With all due respect to Drives and Toolmaker, I think the date of manufacture can be narrowed down to some time between 1942 and 1954.I would like to know if anybody knows about what year this Cornwell box is from.
Maybe you should try filling it up with "The ONE FIFTY THREE Set"! That's the master mechanic's set - exactly one hundred and fifty three pieces - that Cornwell put into that box!it's one of my best looking top boxes so i think i'll have to dig it out and start filling it up again.

Thanks for the clarification, Drives. The 1941 catalog is black and white and the OP's looks green. Or it could've been my envy!At any rate, I would date yours to the late 1940's for the same reason. Do you agree with my reasoning? It seems almost certain that they were made sometime between 1941 and 1955, right? Same exact box as the 41, just the open pulls instead. And then those pulls show up in the 50's. Has to be late 40's.
If yours has slides, I am sticking with 1940's for yours, as the 1941 catalog description highlights the slides. If Todd's doesn't, I agree with him that his is likely before that, Now I'm curious to see if Tommy52's has slides or not.i'll also take a few more pictures and some of the slides if i can find it.
I think you misunderstood me, Drives, or I was unclear. The catalog indicates that these SK24 boxes were sold separately, so you could put anything you wanted in them, obviously. But, the Cornwell "ONE FIFTY THREE" set of tools (see page 2 in the 1941 catalog) came in this box. (It's their version of the master mechanic set that Plomb, Bonney, Snap-On and every other major automotive service tool maker had...). EDIT: You could buy the tools without the box, too. Just saying this was their big box for their biggest set.Twertsy: do you agree with Lug that these Cornwell boxes came with non Cornwell tools originally?
Lugs, the detailed pics of mine are on my site here: http://toolarchives.com/node/1029If yours has slides, I am sticking with 1940's for yours, as the 1941 catalog description highlights the slides. If Todd's doesn't, I agree with him that his is likely before that, Now I'm curious to see if Tommy52's has slides or not.
I think you misunderstood me, Drives, or I was unclear. The catalog indicates that these SK24 boxes were sold separately, so you could put anything you wanted in them, obviously. But, the Cornwell "ONE FIFTY THREE" set of tools (see page 2 in the 1941 catalog) came in this box. (It's their version of the master mechanic set that Plomb, Bonney, Snap-On and every other major automotive service tool maker had...). EDIT: You could buy the tools without the box, too. Just saying this was their big box for their biggest set.
With all due respect to Drives and Toolmaker, I think the date of manufacture can be narrowed down to some time between 1942 and 1954.
My rationale:
Your "Master Deluxe" Toolbox (model #SK24) is green, with the old Cornwell logo on the drop down lid, and open pulls on the drawers.
The box was green, with the old Cornwell logo, and cupped pulls in the 1941 catalog.
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The box was red, with the Cornwell Man logo on the drop down lid, and open pulls on the drawers in the 1955 catalog.
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Everything else about the boxes looks identical or near-identical to me.
So, it looks to me like they went to the open pulls sometime before 1955, before they went to red, and before they adopted the Cornwell Man logo.
I would guess your box is late 1940's.
Here is the detailed description and the dimensions from the 1941 catalog if you want to take some measurements...
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I had forgotten what mine looked like in terms of the drawer pulls.....definitely 30s, maybe even earlier.Thanks. Not only no slides, but totally different drawer layout. The box and the drawer layout are identical in the 41 and 55 cats, and Tommy's and Drive's boxes match that layout. Yours is completely different.
They do smack of roaring 20s rather than the "just get through" 30sThey are downright ornate.
Pulled this from a local swap today. $30.00. Had some tools in it too.
I wonder how old that one is?