Hercules Anchor Co. Patented Sad Iron

Hercules Anchor Co. Patented Sad Iron

The Hercules Anchor Co. of Toledo, Ohio manufactured pressing irons in the early twentieth century. This size 2 patented sad iron — bearing the patent date August 4, 1903 and the full maker cartouche "Hercules Anchor Co. / Toledo / Ohio" — is a product of the same Ohio manufacturing tradition that produced the hollow ware in the SSC collection, expressed in a different form: not a skillet, but a tool for domestic labor, cast from the same gray iron, by an Ohio foundry whose history has not yet been fully written. The Hercules Anchor Co. does not appear in standard cast iron references. This piece is one of the primary physical records of its existence.

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The A.C. Williams Co. Sad Iron

The A.C. Williams Co. Sad Iron

Before the cast iron banks. Before the toy automobiles and airplanes sold through Woolworth's and Kresge's. Before A.C. Williams became the largest manufacturer of cast iron toys in the world — there was a heavy, solid sad iron with a detachable wooden handle. This one is marked "WILLIAMS CO." and "RAVENNA, OHIO" and dates to the transitional period when miniature models of this very product, made for traveling salesmen, caught a buyer's eye and launched one of Ohio's most celebrated foundries into the toy business. Acquired from Etsy seller stoneridgeattic, March 2026.

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Dover Manufacturing Co. No. 4 Asbestos Sad Iron

Dover Manufacturing Co. No. 4 Asbestos Sad Iron

Every woman in America ironed clothes. Dover Manufacturing Company of Canal Dover, Ohio built its entire business on solving one part of that problem: the hot handle. This No. 4 asbestos sad iron — with its patented detachable hood, asbestos lining, and cool wooden handle — represents the SSC collection's first piece from Tuscarawas County.

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The Cleveland Foundry Co. Star & Sunburst Sad Iron Trivet

The Cleveland Foundry Co. Star & Sunburst Sad Iron Trivet

In 1888 they were casting trivets. By 1921 they were Perfection Stove Company. This star and sunburst trivet — patented 1891, just three years after the Cleveland Foundry Co.'s founding — is where one of America's great heating appliance brands began. Twelve dollars and fifty cents.

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