Meteor, Oxwall, GM Co. were sort of the "big three",
Agreed.
I do not think you can honestly include Great Neck in that mix, as the majority of their product line originally was manufactured in country and was of reasonably good quality
I think it's probably the definition of "reasonably good" that is at stake here, 4.c. I wouldn't disagree with you, but I tend to also agree at the same time with Lesserstore on Great Neck being exactly the kind of name that freudianfloyd seems to be asking about. Certainly not in the Big Three category of "junk", but clearly not in the highest quality category, either.
I tend to put Truecraft (was domestic first) and Old Forge in the same category. To be honest and sticking my great neck out further, I used to kinda sorta put Vanadium Tool Co. and even Lectrolite in the same grouping, postwar. Blueline, too. There was a whole bunch of these "affordable" (not great, not junk) American made lines that got squeezed out after the roof fell in and even the formerly high end names (NB, Triangle Bonney and Herbrand, anyone supplying NAPA, etc) starting moving into their space.
Prior to the flood of the Asian imports coming into the U.S., which really began in the 1950s and 1960s
I'd defer to you on this subject, but 50's seems early to me. The first time Congress took any action at all was 1973, I believe, and the first major anti-Dumping action was in the mid-1970's. See...
“
Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Trade of the Committee on Ways and Means, House of Representatives, First Session, 95th Congress", April 26-28, 1977, available on-line and linked
here (see pages 73-79, 85-90, 101, 510, 521, and 531 in particular).
…and…
“
Trends in International Nonpowered Handtools”, Report to the Committee on Ways and Means by the US ITC, Investigation No. 332-163, 1984 (60 pages), available on-line and linked
here.
Ironically, I think the US helping Germany and Japan recover by facilitating the establishment of cheap manufacturing in the postwar occupied zones (where, as you know, Steelcraft, among others, really burgeoned) laid the groundwork for the later import craze. Not enough has been written about that.
When my great grandfather bought a plow a wrench like the attached came with it. People did not have wrenches it was a new concept. This was an amazing thing for him and covered every adjustment an old Oliver plow needed. When I first saw one it was what is this junk.
I think cast iron farm implements are in a whole 'nother category, Mark. They were very early, before the automotive tool market became so big, and then overlapped with it somewhat, until IH and others started equipping their tractors with wrenches made by the same makers.