Barn find. Would it be good to know what has been done with her? I think he has been used as a wedge for cutting stones but did not go quite well ...
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Attachment 29446
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Barn find. Would it be good to know what has been done with her? I think he has been used as a wedge for cutting stones but did not go quite well ...
Attachment 29445
Attachment 29446
My SWAG...
Is it possible that it's not a hammer but rather a handled wedge? The angled hole for the handle to make it more comfortable for a helper to hold the wedge in position while his buddy strikes the end opposite the wedge with a sledge. Perhaps used in metal forging work?
Maybe it is an OFFSET hammer for driving railroad spikes. In a 3 or 4 man "gandy dancer" crew, it depends where you are standing in the circle around the spike being driven as to which angle you have to strike the spike without your hammer hitting the rail.
Gandy dancer, had no idea. Thanks. Lots more here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gandy_dancer
I'm thinking this hammer was damaged by some use as pin or wedge. There is a crack that developed from the stretching of the material in the inside hole where the handle would be.
A badly abused cross peen hammer probably use just as was previously stated as a wedge, quite possibly as a splitting wedge until the handle finally gave up the ghost then used without a handle even after the slug in the eye crumbled out, Once the eye began deforming it would be very hard to get a straight hit on it. So very likely the hammer head was non tempered and only moderately hardened the eye may have failed in one final hard striking blow
I have seen similar destruction of axe heads used as wedges for splitting fire wood. There is simply not enough metal around the eye to take a beating. Heads like this that are used by striking with a sledge in blacksmithing usually have heavy walled eye's to prevent distortion like this.
Eric
As terminology comes back to me....
Looks like a cross peen hammer abused as a fuller.
Eric