Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
Post 1 of 10
I recently splurged for this splendid socket set…
…made in 1909 by a pair of brothers, both of them graduates of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (we’ll get to that later….), and advertised like mad in several trade mags, including Automobile Trade Journal, The Automobile Trade Directory, The Automobile, Automotive Industries, and, to be inclusive of vehicles with motors but less than four or no wheels, The Motor Cycle, Motor Boat, and Automobile Trade Journal.
The ad was the same in all trade mags, and it could not have been more descriptive or glowing in its praise of the aspects and features of the 1/2-inch drive set I admire the most, which is the gorgeous and unique case itself.
The ad copywriter really nailed it.
“The case consists simply of a solid wood block bound with brass, with a sheet of oak-tanned leather as cover. There are no hinges or catches to break and no thin wood to smash. The leather also keeps the sockets from rattling.”
Anyone who owns any early press-steel socket sets from any OEM – e.g., Mossberg, Smith & Hemenway, Eastern Machine Screw, Charles Miller, etc – knows that all of those things are true of all wooden socket set boxes.
I recently splurged for this splendid socket set…
…made in 1909 by a pair of brothers, both of them graduates of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (we’ll get to that later….), and advertised like mad in several trade mags, including Automobile Trade Journal, The Automobile Trade Directory, The Automobile, Automotive Industries, and, to be inclusive of vehicles with motors but less than four or no wheels, The Motor Cycle, Motor Boat, and Automobile Trade Journal.
The ad was the same in all trade mags, and it could not have been more descriptive or glowing in its praise of the aspects and features of the 1/2-inch drive set I admire the most, which is the gorgeous and unique case itself.
The ad copywriter really nailed it.
“The case consists simply of a solid wood block bound with brass, with a sheet of oak-tanned leather as cover. There are no hinges or catches to break and no thin wood to smash. The leather also keeps the sockets from rattling.”
Anyone who owns any early press-steel socket sets from any OEM – e.g., Mossberg, Smith & Hemenway, Eastern Machine Screw, Charles Miller, etc – knows that all of those things are true of all wooden socket set boxes.

