. base at South Ryslip, England. John took early retirement from the Navy while serving as Executive Officer of the Boston Naval Reserve Training Center in 1970. Of his twelve years in the naval service eight of it was spent “at sea”. It was time to get reacquainted with his family again.
As a civilian, John returned to his interest in museum work with a curatorship at the National Park Service’s Minute Man National Park in Concord, MA. His next position was as Director of an empty new local historical museum in High Point, North Carolina. After achieving a viable museum operation for High Point’s Historical Society, three years later he was hired as Curator of Exhibits by the Museum of Our National Heritage, a new American history museum in Lexington, Massachusetts. This museum was funded by the Scottish Rite Freemasons of the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction. John remained there for nearly twenty-five years leaving as Curator of Collections and interim Director. He left Lexington to assume the directorship of the Connecticut Valley Historical Museum at Springfield, Massachusetts where they had just received the entire Smith & Wesson Firearms Company collection of over 1,600 firearms, which had always been his area of special interest. John resigned from Connecticut Valley in 2000, after more than four decades in the museum profession having held a number of curatorial positions and the directorships of three American history museums. He was raised a Master Mason in Simon W. Robinson Lodge, Lexington, Mass. in 1979 and was conferred with the honorary 33rd degree in Scottish Rite in 1997.
John Hamilton is a past president of the Massachusetts Arms Collectors, a founding trustee of the Rifled Arms Historical Association, and a 35-year member of the American Society of Arms Collectors. He is the author of The Ames Sword Company, 1829-1935; Catalogue of Japanese Sword Guards in the Collections of the Peabody Museum; Material Culture of the American Freemasons; The American Percussion Schuetzen Rifle; The American Fraternal Sword, An Illustrated Reference Guide; Frank Wesson, Gunmaker of Worcester Massachusetts, (Vol. 1) and a contributor to Colonial Wars of North America, 1512-1783 An Encyclopedia. He has been a competitive marksman since high school and written numerous articles on arms and militaria, and is a recognized authority on historic American swords. He currently resides in Corinth, Maine with his wife Martha, who is a recognized published authority “Silver in the Fur Trade, 1690-1820.” on silver ornaments made for the North American fur trade.
Surviving John, are his wife of 63 years, Martha W. Hamilton; son, Kenneth Hamilton and his wife, Nikki Johnson, of Corinth; grandsons, Neil Hamilton, of Old Town, Sam Johnson, of Corinth, and Nathan Hamilton, of Corinth; and granddaughter, Andrea Lydick, of Amherst, Massachusetts. In addition to his parents, he was predeceased by his daughter, Kathryn Hamilton.
A Celebration of John’s Life will be celebrated at a date and time to be announced. Those who wish to remember John in a special way may make gifts in his memory to the Olympic USA Shooting Team, ATTN: USA Shooting, 1 Olympic Plaza, Colorado Springs, CO 80909 or, by visiting https://usashooting.org/get-involved/donate/. Condolences to the family may be expressed at BrookingsSmith.com.
John D. Hamilton Background
Education: University of Buffalo, B.A. History, 1958
Officer Candidate School, Newport, RI - Commissioned 1958
Instructor School, Naval Schools Command, 1967
Personal: Born September 15, 1935: Buffalo, NY
Married to wife Martha Wendy Wilson of Chatham, Ont., two adult
children son Kenneth and Daughter .
Military: Offficer Candidate School, Newport, R.I., commisioned Ensign
21 May 1958, LTJG May 1, 1960, LT. Dec 1, 63.
Released from active duty Oct 1, 1970.
Awards: National Defense Service, Vietnam Service Medal (2 Stars Tet offensives),
Navy Achievement Medal, Sec. Nav. Meritorious Unit Commendation,
Navy Pistol Expert Medal with Silver “E”.
