American Wooden Ware Mfg. Co. — Toledo, Ohio
A six-and-a-quarter-inch cast iron disc carrying the mark of a Toledo manufactory that no major cast iron collector database has documented. The American Wooden Ware Mfg. Co. enters the SSC archive and the Ohio Foundry Directory for the first time.
Shinnick & Co. — Zanesville, Ohio
A second Shinnick-marked Civil War tea kettle enters the SSC archive — the same June 23, 1863 Menke patent as The Crown Jewel, but a different Zanesville foundry partnership and one size smaller. The Menke Patent Network's third confirmed Zanesville link.
The Bedrock: Arcole Iron Works Gypsy Pot
In 1834, the Arcole Iron Works in Madison Township, Ohio was the largest industry in the state — producing 1,500 tons of iron annually, sustaining a port community larger than Cleveland. This gypsy pot carries the W.S. & Co. mark of the Wilkeson and Seeley partnership that ran the foundry during those peak years. The mark has worn with 190 years of honest existence. It is still there. Most people who collect cast iron will never hold one of these in their lifetime.
J.H. Day & Co. Patented Safety Kettle with Fire Shield
MADE ONLY BY. Four words cast into a hinged iron door mounted on the front of a Cincinnati hearth kettle, backed by two patents filed three years apart — 1874 and 1877. J.H. Day & Co. was not a stove works. They were an industrial machinery manufacturer who also invented a new way to manage fire around a kettle, protected it twice, and put their exclusivity claim in iron on every piece. This is the most complete example known: fire shield intact, hinged, latched, and operational after 150 years.
Dayton Malleable Iron Co. Patented Smelting Ladle
A brass brush brought it back: DAYTON MALLEABLE IRON CO. / PAT AUG 15 / 1871. Not just the year — the month and the day. August 15, 1871. The same day M. Hose & Lyon, across town in Dayton, patented their own competing ladle design. The dried slag in the diamond-form cup is still there. The thermal patina is still there. SSC will not remove either one. This is what a working foundry tool looks like after 155 years when you choose preservation over restoration.
Yourtee, Hollister & Co. Cast Iron Stove-Top Kettle
Yourtee, Hollister & Co. existed for less than three years. On January 9, 1874, their Cincinnati Commercial dissolution notice appeared. Before that, in 1871, they cast their name and the year into the lid of this kettle. The firm is gone. The iron is still here — marked, dated, and documented for the first time.
Greer & King Mfg. Co. No. 8 Three-Legged Bail Bean Pot Kettle
The Greer & King Mfg. Co. of Dayton, Ohio received their patent on November 3, 1868 — three years after the Civil War ended, when Reconstruction was still unfinished and the western frontier had not yet closed. The bean pot sitting on these three iron legs predates Wagner by two decades and Griswold Erie by more than twenty years. This is the oldest patent-dated piece in the SSC Museum Collection, and one of the primary surviving physical records of a Dayton foundry that the standard reference databases have never documented.
Morrison & Fay Mfg. Co. Bryan Sulky Plow Seat & Footrest
These two cast iron pieces — the seat and footrest from a Bryan Sulky Plow, Improved — are what remained when the plow itself was gone. Made by The Morrison & Fay Mfg. Co. of Bryan, Ohio in the 1880s, the Bryan Sulky was no regional curiosity: in documented field trials it outpulled John Deere's Gilpin, the Casaday, the Syracuse, and the Wiard. This is the iron that carried the man who drove it.