In order to save time in getting the new knife to troops in the field, the first Mark I trench knives were procured from a French manufacturer,
Au Lion (Au Lion/Société Générale, France). Subsequently, the U.S. government placed orders for 1,232,780 Mark I knives with several U.S. contractors, including
Landers, Frary & Clark (L.F.&C.) of
New Britain, Connecticut;
Henry Disston & Sons (HD&S) of
Philadelphia; and
Oneida Community Limited (O.C.L.), with deliveries to commence in December 1918. Ordnance records note that the end of the war in November 1918 caused Ordnance to cancel all orders for the Mark I with the exception of a single reduced order for 119,424 knives from
Landers, Frary & Clark Co. (L F & C). Despite this apparent cancellation, otherwise original U.S. Mark I trench knives have been found with
HD&S and
O.C.L. stamps, with grip handles cast in either bronze or aluminum.
French version The French version of the Mark I is stamped on the blade
ricasso with a recumbent lion, and the words
Au Lion, while the grip is typically stamped "U.S. 1918", and fitted with a four-sided
pommel cap. Made under wartime conditions, the French Mark I knife is generally more roughly finished than U.S. contracted examples, and incorporates several deviations from production specifications. Several versions of the French model exist - some with grooves on top of the grip, some without, and some bearing letters and numbers cast into the bronze fingerguard. As steel was a strategic material in wartime France, the French-manufactured Mark I was issued with a proprietary unmarked scabbard made of iron.
US-contracted versions U.S.-contracted Mark I knives are stamped on the right side of the brass grip "U.S. 1918", with the contractor's initials located just below. The U.S. knives utilized a six-sided pommel cap. Like the French-made version, U.S. Mark I knives came with proprietary scabbards designed to accommodate the Mark I knife with its oversized grip, but fabricated of steel instead of iron. Both blades and scabbards were issued with a
blackened finish to prevent reflection. However, many soldiers (and later, civilian owners) attempted to polish the blades and/or scabbards, believing the blackened finish to be tarnish. As a result, many original Mark I knives and scabbards have lost their original finish. American-made steel scabbards for the Mark I trench knife were marked "L.F.&C. 1918". == Criticisms ==