User contributions for 2601:196:180:DC0:CCAB:80B:2EB1:98FC
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Results for 2601:196:180:DC0:CCAB:80B:2EB1:98FC talk block log logs global block log filter log
13 April 2025
- 20:1220:12, 13 April 2025 diff hist +47 Buck Knives Per: https://www.buckknives.com/buck-gear/accessories/ and https://www.buckknives.com/buck-gear/sharpeners/
- 20:0020:00, 13 April 2025 diff hist −371 Buck Knives Eliminated fluff, relocated valid citation to 1st use, retained marginal but relevant content (that really belongs elsewhere), added expand section template.
- 19:5519:55, 13 April 2025 diff hist +7 Buck Knives →The Model 110: Relocated verbatim content to reference.
- 19:5219:52, 13 April 2025 diff hist +171 Buck Knives →The Model 110: General cleanup.
- 19:4619:46, 13 April 2025 diff hist +2 Buck Knives →Company origins: Close the italic syntax.
- 19:4619:46, 13 April 2025 diff hist +353 Buck Knives →Company origins: Verbatim from the citation.
- 19:4119:41, 13 April 2025 diff hist −27 Zytel Remove promotional template. Tag: COI template removed
- 19:4019:40, 13 April 2025 diff hist +21 Zytel →Benefits: Heading cleanup, expand section template.
- 19:3919:39, 13 April 2025 diff hist −18 Zytel →Benefits: Copyedit.
- 19:3819:38, 13 April 2025 diff hist −26 Zytel Copyedit, link.
- 19:3719:37, 13 April 2025 diff hist −45 Zytel General cleanup.
- 19:2619:26, 13 April 2025 diff hist +143 Buck Knives General cleanup (squaring text and claims with the known facts).
- 19:1619:16, 13 April 2025 diff hist +114 Buck Knives Once again restated for accuracy.
- 19:1319:13, 13 April 2025 diff hist +22 Buck Knives As just quoted verbatim from the "authoritative" Popular Mechanics article, Buck was *NOT* in the knife business (and never was) until he relocated post-WWII to his son's home in San Diego, and set up shop in a lean-to there, forming the partnership H.H. Buck and Son there in 1947.
- 19:1019:10, 13 April 2025 diff hist 0 Buck Knives That's when the business was founded. It is irrelevant that he made an odd knife beginning in 1902. Verbatim from the 5-page Popular Mechanics article: "Although Hoyt Buck had made those first knives of his in 1902, he had never really been in the knife business. In Mountain Home, he was pastor of the Assembly of God Church. After Pearl Harbor, in 1941, the government asked Americans to help arm our fighting men by donating their fixed-blade knives. He partnered with son Al in S.D. in 1947.