Experience: Military: extensive sea duty in western Pacific Ocean, the Caribbean, and the Mediterranean serving variously as an under-way Officer of the Deck watch stander, Ship’s Navigator, and Staff Communications Officer for an Amphibious Squadron Commander. Ordained a “Trusty Shellback” while on Apollo 10 and 11 Recovery missions, and responsible for drafting surface and air Communications Operation Plan for amphibious Navy/Marine Corps deployment in support of NATO operations. Shore duty included residency in Sasebo Japan, London England, Norfolk, VA, and Boston, MA as Executive Officer of the Naval Reserve Training Center.
Museum Profession:
Director: Connecticut Valley Historical Museum, Springfield, MA
Initiated and implemented administrative and curatorial policies and procedures to achieve AAM re-accreditation, and installation of new mobile storage systems. Expanded schedule of exhibitions
and exhibit installation shop capabilities. Responsible for oversight of all museum operations including facility and storage upgrades, collections management, exhibition installations, and research reference library operations.
Interim Director: Museum of our National Heritage, Lexington, MA
Oversight of $2.3 million annual operating budget of a general American history museum, research reference library, and eight major exhibit galleries of changing exhibitions, and staff of nearly twenty. Responsible for acquisition, research, exhibition, management and conservation of all collections, supervised museum and library collections management staff. Conceptualized major exhibits. Oversight of a $297,000 budget for curatorial and library operations. Participated in MAP 1, 2 and 3 assessment programs for successful AAM accreditation, and winning NEH and IMS grants.
Curator of Exhibits: Museum of Our National Heritage, Lexington, MA
Commenced with “empty-building” facility and developed inter-museum networks and a team approach in creating cooperative exhibitions pertaining to all phases of American history. Mounted and installed more than 170 exhibitions; including the conceptualization of themes, identification and loan of artifacts, research and preparation of label copy, coordination of gallery schedules with design and construction personnel, and photography of artifacts for publication.
Chief Curator of Collections: Museum of Our National Heritage Lexington, MA
Responsible for developing a collection of material (stuff) related
to the history of Freemasonry, with a particular emphasis on masonic Americana. Collecting scope was expanded to include all American fraternal organizations while maintaining the main effort focused on masonic material. Duties included identifying, cataloging and researching acquisitions and acquiring artifacts by gift and purchase, or short/long term loans to support exhibition themes. Insure that exhibition techniques being utilized to display artifacts securely and according to current professional museum guidelines.
Director: High Point Historical Society, High Point, NC
Developed a new “empty-building” facility into a 3.5-acre history museum complex that included three 18th century buildings. Obtained funding for restoration projects from the private sector. Supervised craftsmen in the restoration of historic buildings (1784 John Haley House placed on National Register of Historic Houses and recipient of AASLH Award of Merit). Developed interpretation and furnishing scheme for historic buildings. Established guild of volunteers and directed their efforts in providing varied support activities for museum and historic properties, including creation of docent programs and museum store. Identified local history themes, obtained loans of related materials, and constructed exhibits.
Other Museum Experience:
Curatorial Intern, Buffalo & Erie County Historical Society, Buffalo, NY Historian/Registrar, Minute Man National Historic Park, Concord, MA
Honorary Curator Arms and Armor, Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, VA
Curatorial Advisor, USS Constitution, Boston Navy Yard, Boston, MA
In John’s Words
While attending the University of Buffalo I had an opportunity to visit the U.S. Naval Academy on an athletic trip there with the UB fencing team for the 1956 NCAA fencing tournament. I met a fraternity brother, Ron Figuero, who was in his second year there. It seemed a neat place to be. The Annapolis coach at that time was the famous Deladier, who I just knew would like to have me on his team, since I had beaten every saber fencer on the Navy’s team! I applied for entrance to the U.S. Naval Academy, but was given an alternate appointment to the Coast Guard Academy, which I declined. After graduating from UB in February 1958, I applied for U.S. Naval Officer Candidate School at Newport, Rhode Island and was accepted for the Summer 1958 class starting June 1st of that year. I was commissioned an Ensign (Army equivalent of 2nd Lieutenant), and an officer and gentleman by Act of Congress.
