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Home Products Alamo Bowie

Alamo Bowie

by Hibben, Gil

SKU 1012864

Date Added 01/22/2019

# Available This product is out of stock

Price $1,495.00

Overview

This Alamo Bowie by Gil Hibben was made for the Last Alamo Movie starting Billy Bob Thorton, there were 12 of them made. It features a mirror polished blade with a false top edge and brass back, .227" blade stock and 2.535" blade depth, hidden tang construction. The handle has a brass guard and collar with a wood grip. Comes with a brown leather sheath. Excellent condition. 13.75" blade 20" overall.

Product Details

Blade Length 13.75

Overall Length 20

Weight (oz) 36.5

Source Previously owned

Additional Specs

Knife Type Has Sheath, Hidden Tang

Blade Material Other

Blade Details Clip Point

Handle Material Metallic, Wood

Other Details Engraved

About the Maker

Hibben, Gil
Hibben, Gil

Gil Hibben lives and works in LaGrange, Kentucky. He began making knives part-time after his discharge from the Navy in 1956. He sold his first bowie knife for $45 and that sparked his long and famous career as a professional knife maker. While living in Seattle, WA after his Navy discharge, Gil worked as a machinist for Boeing Aircraft and learned a lot about metals and their properties. In 1964, while living in Salt Lake City, Utah, Gil started making knives full time. This was also the year Gil started making knives from the relatively new 440C steel. Although it is the industry standard now, Gil believes he was the first custom knife maker to use 440C. Hibben has been a full time custom knifemaker since 1957. Over the years Gil achieved fame as a premier custom knife maker and his work has been featured in, and on the covers of, national gun and knife magazines. He has established a whos-who following of collectors including John Wayne, Elvis Presley, Steve McQueen, Sylvester Stallone and Steven Segal or world leaders such as Israel's Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, the Sultan of Brunei and Vice-President Dan Quayle. He has taught and influenced some of the other legendary knife makers such as S.R. Johnson, Harvey Draper and Buster Warenski among countless others. Hibben designed the first line of Browning hunting knives in 1968, the American Kenpo Knife for Ed Parker. Gil's fame dramatically increased in 1988 when Sylvester Stallone, who had purchased several of Gil's custom knives for his own collection, asked Gil to design the now famous knife used in the movie Rambo III. Inducted into the Blade Magazine Cutlery Hall of Fame in 1990.