Wagner Ware — Miniature Cast Iron Skillet No. 1050
The Wagner Manufacturing Company of Sidney, Ohio produced this 3½-inch miniature skillet — catalog number 1050, pattern letter D — as a novelty item, advertising premium, and salesman's sample. Every feature of a full-size Wagner skillet is present in miniature: the oval logo, the pour spouts, the teardrop hanging hole, and the smooth cooking surface. The stylized W logo dates this piece to approximately the 1950s–1960s. Acquired from eBay seller floodgatesofheaven, August 2025.
National / Wagner Ware Sidney –O– Dual Logo No. 8 Cast Iron Skillet #1358
Wagner's economy brand meets Wagner's premium logo on a single piece of iron. This National No. 8 skillet carries the dual-logo configuration — "NATIONAL" arced above the centered stylized Wagner Ware Sidney -O- mark — documenting Wagner's multi-brand strategy from the same Sidney, Ohio foundry.
Wagner Ware Sidney –O– No. 14 Cast Iron Skillet #1064
The largest single-handled skillet Wagner ever produced. This No. 14, catalog #1064, crowns the SSC's complete Wagner Sidney-O skillet set spanning No. 0 through No. 14 — preserved in bare iron for permanent museum display.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- Round Griddle No. 1109 D
The round griddle is cast iron at its most fundamental — a flat surface over fire. Wagner's 1109 D carries the stylized logo from the company's peak era, and pairs with an early-mark No. 8 to show that the best designs don't change. Only the trademark evolves. The iron stays the same.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- Bacon and Egg Breakfast Skillet
Everyone has dealt with bacon grease flooding into eggs. Wagner's answer was to cast the solution into the iron — a square divided pan with separate compartments for bacon and eggs, one burner, one wash. The most immediately charming piece in the SSC collection.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 3 Nickel-Plated Skillet
Most nickel-plated Wagners survive with sixty or seventy percent of their plating. This No. 3 retains ninety percent or more. Nearly perfect nickel patina on a piece this old is genuinely unusual — and at $19.95, it slipped through the cracks because nobody was looking for a little No. 3
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 7 Cast Iron Skillet
Everyone has a Wagner No. 8. The No. 7 is the size that a knowledgeable cook chose on purpose — a 9¼-inch sauté skillet that heats faster, concentrates fond better, and handles with one hand. It wasn't the best seller. It was the better skillet.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 4 Nickel-Plated Skillet
Not every Wagner left Sidney looking the same. This No. 4 carried the premium option — factory nickel plating that turned a workhorse skillet into a showpiece. A century later, the plating survives because every owner had the wisdom to leave it alone. SSC will continue that tradition.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 7 Cast Iron Saucepan
The Archival Black protocol isn't "never touch." It's "know when to touch and when not to." This Wagner Ware No. 7 saucepan was restored by SSC because restoration served the piece — the same philosophy that keeps the 1863 Shinnick kettle untouched.
Wagner Ware No. 3 Skillet — Pie Logo, Nickel Plated
Wagner's most collected trademark on its most premium finish — a No. 3 pie logo skillet with nickel plating from Sidney, Ohio. The first pie logo and first nickel-plated specimen in the SSC collection, representing the summit of Wagner Manufacturing's production art.
Wagner Ware No. 0 Skillet — Stylized Logo
The third Wagner No. 0 variant in the SSC collection — a stylized logo smooth-bottom specimen from Wagner's golden age. Together with the arc logo No. 0 and the complete Sidney-O set specimen, SSC now documents the No. 0 skillet across four decades of Wagner production.
Wagner Ware No. 8 Round Roaster
Four United States patents. Five years of engineering. All of it cast into the iron of a single lid. The Wagner Ware No. 8 Round Roaster with Drip Drop Baster lid is one of the most precisely dateable artifacts in the SSC collection — a complete, pre-catalog-number piece from the narrow 1922–1924 window that documents Wagner's most important technological innovation in its original, fully evolved form.
Wagner Ware No. 8 Chicken Fryer
The Wagner Ware No. 8 Chicken Fryer is one of the foundry's most recognizable specialty forms — deep sidewalls, self-basting dome lid, and the direct "CHICKEN FRYER / NO.8" base inscription that confirms Wagner attribution without a branded name. This pre-1924 example arrives complete with its original matching lid, an increasingly rare configuration in the collector market.
Wagner Ware Krusty Korn Kobs Junior Cornbread Pan — Pattern 1319
Seven corn cob cavities. A patent date of July 6, 1920. The full Wagner Ware Sidney-O mark, the registered Krusty Korn Kobs trade name, and pattern 1319 — all cast into the base of a single pan. Wagner's signature corn stick design in the Junior configuration, with every kernel row sharp and the seasoning intact. Acquired from a Goodwill auction for $7.99. The iron remembers what it's worth even when the market doesn't.
Wagner Cast Iron Bean PotStove Ring Kettle — Size 8
A Wagner No. 8 cast iron bean pot from the early arc mark period — before WAGNER WARE, before Sidney-O, before catalog numbers. The arc WAGNER mark with decorative flourishes, three cast leg feet, original wire bail handle, and the stove ring flange that locked it into a wood or coal stove eye for the long slow cook that fed American families in the foundry's earliest years. The oldest Wagner mark configuration in the SSC collection.
Wagner Ware Tea Kettle — WAGNER / SIDNEY / O Lid Mark
This Wagner Ware tea kettle carries the early-period WAGNER / SIDNEY / O lid mark — without the WARE suffix or MADE IN USA designation — placing it in the c. 1915–1920s production window. Original brass finial intact, wire bail with coiled heat guard complete, heat ring sound. A complete, fully original Wagner specialty hollow ware piece documented in the SSC Wagner Specialty & Variant Collection.