My twelve-years of naval service, extending from October 1958 until October 1970, included the following assignments:
COMSERVRON 3 (afloat) Staff, communications, 2 yrs. - Sasebo, Japan.
USS HALEAKALA (AE-25) Communications Officer – Home-ported out of Naval Ammunitions Depot Concord, California, 2 WESTPAC deployments.
CINCUSNAVEUR Staff, communications – London, England.
USS SABINE (AO-22) Ship’s Navigator – Home-ported out of Mayport, Florida
(6 mo. Mediterranean cruise).
COMPHIBRON 4 (afloat) Staff Communications Officer - Little Creek, Virginia
1 Mediterranean cruise, 1 Caribbean cruise.
NAVSCHOOLSCOM, Communications Department Head - Norfolk, VA.
USS ARLINGTON (AGMR-2) Circuit Control Officer/Communications Dept. Head Home-ported out of San Diego, Indefinitely deployed to Western Pacific (1 yr. Viet-Nam, Apollo 10 and 11 Recovery Missions, Decommissioned 1969).
NAVRESTRACOM, Reserve Training Center, Executive Officer - First Naval District Headquarters, Boston, MA.
My first set of orders sent me to San Francisco for Cryptographic school to learn how to operate various coding machines and systems. I was destined to join the communications staff assigned to Commander Service Squadron Three, home-ported in Sasebo, Japan. Upon completion of Crypto school, I left for the western pacific.
SERVICE SQUADRON 3
I flew out of California from Travis Air Force Base and arrived at Tachikowa, AFB, Japan. From there I eventually got transportation to Sasebo on the southern Japanese island of Honshu where SERVRON 3, commanded by Rear Admiral John A. Tyree, was home-ported. I checked into the base BOQ and had a room right on the water overlooking Sasebo Bay (and kept it for two years). The other communicators and staff junior officers were also billeted there, and it was like living in a fraternity house. There were twelve of us junior officer “communicators” assigned to COMSERVRON 3, In addition to permanent rooms in the B.O.Q. we also were assigned bunks in ”Boys Town” (a large Junior Officer bunkroom) aboard the flagship, which was always an AR (heavy repair ship). There were three ARs homeported out of the West Coast that rotated for four-month deployments to SERVRON 3.
The Service Force supplied logistical support (Bullets, Beans & Black Oil) to the combat fleet in the western Pacific through various auxiliary ships such as oil and aviation gas tankers (AOs), ammunition ships (AEs), refrigerated food ships (AFs), Personnel carriers (AKs), heavy repair ships (ARs), various diving salvage vessels and minesweepers. When not standing communications watch aboard the flagship, we were assigned to ride the various service force ships under the Admiral’s command as exercise observers grading ship’s performance of various underway drills in gunnery, damage control, engineering, and communications, as well as administrative record keeping. I became familiar with quite a number of different types of ships. To me riding the mine sweepers were the most fun, because every once in a while they would pull up a mine left over from WWII or the Korean War, which we would detonate by gun fire. Periodically, the Admiral would order the flagship to visit his various service force detachments in Yokosuka or Iwakuni, Japan; Subic Bay in the Philippines, or Kaohsiung on Taiwan. On these trips there was always an opportunity to make a port visit into Hong Kong – I must have been there at least four times.
USS HALEAKALA (AE-25)
From the staff, I was assigned to my first sea duty Communications Officer billet aboard a newly constructed, new class of ammunition ship, the HALEAKALA (AE-25), which I reported to when they arrived in Sasebo. It was faster than the other support ships (max. speed about 27 kts.), and qualifying as OOD underway was the most fun I ever had in the Navy. In driving the ship, it handled like a destroyer – almost. All our transfers of munitions, including atomic weapons, were done at sea while underway steaming at about 10 kts. By a method called FAST. This was done by running the containers across the intervening space between the vessels via a special constant-tensioning highline rig while keeping the two hulls about 60-80 feet apart. If they got too close, the hulls created a venturi effect suction that would bring the two together into collision. It was a newly developed method and we were the trial horse for the fleet.
