I should have access to some scans but no physical ones yetCool. Have you located a catalog?
I should have access to some scans but no physical ones yetCool. Have you located a catalog?







Awesome set.So here is the Husky No.55 self-contained wrench set, circa 1925.
What would have been the dimensions on the original drive plug?Edit: btw I don’t have the original short drive plug.
Thanks, pretty sure I have some drive plugs that are 1/2 hex. But yes, it is 1/2" iirc. Length, not exactly sure.What would have been the dimensions on the original drive plug?
1/2" hex x 1/2" hex x how long? or?
detents?
I have a bag of those widgets somewhere. Mix and match stuff.
Thanks. I got impatient and read the patent front to back, something I don't think the DATAMP steward has done.The parts do not stay in the handle as far as I can tell. My pink held them in quite well while messing with it, but they extend outward so no, I don't believe there was a cap unless it went over the end somehow.
Litton "Pocket Socket".. Off the top of my head and time for a nap, I can't think of another self-contained ratchet-based set. Anyone else?
I meant vintage. A contemporary.Litton "Pocket Socket".
Such a cool tool hopefully I find a complete setup eventually ha. And if I remember correctly one end had a stopper and the other had detent balls. I think the inside is supposed to be set up so that you can keep it together decently stable by pushing it in and have the detent balls sort of secure it inside the extra cavity area.Thanks Lugz. The extension and sockets came together and the ratchet was an eBay buy from Roy's liquidating I believe.
The parts do not stay in the handle as far as I can tell. My pinky held them in quite well while messing with it, but they extend outward so no, I don't believe there was a cap unless it went over the end somehow.
I remember looking into this for the Husky entry in Tool Archives back in the day and finding it a little inconclusive with slightly contradictory notices.....also turns out Husky corp is the result of a merger so they weren't actually acquired by Olsen mfg it seems?
I remember looking into this for the Husky entry in Tool Archives back in the day and finding it a little inconclusive with slightly contradictory notices.
- Your notice, which for everyone else's benefit I will identify as excerpted from the 'Personals' (personnel related) section of a 1929 Motor, indicates merger.
- A notice in a 1929 El Automovil Americano linked here, also indicated a "consolidando" (merger).
- Ads in various trade mags in 1929 indicated that H.P. Olsen was the president of Husky Corporation. He was formerly the owner and president of Olsen Manufacturing. That could go either way. Example linked here.
- AA claims that "an article in the January 13, 1929 edition of the Chicago Tribune states that the Husky Corporation had been purchased by Olsen Manufacturing of Kenosha, a company founded in 1928 by H.P. Olsen, a Milwaukee businessman and publisher," but they do not provide the clipping. AA takes great pains to cobble that together with the new factory and name change notice in a 1929 Motor Record, linked here, with information in a 1928 Motor Truck linked in snippet-only view here that the factory was previously being operated by Olsen Mfg to conclude acquisition by Olsen, but the newly named Husky Corporation under the formerly Olsen Mfg facility roof could just as plausibly be a merger.
Legally, a merger requires two companies to consolidate into a new entity with a new name, ownership, and management structure. Mergers do not have to include cash, but sometimes do, which can make it look like an acquisition. One key would be to determine if Olsen Manufacturing continued to exist, which is hard to show since there's such a paucity of information on it to begin with. That leaves us with the only tea leaves we have to read.
I lean merger, despite the Tribune article, which could easily be misinformed.
Regardless of the legal definition of the new 40,000 foot facility business, they all went out of business four years later!
Meanwhile, the brains behind the entire original outfit, had already skedaddled for bigger, better things at Blackhawk.


Dug out this old add for the no.55While looking through things yesterday I realized I still had not posted this tool and it is time.
The sockets of course came from Steven, whose arm must have been twisted like an over torqued allen wrench! He promptly shipped them out upon payment, however it was a completely different item bundled in the deal that took some 40 days and 40 nights to receive, leaving me to think we have a crisis on our hands and I might have to send the sockets back in order to free that other hostage.
So that said, I owe Steven a big thank you. I was very happy to see these pieces together, like a band reunited once again. I also have to say, man, I don’t know how you focused in on that little 1/6 of a page Husky ad from 1925! I just went and found it myself based off your photo and good grief, there are only a couple tool ads in that Commercial Car Journal publication. What a find that was.
The ratchet arrived a few years back, and if I’m not mistaken, via someone with the first name R, last name Olson. You all may know who that is! Funny how this came together.
So here is the Husky No.55 self-contained wrench set, circa 1925. I’m very happy to have it in the collection guys.
^the better side. Yes, it’s double sided!
Edit: btw I don’t have the original short drive plug.
As seen in Commercial Car Journal (12/15/25) thanks to archive.org.
Mandl Patent 1,724,491 (1929)-Datamp-
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The New Britain era Husky catalog No. 38 (1938) on IA/ITCL is chock full of H-series tools and sets....cause there ain't no H series catalog,
Thanks, I'll check it out! Not sure how'd I'd missed that, could've been a "duh" moment!The New Britain era Husky catalog No. 38 (1938) on IA/ITCL is chock full of H-series tools and sets.
Big drool for that hex sliding T bar; then double drool on that whole set...don't have Husky that old, yet...Checking out some 19th and early 20th century architecture on a home tour in Marshall Michigan yesterday walked thru a little craft show set up and one cool dude was selling old salvage hardware but did have a few tools including this. Not used to seeing the larger size ( 1 1/4, 1 1/8 1 1/16 etc) 9/16 hex drive sockets like these. One of the houses we randomly walked by on our way to one of the featured houses was the literal inspiration for the House from the children's book / movie 'The House with a Clock in it's Walls'.
Hey now
Fixed it.HY now
Found it in the No. 38 catalog. Big thanks to whoever uploaded that catalog last year. This set is the #2232 and all I lack is a H3925 reversible ratchet and the H4300 adapter plug!I've got this older Husky "H" series 3/8 drive set. Sockets H3703, 3704, 3705-9, flex head H3721, 6" extension H3717 and the ever elusive 6" crossbar. Just wondering, cause there ain't no H series catalog, if one of you might have the same set and if there was a ratchet included. I know some earlier sets often didn't have a ratchet but I also know there's a H5125 ratchet from this time period.![]()
PerfectFixed it.
Nice looking set

I have a few of the old craftsmans. Here's one and a dunlap pair. The interesting thing is that I've never seen or heard of any original husky branded pliers or wrenches besides in this catNo, but they sure look a lot like the CRAFTSMAN pliers OTG posted in the Long C thread.
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Show your "Long C" Craftsman!
That font is certainly the long C era, but Smoke has a good point - is it on the shank? The 8 bits that fit in the box all have Craftsman on the Shaft in the same style as the Blue Cap . There were two similar Bits with the box of 8. One is Craftsman and the other is Irwin. See images.www.garagejournal.com
Tom