The idea that everything went to the military during WWII is a fallacy. At no time was commercial tool production banned, not even during the steel drive years, which were voluntary, and aimed at old, unused tools. The WPB restricted alloys and limited the types of tools that could be made, to eliminate redundancy, which conserved steel. All the major mfgrs published catalogs for commercial sales during wartime. Other sectors (railroad, oil, agriculture, manufacturing, etc) still needed tools. As a good exemplar of just how big the market was, charts in Snap-on's 50th anniversary stakeholder meeting book, famous in the collecting community, showed that commercial sales dwarfed their military sales during WWII.