Because naval vessels were, and still are, prohibited from entering ports with atomic weapons aboard, they had to be off-loaded at sea in international waters. Sometimes we would receive the weapons from an aircraft carrier about to enjoy a port visit. We would steam around holding them until the visit was over, then we would re-transfer them back to the carrier again. Neither denying nor acknowledging that we had them, but because we had lots of other munitions in our holds, we would normally be ordered to anchor waaaay out in any harbors we visited - like lepers. The standing joke aboard ship was that we had to take leave to get liberty ashore.
While assigned to the HALEAKALA, I received a message from the Red Cross stating that my father had a heart attack and “serviceman’s presence was required.” When I got Home to Buffalo, My Dad was fine, my mother had used her pull at the Red Cross HQ to get me home, even if for a short time. Having nothing else to do, I drove up to the University of Michigan where Martha was going to school. Between classes, on October 17, 1960, we got married. We had both gotten blood tests before hand and that was how my mother found out we were married because the receipt was mailed to the house. I left immediately afterward to return to the ship. By the time the ship had finished its deployment and returned to CONUS I was ready to have Martha join me, but first I had to go back to Detroit to get her because her father (Douglas) strongly desired that, after the fact, we had to have a ”church blessing.” Life in NAD Concord, California was frugal (being Ensigns and at the bottom of the food chain), but fun. I did make Lt. JG. while aboard the “Hockey Locker.” Our best friends from the ship were Pudge and Mare Ingebritson. While in Concord, Martha gave birth to our son Kenneth Avery Hamilton and Mare was Kenny’s God-Mother.
US NAVAL FORCES EUROPE
Our next duty station was USNAVFOREUR, headquarters at Grosvenor Square, London, W1 (directly across the square from the U.S. Embassy). As a “newbe” attached to the communications center I began on rotating duty shifts (three on two off, then a whole day off) - until an administrative day job opened as others departed. Martha found a mews flat in “posh” Knightsbridge. It seemed as though every one we ever knew visited us while we were in London. We found that the best time to sightsee in London was Sunday morning when the city was like a ghost town. Our back yard wall backed onto that of the local pub (an institution). Rudoph Nuriev was one of our near neighbors (his amour, Dame Margo Fontaine, would visit him in her chauffeur-driven Morris Mini-Minor, which would get parked in front of our flat). Nicholas Tate and his wife (Tate Art Gallery Tates) were on one side of us, and Carl Ames, harpist for the London Symphony, was one the other side. Through the walls, we enjoyed free morning concerts. We could see old Brompton Oratory from our “loo” (bathroom) window. We were on a side street almost across from Herrod’s department store, and just about a block away from the Victoria & Albert Museum. On the next street behind ours was Bonham’s & Bonham’s Auction gallery. On my lunch hours I could get to a number of nearby antique arms dealers shops from the headquarters building on Grovesnor Square, where the American Embassy was, also across the square was Purdy’s (the gun makers), and not far away was Old Bond Street and Sotheby’s Auction Galleries. It was while we were in London, that JFK was assassinated on November 22nd, and 7 No. Audley St. went into “lockdown” until it became clear that the assassination was not a prelude to war with Russia. Our daughter Kathryn was born at the U.S. Air Force base hospital at South Ruyslip. We returned stateside via an MSTS passenger ship. The crossing was marked by my being designated an officer courier for obsolete “Bacchus” cryptographic machines, which were to be jettisoned over the side in the Atlantic somewhere beyond the 1,000 fathom curve. The crates were to be sunk by rifle fire. I was on deck for that... like sinking mines.
I hated those machines when I had to use one. It was so easy to make a typo that required a de-coder to restart all over again. The weather was a bit rough during the week-long crossing, but Kate gained her sea legs as she first learned to walk in the ship’s rolling passageways.
