The Adams & Britt Cincinnati Cast Iron Stove Kettle Griddle
Dated 1872 and carrying every letter of its maker's name as clearly as the day it was cast — a Cincinnati kettle griddle from a partnership so obscure that this piece may be the primary evidence it existed.
The H.S. Pease Enameled Three-Leg Safety Kettle
A one-of-a-kind survival — an enameled three-leg safety kettle from a Cincinnati inventor-manufacturer whose patents spanned three decades, with its porcelain interior intact after more than 130 years. Preserved exactly as found.
The W. Resor & Co. Cincinnati Cast Iron Waffle Iron
From Cincinnati's first stove factory to the SSC collection — a museum-quality waffle iron from the Resor family foundry, whose patriarch arrived by flatboat in 1811 and whose stoves, mansions, and philanthropy helped build the Queen City.
The Perin & Gaff Mfg. Co. Susan R. Knox Patent Crank Fluting Iron
A Victorian laundry machine that connects a woman inventor in New York to a Cincinnati foundry — manufactured under the 1866 patent of Susan R. Knox by Perin & Gaff of Cincinnati, with comparable examples in the Smithsonian's permanent collection.
Browne’s Patent Cast Iron Broom Head
A Cincinnati inventor's patented broom head from the first autumn after the Civil War — carrying his name and the exact date of his patent grant cast into the iron, five months after Appomattox.
The Perin & Gaff Mfg. Co. Cast Iron Chain Pulley
A Cincinnati hardware manufacturer's working pulley survives with full foundry markings — the second Perin & Gaff piece in the SSC collection, expanding the documentation from the laundry room to the barn loft.