No. 8 Gate-Marked Bean Pot
This piece carries no foundry name, no city, and no patent date — and in early American cast iron, that absence is its own kind of story. SSC-UNK-KTL-8-001 is an unmarked No. 8 cast iron bean pot / kettle with a wire bail handle, a recessed base, and a clear bottom gate mark. Rather than invent an attribution, this deep-dive reads the iron itself: what the gate mark reveals about early sand-mold casting, what the cast size “8” meant on a period stove, and why bottom-gated hollow ware generally points to a 19th to early 20th century date. It also explains why unmarked kettles like this are so difficult to assign to a specific foundry and keeps the maker honestly unconfirmed pending primary-source verification — preserving a sourced record ready to meet a marked twin or catalog match if one ever surfaces.
Cast Iron Posnet — “D.O.-52” Marking
A small cast iron posnet marked "D.O.-52" — three legs, a hanging loop, and a marking nobody can identify. SSC documents this hearth-era mystery piece in full detail and invites the collector community to help solve it.