USS Sabine (AO-22)
Arriving stateside, I was assigned to the USS SABINE (AO-22)
The Sabine was a service fleet oiler, homeported out of Mayport, Florida. I was ordered aboard as a designated replacement for the ship’s navigator, Tom Gainer, an Annapolis graduate. Sabine’s mission was to refuel underway carrier task forces and other navy vessels as required. Prior to a scheduled Mediterranean deployment, we were required to go through underway training (simulated wartime conditions) at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. After each daily or night session, there was a critique by the fleet inspection team. We passed – that’s about all I can say.
Shortly after having returned from our Mediterranean deployment, the captain received orders from BUPERS for me to report immediately to Little Creek, Virginia, as an emergency replacement for the staff communications officer of Commander Amphibious Squadron 4, who had suddenly gone blind at his desk, just two weeks before the squadron was scheduled to deploy to the Med. Eventually I learned that I was selected because I had been a ship’s communications officer on the HALEAKALA, and had NATO “experience” in the communication center at CINCUSNAVEUR. Martha was not too happy about being left to shift for herself and the kids and to oversee our move to the Norfolk area. Within 48 hours, I was in Norfolk.
COMPHIBRON 4
The staff of Commander Amphibious Squadron 4, located at the Amphibious Naval Base at Little Creek, Virginia. The Commodore was Capt. Neil Almgren, a very senior Captain. As the squadron’s communications officer, I was responsible for creating the communications section of the deployment Operation Plan, which included not only U.S. naval operations, but also joint NATO operations as well. Part of my job was to devise appropriate radio circuits necessary to carry out ship operations, amphibious landings of our embarked Marine Corps battalion, and tactical air support operations. This required obtaining European frequency allocations for U.S. military use for our ships, aircraft, and Marine Corps tactical nets throughout the Mediterranean. The plan also required meshing our squadron comm plan with the NATO joint forces plan. Fortunately most of the drafting of the communications plan had already been completed by the time I arrived in Norfolk. As staff Commo, I was also responsible for conducting administrative inspections of the communication departments of the various ships assigned to the squadron.
FLEET TRAINING CENTER, Norfolk, VA
From PHIBRON 4 the next assignment sent me to the Fleet Training Center in Norfolk as Officer-in-Charge of the Communications School. Since we were already living in Norfolk, the change of duty did not require moving our household, and disrupting Ken and Kate’s schooling.
USS ARLINGTON AGMR-2
I was at the Fleet Training School, Norfolk when I received orders to the USS ARLINGTON AGMR-2 (major communications relay ship), which was in the western pacific on station in the Gulf of Tonkin, Viet-Nam. Martha was not happy facing a one-year separation. She and Kenny and Kate stayed in our house in Norfolk. I caught up with the ship in Yokosuka, Japan. I soon discovered that the Arlington’s navigator was the same Tom Gainer who I had relieved aboard the Sabine. I was assigned to the communications department as circuit control officer. The communications department, being the major workforce of the ship, contained about 280 men whose ratings were in telecommunications, electronics maintenance, or satellite communications. The ship was usually on station (Yankee Station) in the Gulf of Tonkin off the shores of South Vietnam and since the Vietcong had earlier attacked one of our Destroyers there. The Arlington always had a Destroyer escort in as much as we had no armament that would have interfered with our transmitting radiation patterns. We were responsible for relaying all communications from HQ Saigon to the JCS in Washington via radio and satellite transmissions. We also provided Presidential and Press communication services for the conference at Midway Island, between President Nixon and Vietnam’s Pres. Thieu, as Nixon maneuvered to wind down U.S. participation in the conflict. Then we were assigned to act as the primary capsule recovery vessel for Apollo 10 off American Samoa [in the middle of nowhere]. Because of our transmission capabilities, we were privileged to broadcast reports of the historic mission and splashdown, narrated in Russian and directly transmitted by us to the people of Russia, as Voice of America coverage. This mission entailed crossing the equator and the obligatory “pollywog” meeting with King Neptune, and being made a “trusty shellback.” In the Navy, a crossing the equator ceremony is a lot more disgusting and painful than on a civilian cruise ship. We also did an Elint (electronics intelligence) survey in the Sea of Japan off the Russian coast, of their electronic transmissions, particularly those emanating from their missile site on the Kamchatka peninsula. Then we were reassigned to Apollo 11 (Moon walk) recovery operations, 800 miles N.W. off the Hawaiian Islands, acting as the primary communications relay ship for the whole recovery task force. President Nixon stayed aboard overnight to observe the splashdown. After that the Arlington had fulfilled its western Pacific mission and was slated for the reserve fleet (decommissioning and mothballing), which took place in San Diego. For all that the Arlington accomplished in the way of special missions, we crew received the Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation. When the Arlington was decommissioned and mothballed, I was also awarded the Navy Achievement Medal.
