Would've been a good day (in my own book) at the flea market this morning if the only thing in this haul (Lugz 2020_54) was my first ever
original Masterrench (Turlock, CA, not Heller Bros).
The original owner liked his self-adjusting wrenches, because I also found a
Cleveland Wrench Co Auto-Grip in the same load. Per the seller, no spring chicken hisself, the PO was a 90-year-old WWII vet. The seller had bought a Signal Corps compass from his son in a wood box at a yard sale at his house on Friday and they got to talking. The WWII vet's son told him to come back the next day, which was Saturday, and look in the garage if he wanted old stuff. HAHA! So he filled up a trailer, kept the stuff he wanted, and brought the rest to the flea market this morning. The unmarked
Duro female nonreversible ratchet, the drive plug, the -D-I- 15/16" socket, the
Duro universal joint, the deep
Long C Craftsman Circle-H socket, and that
Barcalo-Buffalo ISN 25 DOE wrench were all from that load. And some of it was in a wartime unmarked McAleer 41-B-1840 toolbox. See Pics 2 & 3.
Also happy to find a new halfmoon wrench (
GILLER) for the no-dupes halfmoon collection from a different seller.
I don't know exactly what the brass thing in the front is, but it's square, thick, and heavy, has a loop on the end for a line, a pointy nose, and it's marked out for 1 foot in inches one one edge and quarter inches on the other in two different directions, with the 1 foot and 0 inches mark mark being dead center with the loop for the line. So it's for making depth measurements of some kind. Probably a tank, I guess. That, the ignition set (pouch marked
Clark Mfg Co, Buffalo, NY wrenches marked "foster" (just like that), and the
G.M. Co. set (metal case, cool little sliding see-through lid) were from a third seller. I am hoping 3bay may know something about the Clark/"foster" set, otherwise it's research time.
I know it may seem counterintuitive for someone with a big stash of rare high quality antique and 1920's wrench sets in wooden boxes to enjoy these sorts of economy line sets from the 50's, but there's just something about them I like.
Quick backstory is kind of funny, too. You guys know I don't like to talk about money, but I'll make an exception in the case of this story. It ends with me coming home with a one dollar bill in my pocket! The funny part of that is that I left home with only $17 in cash (a ten, a five, and two ones), which is all I had to my name this morning.

I almost didn't go, because as you guys know, there's nothing more cruel than finding something good and not being able to afford it. Glad I risked it!