Camp fork
In the eighteenth century, to dine with a knife and a fork rather than one's hands was a mark of genteel refinement. Compact sets of knives and forks enabled the polite traveler to eat confidently outside of his own dining room. In this fashionable, horn-paneled set, a slot within each handle allows it to sheath the opposite utensil, thus joining the two together in a single case. A stamped mark on the knife blade wishes its user to "Prosper." George Washington may have acquired this set for his personal use during the Revolutionary War.
Published ReferencesMount Vernon Ladies Association, General Washington's Swords and Campaign Equipment: An Illustrated Catalogue of Military Memorabilia in the Mount Vernon Collection (Mount Vernon, VA: Mount Vernon Ladies Association, 1944), 54.
Mount Vernon Ladies Association, General Washington's Military Equipment (Mount Vernon, VA: Mount Vernon Ladies Association, 1953), 37.