I returned to Norfolk, and Martha, Kenny and Kate, and we all got ready to move to the next duty station at the Boston Fleet Reserve Training Center located in the headquarters building of the Commandant of the First Naval District. I was to be the Executive Officer of the Training Center under Commander Harry Remson.
Medals authorized:
National Defense Service Medal
Vietnam Service Medal (two bronze campaign service stars)
Sec. Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Medal
(Apollo 10 - 1 July 1967; Apollo 11 - 26 July 1969)
Sec. Navy Achievement Medal
Navy Pistol Expert Medal (with silver “E”)
JOHN D. HAMILTON, Author — PUBLISHED WORKS
The Ames Sword Company 1829-1935. Providence: Mowbray Publishing Co., 1983. Second printing, 1994.
Material Culture of the American Freemasons. Hanover and Lexington: University Press of New England and Museum of Our National Heritage, 1994.
The American Percussion Schuetzen Rifle. Rochester, New York: Rowe Publications, 2004.
American Fraternal Swords, A Reference Guide. Woonsocket, Rhode Island: Andrew Mowbray Inc. - Publishers, 2008.
Contributing Author:
Colonial Wars of North America 1512-1786: an Encyclopedia. Alan Gallay, ed. New York and London: Garland Publishers Inc., 1996.
George Washington: American Symbol. Barbara J. Mitnick, ed. New York: Hudson Hills Press, 1999.
American Folk Art Canes: Personal Sculpture. George H. Meyer, ed. Bloomfield Hills, Michigan: Sandringham Press, 1992.
Silver in the Fur Trade 1680-1820. Martha W. Hamilton. Chelmsford, Massachusetts: Martha Hamilton Publishing, 1995. Also published in The American Society of Arms Collectors Bulletin No. 73, Oct. 1995.
Frank Wesson, Gunmaker of Worcester Massachusetts. Sugar Grove, VA: Tom Rowe Publications, 2012. 3 vols. Author of Vol. 1, (Edwin Wesson and associated gunmakers).
Catalogs
The Peabody Museum Collections of Japanese Sword Guards, With Selected Pieces of Sword Furniture. Salem, Massachusetts: The Peabody Museum, 1975.
“Schuetzenfest: A German American Tradition.” Lexington, Massachusetts: Museum of Our National Heritage, 1991.
Articles, Semi-annual
"A Roland for an Oliver: Swords Awarded by the State of New York During the War of 1812." American Society of Arms Collectors Bulletin 57, pp.2-11, October 1987.
"The Bay State Arms Company Match Rifle, An Update." American Society of Arms Collectors Bulletin 60, pp. 20-28, May 1989.
"Schuetzenfest: A German-American Tradition." American Society of Arms Collectors Bulletin 63, pp. 3-17, October, 1990.
"Jacob Hurd and the Boston Smallsword." American Society of Arms Collectors Bulletin 70, pp. 9-15, April-May 1994.
