Shinnick Hattan & Co. No. 9 Cast Iron Kettle

Shinnick Hattan & Co. No. 9 Cast Iron Kettle

June 23, 1863. Ten days before Gettysburg. Confederate cavalry threatening eastern Ohio. And in a Zanesville foundry, Shinnick Hattan & Co. cast this kettle and stamped it with the date. The oldest piece in the SSC collection — and its crown jewel.

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Marion Stove Co. Cast Iron Stove Lid Lifter

Marion Stove Co. Cast Iron Stove Lid Lifter

Marion Stove Co. was born in Sidney, Ohio in 1855 — and when it left for Indiana, a Marion man stayed behind to help build Wagner Ware. This lid lifter retains its original nickel plating, a surface that must never be disturbed.

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Pre-Logo Era No. 8 Flat Skillet — Gate Scar, Unattributed

Pre-Logo Era No. 8 Flat Skillet — Gate Scar, Unattributed

The gate scar is the oldest mark in the SSC collection. Not a logo, not a brand — the physical remnant of the casting process itself: the raised diagonal ridge left when the iron that filled the gate was broken away after the pour. American foundries of the mid-to-late 19th century tolerated visible gate scars in a way the branded era did not. By the time Favorite Piqua Ware was stamping Smiley cartouches into its bases, the gate scar was already a relic. This No. 8 flat skillet, with its fancy twist handle and figure-8 loop, predates every other piece in the SSC collection — and it belongs here.

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