The Vaughan mallet is a drop-forged striking tool built the way professional framing and striking hammers are supposed to be made. The head is forged from a single billet of high-carbon steel, heat-treated for durability, and seated on a handle rated for real work.
It’s made for driving chisels, seating joinery, and any work where you want firm striking force without marring the surface. Vaughan hammers show up on professional jobsites because they hold up — they don’t chip, the handle doesn’t loosen, and they keep the same face geometry through years of use.
Vaughan has been forging hammers and striking tools in Hebron, Illinois since 1869. The company is one of the oldest continuously operating hammer makers in the United States, and its California Framer pattern is a standard on professional framing crews across the country.






