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Living with old iron


Mystery Solved! September 2011 Mystery Tool Answers

September 2011 Item A 

September 2011 Item A 

No responses were received for this come-along for chains, used to apply tension with haulage power to a chain. Photo submitted by Greg Flugum, Forest City, Iowa. See patent 2,497,805 for a similar piece. 

September 2011 Item B 

September 2011 Item B 

No responses were received, and we don't know what the piece is. Photo submitted by Bonnie Umphlett, Columbus, Mont. 

September 2011 Item C 

September 2011 Item C 

No responses were received, and we don't know what the piece is. Photo submitted by James Moloney, Palos Hills, Ill. 

September 2011 Item D

September 2011 Item D 

Combined mop and wringer, identified by Roy L. Archibald, Leavenworth, Ind.; Myron Olufson, Gatzke, Minn.; and Frank Scheibert, Middletown, Ohio. Photo submitted by Douglas Drogseth, Holmen, Wis. See patent 758,753.

September 2011 Mystery Tool D

Do you recognize this tool? It is marked "Patent Appd for Pat – May 3 – 04 Hilker Chicago."

September 2011 Mystery Tool D 

If you recognize this mystery tool leave a comment by clicking the Comment link below.

Check back here October 18 for the correct answer, or find it in the November 2011 issue of Farm Collector.

Have a tool you want to submit? E-mail us at editor@farmcollector.com with at least one photo taken in a well-lit area against a plain background. Include dimensions and any markings on the piece.

September 2011 Mystery Tool C

Do you recognize this tool? It appears to be hand-made. It measures 19 inches long by 7-1/2 inches wide. The outside edge is copper. There are no markings.

Mystery Tool C 

Mystery Tool C 

If you recognize this mystery tool leave a comment by clicking the Comment link below.

Check back here October 18 for the correct answer, or find it in the November 2011 issue of Farm Collector.

Have a tool you want to submit? E-mail us at editor@farmcollector.com with at least one photo taken in a well-lit area against a plain background. Including dimensions and any markings on the piece.

September 2011 Mystery Tool B

Do you recognize this tool? It measures 35 inches at the longest point, and 16 inches at the widest point. It is made of oak with short nails inside the crosspiece.

September 2011 Tool B 

If you recognize this mystery tool leave a comment by clicking the Comment link below.

Check back here October 18 for the correct answer, or find it in the November 2011 issue of Farm Collector.

Have a tool you want to submit? E-mail us at editor@farmcollector.com with at least one photo taken in a well-lit area against a plain background. Include dimensions and any markings on the piece.

September 2011 Mystery Tool A

Do  you recognize this tool? It measures about 18 inches long. The two "jaws" are about 4 inches out from the main handle. Decal appears to say "Universal Puller." The ends of the jaws are open about 3/8-inch wide and tapered, suggesting the harder you pull on something, the less likely it is to slip off.

September 2011 Mystery Item A 

If you recognize this mystery tool leave a comment by clicking the Comment link below.

Check back here October 18 for the correct answer, or find it in the November 2011 issue of Farm Collector.

Have a tool you want to submit? E-mail us at editor@farmcollector.com with at least one photo taken in a well-lit area against a plain background. Include dimensions and any markings on the piece.

Recognize this single disc?

Reader Ronald Pins, P.O. Box 71688, Des Moines, IA 50325, is wondering if anyone recognizes a disc he owns:

I’m hoping a Farm Collector reader can help identify this disc, the manufacturer, model and approximate year built. It has faded orange or red paint. It is a 10-foot single disc with a tractor drawbar hitch. Numbers were found on blade scrapers (310527L on one side and 310528R on the other) and disc bearings (300625 on one side and 300626 on the other). There is no serial number tag on the disc.

Recognize this single disc? 

Need Info on Montgomery-Wards Lo-Load Running Gear

Reader Elmer Green, Lynd. Minn., (507) 872-6560 or (507) 828-8322, is looking for more information about a Montgomery-Wards Lo-Load running gear:

I have loosened the steering on this Montgomery-Wards Lo-Load running gear and painted it green because there was still some green paint on it. Does anyone know when it was manufactured? Since there is a tongue on it for a tractor, I’d guess in was in the 1940s. It was my grandfather’s.

Montgomery-Wards Lo-Load running gear 

Looking for leads on Sears & Roebuck Corn Sheller

Reader Larry Newman, 8711 Baseline Rd., Battle Creek, MI 49017; (269) 963-1563; jdman0509@yahoo.com, is looking for information on a corn sheller he recently purchased:

Recently I purchased a Sears & Roebuck corn sheller. No one at the Corn Items Collectors club had any information on the sheller. Sears was unable to provide any information. If anyone has any information, I’d be happy to visit with you. I want to restore the sheller so I need colors, history, etc.

Sears & Roebuck corn sheller 

Sears, Roebuck and Co. 

Know anything about Gregg Iron Works?

Reader Mark Miller, mmiller@dollywood.com, sent along this note about a Gregg Iron Works mowing machine/sickle bar mower:

I purchased a Meadow King mowing machine (sickle bar mower) that I was unfamiliar with but was going to salvage parts from, until I got it home. I have searched everywhere for information, pictures, literature of any sort and I have only one source who has been able to help me. The county historian for Ulysses, N.Y., Joe Baldwin, has been a blessing in a small amount of information.

The piece is almost complete (missing only the seat and wood tongue and handle). It apparently was manufactured by Gregg Iron Works in Trumansburg, N.Y., between 1860 and 1888 when the company went out of business. It is very modern for its time and very ornate. The wheels are what first caught my eye. I plan to replace the wood, add a cast iron seat and that’s it. It appears to have original paint on it and it could be made to operate again with little work.

Gregg Iron Works 

Know anything about this mowing machine? 

Keeping it in perspective

There is something about family heirlooms that makes many of us check our brains at the door. I know; I’ve been there. An heirloom is a very fine, very special thing to have, but it is astonishing how some old thing can stir up trouble and/or drain bank accounts.

Family heirlooms are a bit like real estate, in that nobody is making any more of them. Every passing year adds to a relic’s luster. An heirloom may be (and often is) a simple, plain thing but it survives the passage of time through the efforts of generations of people who protect it. In the process of preserving the piece, family members attach importance to it, a characteristic that both ensures its survival and, in some cases, sets the stage for battle.

You can see an antique at a shop and be unimpressed. But when the guy down the road shows you a similar piece and shares its history, dating to the War of 1812 when his great-great-granddad was an Army scout who eluded invaders through wily backwoods skills and bravado, suddenly your life feels meaningless and transitory and your possessions reek of big box chain stores. At such times, some take leave of their senses.

I was reminded of that as I considered a cautionary tale told in this issue of Farm Collector by an Arizona man who set out to find his father’s Farmall Model M (see article, page 46). I won’t spoil the read for you except to say that the guy’s buddy splashed him with some plain old common sense, and that made all the difference.

Sometimes, as the Arizona man discovered, all that glitters is not gold. Sometimes the true prize is of our own making. You bet, it’d be great to have the first tractor your great-granddad bought. But try to keep things in perspective, and use the buddy system to get a second opinion. If the deal du jour sounds too good to be true, it probably is!  FC


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