Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
I am supposed to be packing for a trip, but Ole Slewfoot and Otg gave me one more excuse to further procrastinate when they tacked on to the end (posts #17 and #18) of my Early Roaring 20’s thread, linked here.
According to the 1914 edition of the Special Acts & Resolutions of the State of Connecticut, linked here, Eastern Machine Screw Corporation was incorporated on April 28, 1910 in New London.
The Norwich (Connecticut) Bulletin announced the founding in its May 2, 1910 issue, and said that the company, organized with $100,000 capital, would be manufacturing automobile machine screws, other automobile parts, and other hardware in New Haven, using patents owned by William Gates of the Hopkins & Riley Arms Company. Gates was a vice president of the new company, along with Joseph E. Hubinger.
Their primary line of business was the manufacturing of screws and machinery to make screws, including threading machines and tooling. All of their products were branded as “H&G”. Although it hasn’t been explained on Alloy Artifacts or anywhere as far as I know, my hunch is that the initials signified the first letter in the last names of the vice presidents, Hubinger and Gates, who were the brains of the outfit, leaving the operations up to others.
In 1921, Eastern Machine Screw was running WANTED ads in large city newspapers looking for an agent to organize a sales force for selling, “by actual canvas to the user, a new and distinctive automobile socket and wrench set.” Here is a typical ad from the Philadelphia Inquirer, on Christmas Day, no less.
View media item 85669
Ole Slewfoot recently found an auction on eBay for an H&G set in exquisite condition, including the box and decals. One of the decals seems to be their agent in Los Angeles.
View media item 85670
By 1922 they were aggressively advertising the “H&G Socket- and Ratchet-Wrench Set”. An example from page 502 of Machinery, February 1922, is linked here.
According to the 1914 edition of the Special Acts & Resolutions of the State of Connecticut, linked here, Eastern Machine Screw Corporation was incorporated on April 28, 1910 in New London.
The Norwich (Connecticut) Bulletin announced the founding in its May 2, 1910 issue, and said that the company, organized with $100,000 capital, would be manufacturing automobile machine screws, other automobile parts, and other hardware in New Haven, using patents owned by William Gates of the Hopkins & Riley Arms Company. Gates was a vice president of the new company, along with Joseph E. Hubinger.
Their primary line of business was the manufacturing of screws and machinery to make screws, including threading machines and tooling. All of their products were branded as “H&G”. Although it hasn’t been explained on Alloy Artifacts or anywhere as far as I know, my hunch is that the initials signified the first letter in the last names of the vice presidents, Hubinger and Gates, who were the brains of the outfit, leaving the operations up to others.
In 1921, Eastern Machine Screw was running WANTED ads in large city newspapers looking for an agent to organize a sales force for selling, “by actual canvas to the user, a new and distinctive automobile socket and wrench set.” Here is a typical ad from the Philadelphia Inquirer, on Christmas Day, no less.
View media item 85669
Ole Slewfoot recently found an auction on eBay for an H&G set in exquisite condition, including the box and decals. One of the decals seems to be their agent in Los Angeles.
View media item 85670
By 1922 they were aggressively advertising the “H&G Socket- and Ratchet-Wrench Set”. An example from page 502 of Machinery, February 1922, is linked here.
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