"Alvan Clark and the False Muzzle." American Society of Arms Collectors Bulletin 79, pp. 31-37, October 1998.
"The St. Albans Raid. The Confederate Raid on St. Albans, Vermont October 19, 1864." American Society of Arms Collectors Bulletin 90, pp. 48-52, October 2004.
"Arms Makers in the Pioneer Valley." American Society of Arms Collectors Bulletin No. 94, pp. 17-32, September 2006.
"The National Projectile Works - Grand Rapids, Michigan 1897-1906, 1906-1917." American Society of Arms Collectors Bulletin No. 102. pp. 34-44, September 2010.
"Samuel Gardiner's Explosive Bullet." American Society of Arms Collectors Bulletin No. 120. , pp. 21-31, Fall 2019. Reprinted: International Ammunition Association, Inc. Journal, Issue 537, January/February, 2021.p.16-22, (Part I).
Articles, Quarterly
"Congressional Swords for the Battle of Lake Erie Sailing Masters and Midshipmen." Journal of Erie Studies, Fall 1988. Erie: Erie County Historical Society.
"Masterpieces of the Clockmaker's Art." Decorative Arts at Amherst College, Mead Museum Monograph, Vol. 3, Winter 1981/82, edited by Frank Trapp, Amherst: Mead Art Museum, 1982.
"Carver Rifle Sights and Shooting Accessories." John D. Hamilton & Tom Rowe. The Black Powder Cartridge News, Winter 2021 — Issue No. 116. P. 28-35.
Articles, Magazine
"Swords of the Masonic Orders." Man At Arms Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 3, May/June 1979.
"Christopher Roby and the Chelmsford Sword." Man At Arms Magazine, Vol. 2, No. 1, January/February, 1980.
"The Elegant Elite: Volunteer Militia Companies and their Social Significance, 1790-1860." Man At Arms Magazine, Vol. 2, No. 3 May/June, 1980.
"Ugly Ducklings: Iron-hilted Swords of the Federal Republic 1795-1815." Man At Arms Magazine, Vol. 4, No. 4, July/August, 1983.
"The Isaac Hull Collections." Man At Arms Magazine, Vol. 4, No. 3, May/June, 1983.
"The Indian Princess and the Neoclassic Sword." Man At Arms Magazine, Vol. 4, No. 4, July/August, 1984.
"So Nobly Distinguished: Congressional Swords for Sailing Masters and Midshipmen in The War of 1812." Man At Arms Magazine, Vol. 7, No. 2, March/April, 1985.
"A Swan Among the Ugly Ducklings: Daniel Pettibone's 1812 U.S. Sword Contract." Man At Arms Magazine, Vol. 7, No. 5, September/October, 1985.
"Elegant Continentals: Swords Presented by the Continental Congress." Man At Arms Magazine, Vol. 8, No. 5, July/August, 1992.
"Thoughts on the German Schuetzen Rifle." Man At Arms Magazine, Vol. 14, No. 3, May/June, 1992.
"The New Hampshire Mushroom Pommel Sword." Man At Arms Magazine, April, 2007.
IN PROCESS & COMPOLATION:
American Colonial Silver- Hilted Small-swords (1640-1800)
Elements of Military Discipline 1640-1840 James W. Carver (1853-1932)
.22 Slide-Action Rifles Cyrus B. Allen (1807-1841)
Gallery Guns Edward E. Redfield (1864-1922)
Henry B. Febiger & the Batavia Rifle No. 1 Emerson Gaylord (1817-1899)
Guns of April 19th, 1775 James Warner (1817-1869)
Massachusetts Arms Makers Joshua Stevens (1814-1907)
Reloading Tools Edwin Wesson (1811-1849) et. al.
Reloading Patentees
Metallic Target Sights
American Telescopic Sight Makers 1841-1940
German Schtitzenfests
Cartridge Box Patents
Whaling and Darting Guns & Bomb Lance Patents
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