Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
Welcome to the “c.1899 Metal Worker Challenge”! 
So, I was doing some research a week or so ago and up popped this article, “Wrenches, Cutters, and Tongs” by J.L. Bixby, Jr., in the March 25, 1899 edition of The Metal Worker, a trade journal.
Written in the form of a quiz for notional apprentices, the article is interesting in and of itself. For example, I love the brutal forthright honesty of the author’s rationale for the style variations of what he refers to as “the three most common pipe wrenches” (Stillson, Franklin, and Trimo): “to overcome patent rights or to suit the fancy of the manufacturer.” I also enjoyed his warning about using a cheater pipe: “By doing this there is some risk of springing the wrench.”
As I read through the article, a gratifying feeling began to come over me as the recognition sunk in that I own most of the wrenches referenced in the article in my personal collection (or in a couple cases a slightly later version), except for one, the “Extension S Wrench” shown in Fig. 7.
That just didn’t sit right with me, and so, for my own sense of completion, I recently acquired one from a fellow GJ member.
And I thought the wrench section, shown here, might make a fun challenge for others.
(Post 1 of 7)

So, I was doing some research a week or so ago and up popped this article, “Wrenches, Cutters, and Tongs” by J.L. Bixby, Jr., in the March 25, 1899 edition of The Metal Worker, a trade journal.
Written in the form of a quiz for notional apprentices, the article is interesting in and of itself. For example, I love the brutal forthright honesty of the author’s rationale for the style variations of what he refers to as “the three most common pipe wrenches” (Stillson, Franklin, and Trimo): “to overcome patent rights or to suit the fancy of the manufacturer.” I also enjoyed his warning about using a cheater pipe: “By doing this there is some risk of springing the wrench.”
As I read through the article, a gratifying feeling began to come over me as the recognition sunk in that I own most of the wrenches referenced in the article in my personal collection (or in a couple cases a slightly later version), except for one, the “Extension S Wrench” shown in Fig. 7.
That just didn’t sit right with me, and so, for my own sense of completion, I recently acquired one from a fellow GJ member.
And I thought the wrench section, shown here, might make a fun challenge for others.
(Post 1 of 7)
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