Jammer1329
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2012
- Messages
- 88
a ferret box. would date right about 1930. Nice . It is very hard to find.
Cool! Thanks for the info
Sent from my iPhone using Garage Journal
a ferret box. would date right about 1930. Nice . It is very hard to find.
It does look like a K21 box on the left, the lid is propped open with the tote tray standing up on edge inside.
Why all the 'Union Jack' flags in the display? Probably a shop owner from England and maybe it was 2nd June 1953 coronation of our present Queen Elizabeth 2. Or perhaps on the occasion of a royal visit to Canada.
The latter is suggested not only by the flags, but the banner. "Crowned King of Mechanics Tools" and "Reigned supreme" were not corporate marketing sloganeering. The shop owners had that made themselves, locally, cleverly tailored for the occasion.Why all the 'Union Jack' flags in the display? Probably a shop owner from England and maybe it was 2nd June 1953 coronation of our present Queen Elizabeth 2. Or perhaps on the occasion of a royal visit to Canada.
The latter is suggested not only by the flags, but the banner. "Crowned King of Mechanics Tools" and "Reigned supreme" were not corporate marketing sloganeering. The shop owners had that made themselves, locally, cleverly tailored for the occasion.
EDIT: There is a heraldry shield with a smaller 'Union Jack' on a flag just over the entrance. If someone can identify it, that might provide a location, no?
Hey cool!I would bet my next paycheck that if it's Canada, it's May-June 1939, for the royal tour of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth.
I was already convinced by the obvious royal double-entendres in the banner, and 1939 fits the K21 perfectly. It was a big deal. Wiki link here.
Let's hear it!The clue. 1211 street number. Listed in the 37 cat. 1211 Granville st. Vancouver BC
Other pic shows the cool work duds with both Snap On and Blue Point on them. Thanks guys!
The clue. 1211 street number. Listed in the 37 cat. 1211 Granville st. Vancouver BC

I'm not buying that date. I think it's highly probable they archived the photograph wrong. It happens. Not only was May 1939 the month and year of the royal tour, it was the first time the reigning king and queen had ever visited Canada. If it's May 1937, what was the reason for the hoopla? We're supposed to believe that Snap-on distributor (great idea to check the distributors' lists, snapmom, 1 of only 4 in Canada!) was displaying all those Union Jacks and the special banner with the clever royalty/Snap-on play-on-words in 1937?May 11, 1937
I still cannot believe my luck on this one. this was one of those "who can get to their phone fast enough" type deals on OfferUp. I responded within 7 minutes and was on the road. A KR 300B, that although was in rough condition, is absolutely worth $20. In speaking to the owner, who was in his 70s, he mentioned that his father was a Snap-On salesman and that this was his roller.
Late to the party with this, but that was the Canadian flag at the time. It was unofficially adopted from 1867 and officially from 1924-1965 when the Maple Leaf flag was adopted. Not unlike the US flag, there were several iterations of the Red Ensign until its final version. Interesting to me that the Union Jack is displayed to the flag's left, though I don't know if that has any particular significance.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Ensign#Canada
Hmm. That idea is strange to me. Not to get too far off topic here, and speaking for no other flag etiquette other than US, this is absolutely not the case with the US flag. When it is displayed on a wall or on any flat immovable surface other than a pole, the white stars on a field of blue is always in the upper left. It is never proper to show the US flag on a flat vertical immovable surface with the blue field of stars in any other position. Even when a US flag is hung vertically, with the red and white stripes going up and down instead of horizontal, the white stars in the blue field still belongs on the upper left. This is the most common mistake I see on people's homes, where they simply turn the flag 90* to the right, which puts the field of blue with stars in the upper right.Most flags are mirror-image on the other side. Depending on which side you are looking at, the Union Jack could be on either side. I believe there would be a protocol for which side to display a single flag, but if it were part of a symmetrical display, it would be proper to show both sides.
I am doing a complete about face on the 1939 royal tour conclusion based on this information. All the previously noted royalty allusions in the banner ("King of Tools" "long may they reign" etc) make even more sense for celebrating their coronation and it absolutely makes sense that they decked their shop out and snapped the photos the day before in 1937.The May 11th date may have been for the May 12th Coronation of George VI and Elizabeth.
I don't see a window. I see a flag hanging horizontally from a beam above an entrance. The vantage point is clearly meant to be from outside the store looking at the store. If that was the US flag, the blue field must be in the upper left. This is not subject to interpretation. It is code.Lugz - I completely agree with your observations about displaying the Stars & Stripes on a flat vertical OPAQUE surface, but that Red Ensign is displayed in a window. If you walk around a US flag hung from a boom or flying in a breeze, you do see the other side.
Note I said immovable objects above. I was not a fan of the change, but right shoulder patches were reversed because uniforms are worn by people, and people are not immovable, to match the code for vehicles, for the same reason.LesserSon said:Further, the right-shoulder patches on US uniforms were, in recent years, reversed to give the impression soldiers were “advancing, not retreating.”