i have 2 partial sets, each a mix of branded/unbranded. sizes i need are3/8x7/16 and 1 1/16x1 1/4, the biggest size.




This spanner would have been purchased by Ford from Williams and distributed by them to a factory, assembly plant, or dealership. It is unlikely that it would have been sold by Ford to a customer. The Buffalo plant opened in 1914, and the company moved it's headquarters there about 1919. Williams stopped using a face marking on wrenches that included "Brooklyn" around 1924. That may have been when the Brooklyn plant was closed.I found this adjustable spanner from J. H. Williams Co. in a box of tools that I picked up at an estate sale. I've done some research on Alloy Artifacts and searched here and this one seems unusual in a couple of ways, and I was hoping that the Williams collectors could shed some light on it. First off, it shows both Brooklyn and Buffalo on the wrench and the others I have seen had one or the other, or "USA". Secondly, it has the pre-1948 Ford logo in script on it. I see where Williams made tools for Craftsman and others, but have not found any mention of them making Ford tools. Has anyone here seen other Ford tools made by Williams, or can you shed any light on this one? Thank you in advance!
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Thank you!This spanner would have been purchased by Ford from Williams and distributed by them to a factory, assembly plant, or dealership. It is unlikely that it would have been sold by Ford to a customer. The Buffalo plant opened in 1914, and the company moved it's headquarters there about 1919. Williams stopped using a face marking on wrenches that included "Brooklyn" around 1924. That may have been when the Brooklyn plant was closed.
The spanner forgings didn't progress like the wrenches, and stayed very much the same over the entire production history. This makes it harder to pin down a date of manufacture, since they were likely produced using supplies of old forgings that had been stockpiled. Your wrench could have been forged when the Brooklyn plant was still in operation, but finished and sold a decade later!







Never having seen one before, have to wonder if it's factory or not. Most modified tools will have a special stamp, but when it comes to ratchets, pretty sure I've only seen one that was stamped!Williams, like Proto, would sell you any tool you wanted them to build. This is why you see so much uncataloged material from both companies.
Cool find!
That is because you emailed Snap-On (current owner of the Williams brand). jH Williams basically went completely kaput in the 80s, filed for bankruptcy, and SnapOn bought the name. Pretty much everything, including dirty paper (aka catalogs) and any industrial knowledge was gone at that time. So what SO is saying is that from when they acquired it until now, they didn't do anything like that. Nothing about JH Williams.So, as I mentioned in the above post, I emailed Williams about the ratchet and got the following reply:
"We have never made a ratchet with a light. I would be glad to send you a new S-52 ratchet if you would send me that one. Always like to see what our customers do to our product, and this would be a good example."
I think I will decline the offer and see if I can come up with a way to make it functional again, (assuming it ever was functional).
As some have mentioned, perhaps this is a 'Franken-ratchet' made from parts of another brand ratchet with a light feature. The parts may have even come from some other type of tool or machine and were adapted to the S-52. I will investigate further and update the thread. Thanks for all your interest and replies.



