International Harvester / McCormick-Deering, est. 1902

Museum Artifact: Deering Cast Iron Tractor Seat, c. 1920s

Made By: International Harvester Company, Deering Works, Clybourn and Fullerton Avenue, Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

U.S. Automatic Pencil Sharpener by APSCO, c. 1911

Automatic Pencil Sharpener Co., 35 Randolph Street., Chicago, IL

While it was initially distributed out of New York City, the U.S. Automatic Pencil Sharpener was actually designed and patented by a Chicago inventor named Essington N. Gilfillan (first patent date, 1906). And after a few short years, it would return home, becoming the first marquee product of the Chicago-based Automatic Pencil Sharpener Company (aka APSCO) under the banner of the Spengler-Loomis Co.

Northwestern Terra Cotta Co., est. 1878

Museum Artifact: Terra Cotta Dog Premium, c. 1920s

Made By: Northwestern Terra Cotta Company, 1701-1711 W. Terra Cotta Place, Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Oscar Mayer & Co., est. 1883

Museum Artifact: “Little Oscar & The Bandit” Coloring Book, 1962

Made By: Oscar Mayer & Co., Inc., 1241 N. Sedgwick St., Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Case-Moody Pie Corp., est. 1929

Museum Artifact: Case-Moody Pie Pans, c. 1940s

Made By: Case-Moody Pie Corporation, 1807 W. Walnut Street, Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

A.L. Hansen MFG Company, est. 1920

Museum Artifact: Hansen Tacker / Stapler, c. 1940s

Made by: A. L. Hansen MFG Co., 5037 N. Ravenswood Ave., Chicago, IL

The vintage Hansen Tacker pictured above looks and functions much like the manual staple guns of today—it’s spring-loaded, uses tough wire staples (also made by Hansen), and has an upturned squeeze-trigger handle for one-handed efficiency. It was used for the same sorts of handyman tasks,

Central Waxed Paper Co., est. 1915

Museum Artifact: Original Bread Wrapper Wax Proof Sheets, 1920s

Made By: Central Waxed Paper Co., 5659 W. Taylor Street, Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

B. F. Cummins Co., est. 1887

Museum Artifact: “Chicago” Check Perforator, c. 1900s

Made By: The B. F. Cummins Company / Cummins Perforator Co., 4740 N. Ravenswood Ave., Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Card Shuffler by Nestor Johnson MFG Co., 1951

Nestor Johnson MFG Co., 1900 N. Springfield Ave., Chicago, IL

Skillfully shuffling a deck of cards, much like stoically smoking a pack of cigarettes, was a universal method of establishing one’s coolness in 1950s America. The risks of the manual shuffle, however—much like the cigarette smoking—were numerous and potentially deadly. And I’m not just talking about the carpal tunnel and paper cuts. If an amateur card shark failed to evenly redistribute his hearts and clubs,

Curtiss Candy Co., est. 1916

Museum Artifact: Baby Ruth Display Box, c. 1950s

Made By: Curtiss Candy Company, 337 E. Illinois St., Chicago, IL

“There was never a crack in the integrity of Otto Schnering.”

In 1953—right around the same time the vintage Baby Ruth display box in our collection was made—radio host and author Henry J. Taylor went on the air and delivered a stirring speech / eulogy for the man they used to call the “Candy Bar King.” Taylor was a former business associate and longtime friend of Otto Schnering,

Jaques MFG Co., est. 1890

Museum Artifact: K C Baking Powder 10 oz. Can, c. 1900s

Made By: Jaques MFG Co., 1601 S. Canal Street, Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Elgin National Watch Company, est. 1863

Museum Artifact: Elgin Pocket Watch, 1926

Made By: Elgin National Watch Company, 107 National Street, Elgin, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Steele-Wedeles Company, est. 1862

Museum Artifact: Savoy Cocoa Tins, c. 1920s

Made By: Steele-Wedeles Company, 312-22 N Dearborn St., Chicago, IL

In 1925—back when these Savoy brand cocoa tins from our museum collection were still sitting shiny and new in someone’s kitchen cabinet—the wholesale grocer that produced them, the Steele-Wedeles Company, made a major announcement.

After more than 50 years at its post-fire headquarters on the corner of South Water and LaSalle Street,

Lincoln Logs Company, est. 1916

Museum Artifact: Original Lincoln Logs Set 1C, c. 1958

Made By: Lincoln Logs, 1750 N. Lawndale Ave., Chicago, IL

“When I completed the design for ‘Lincoln Logs’ toy construction blocks, their success encouraged me, and making wooden objects became my temporary source of income. Marshsall Field’s bought all I could make.” –John Lloyd Wright, from his memoir My Father, Frank Lloyd Wright,

Johnson Publishing Co., est. 1942

Museum Artifact: Jet Magazine MLK Memorial Issue, 1968

Made By: Johnson Publishing Co. Inc., 1820 S. Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

General Television & Radio Corp., est. 1932

Museum Artifact: General Tube Radio 19A5, c. 1947

Made By: General Television & Radio Corp., 2701 N. Lehmann Ct., Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Arnold, Schwinn & Co., est. 1895

Museum Artifact: Schwinn “Hollywood” Bicycle, c. 1970

Made By: Arnold, Schwinn & Co. / Schwinn Bicycle Company, 1718-1740 N. Kildare & 1856 N. Kostner Ave., Chicago, IL

The last Chicago-built Schwinn bicycle rolled off the assembly line in 1982, and while the brand name is still embossed on the badges of various Chinese imports, anybody who buys a new one is bound to hear the inevitable cranky lament from a passerby: “they don’t make ‘em like they used to.”

The Schwinn in our own collection is a “campus green” Hollywood model,

American Shoe Polish Co., est. 1900

Museum Artifact: Eagle Brand Suede Powder, c. 1920

Made by: American Shoe Polish Co., 1956 S. Troy Street, Chicago, IL

“Wherever footwear is worn and shoes are shined, the American Shoe Polish Company, of Chicago, have made their ‘Eagle Brand’ dressings known”—this according to a 1913 article in that much beloved periodical, Shoe and Leather Facts.

“Through a harmonious co-operation between the manufacturing and selling forces,

Page Boiler Company, est. 1905

Museum Artifact: Chicago Stadium Boiler Room Blueprint, c. 1940s

Made By: Page Boiler Company, 815-819 W. Webster Avenue, Chicago, IL

In 2015, the Page Boiler Company shut down its last Chicago plant at 2348 N. Damen Avenue in Bucktown, and I guess I can say I attended the funeral.

After 110 years of designing, building, installing and repairing the finest water-tube boilers in the Midwest,

Flavour Candy Company, est. 1925

Museum Artifact: The Original Flavour Chicken Bones (Tin), 1927

Made By: Flavour Candy Co., 3922 N. Lincoln Ave., Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Hedman MFG Co. & The F&E Check Writer, est. 1914

Museum Artifact: F&E Check Writer, 1920s

Made By: Hedman MFG Co., 1158 W. Armitage Ave., Chicago, IL

First developed in 1914, the F&E Check Writer was more of a hi-tech defense weapon than a mere piece of office equipment. It was designed, as a number of other similar machines were in the early 20th century, to combat what was then considered “one of the gravest and most widespread of all menaces against our nation’s business”—check forgery.