I inherited a Union Utility Chest. It was painted so some things are difficult to read... unless I remove the paint. I was thinking about doing exactly that. But.... The chest is not in great space and the key / latch was damaged and drilled off the box. I am trying to decide if I can make the connections more robust so it can easily handle the heavy things I have in it. Lets start with the box itself. I tried to identify the box but I am not having an easy time of it mostly because I cannot find this box in a catalog. I think it is before catalog 20, which I think is around 1950, but, I could be wrong.
I think this was painted green. I think that the top plate should not be painted. Notice that there was a key lock on the front that was drilled out because the mechanism was damaged and could not open. There are two rivets holding that top in place. With the weight I am not sure I trust those two rivets to hold things without letting go. Also, with the weight, I trust the two front latches even less than the top two rivets.
This is the front. I really do not trust the two latches to not slip. I would like to find a third latch for the front.
Although there is some rust, that stuff on the top is not rust. Oil and dirt and it should wash off.
This box was full of files so it is pretty heavy. I sorted the files and rasps and wrapped them in paper so they would not grind against each other. i sorted them by shape. The Shinto Rasp is mine. If you look carefully, right in the middle and on the right side are some interesting metal handles that can be used to hold files. it took me a while to even figure out that was their purpose. I am used to storing these files in this form and then I know where to look for them when I want to use them.
This is the "keyed" latch that would not open, probably because the key portion has been knocked off. OK, I assume it is for a key.
The top I believe says something similar to the following (it is difficult to read).
Union Utility Chest
Union Chest Coporation
Le Roy NY
I do not see writing on that "key" latch and most samples I have seen have a keyed latch.
Also, I know which Grandfather used this because it is green; he painted many things green.
I don't care about a key. My first concern is making this sufficiently robust that I can just pick it up without worrying about the weight. I do not even know where I would look to find some kind of replacement latch that I could just bolt into place.
I will probably start by cleaning, maybe stripping and repainting (probably just clean it and remove rust). Then add a draw latch where the previous locking mechanism was located. I might replace the handle with something more robust.