Unknown Wapakoneta Foundry No. 258 Camp Waffle Iron

Unknown Wapakoneta Foundry No. 258 Camp Waffle Iron

Before Wapak Hollow Ware. Before Ahrens and Arnold. Before the Indian Head logo. In 1858, an unnamed foundry in Wapakoneta, Ohio cast this diamond-pattern camp waffle iron — pushing the town's documented cast iron heritage back forty-five years before the foundry that put "Wapak" on the collecting map.

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Wapak Hollow Ware Company — No. 9 Cast Iron Flat-Bottom Kettle

Wapak Hollow Ware Company — No. 9 Cast Iron Flat-Bottom Kettle

The Wapak Hollow Ware Company of Wapakoneta, Ohio existed for just 23 years — from 1903 to 1926 — but in that span produced some of the finest lightweight cast iron in American manufacturing history. This No. 9 flat-bottom kettle, marked "WAPAK" in block letters, represents the company's workhorse product line: deep, straight-sided, flat-bottomed vessels built for daily stovetop use in early 20th-century Ohio kitchens. Professionally restored. Acquired from eBay seller golden_treats, January 2026.

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Oneta No. 9 Cast Iron Skillet

Oneta No. 9 Cast Iron Skillet

If you couldn't afford Wagner, you bought Wapak. If you couldn't afford Wapak, you bought Oneta. Made in Wapakoneta — the town between Sidney and Piqua, Neil Armstrong's hometown — this budget skillet is now harder to find than the premium brands it once undercut. The cheap things get used up. The survivors are scarce.

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Ahrens & Arnold No. 3 Skillet — Wapakoneta Mark

Ahrens & Arnold No. 3 Skillet — Wapakoneta Mark

Ahrens & Arnold operated in Wapakoneta, Ohio, for only a few years in the late 1920s — founded by former Wapak Hollow Ware employees after that foundry's closure, documented in almost no historical record, and known to collectors today through a handful of surviving pieces. This No. 3 cast iron skillet carries the full A&A marking layout in exceptional condition: the CAST · IRON · SKILLET arc with raised dot word separators, the AA arrow emblem, and the WAPAKONETA / OHIO. origin text with its characteristic terminal period — every authentication marker present and clearly legible. One of the rarest named makers in the American cast iron corpus, now documented in the SSC collection alongside its Wapak Indian Head No. 3 counterpart to tell the complete Wapakoneta story.

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Wapak No. 3 Skillet — Indian Head Mark

Wapak No. 3 Skillet — Indian Head Mark

Every Ohio foundry in the SSC collection marks its iron with text or geometry — an arc, a cartouche, a diamond. Wapak chose a face. The Indian Head medallion centered on this No. 3 base — a Native American figure in feathered headdress, cast in profile, surrounded by the company inscription — is the most visually distinctive mark in the Ohio foundry corpus. This No. 3 carries it in exceptional condition: headdress feather detail preserved, facial profile clear, inscription readable. It is the finest-condition marked piece in the SSC collection, the first Wapak entry, and the highest single-piece acquisition to date. Some iron earns its price

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