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Knickerbocker Leather Tool Case

Private Lugnutz

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I found this vintage black case at my Early Bird flea market this morning.

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GJ member Lump found a similar (but not the same) case back in May that most likely belonged to a traveling National Cash Register (NCR) repairman. Here is a link to Lump's GJ thread. (Incidentally, Lump's thread attracted a former NCR repairman, JusBil, who was instrumental in identifying the case, and his four (4) total GJ posts, all on that thread, are insightful and wryly humorous.)

If you've never seen one of these before, they were built for traveling sales reps, salesmen, and repairmen. It has a deep compartment, a sort of “top box,” if you will, built in under that main flap. If you look close, you can see a line of stitching all the way around the case, outlining this main compartment.

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It also has a compartment underneath that, where tin small parts trays slide in from a flap in one end.

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The ends and bottom are pressboard, everything else is leather. The handle is a steel frame with a leather cover. I haven't measured it yet, but it's about 14" x 10" x 6".

Lump's case had no markings that I recall. This one was made by the Knickerbocker Case Company, Chicago.

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That patent (1,947,718) on the latches, granted February 30, 1934, to H.H. Labadie, for what he called a "Brief and Sample Case," was for the general construction and top latching mechanisms. To view the full patent drawings and text on the USPTO site, click here.

Like Lump's case, this case had some tools in it. These seemed to cross a few decades. Like the tools in Lump's case, a few of them - three in particular, all clearly marked with an unmistakable name, are very telling of its use. Small machine repair, to drop a big hint, but not cash registers.

I will be posting more photos of the case and the tools I found in it as soon as I have the opportunity.
 
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bmwrd0

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I have one. I will try to take pics of it when I get back in town, but I don't think it says Knickerbocker anywhere. It is newer though, with non-metallic trays.
 
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Private Lugnutz

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I have an old tackle box Knickerbocker.
That thing is sweet!

I have one. I will try to take pics of it when I get back in town, but I don't think it says Knickerbocker anywhere. It is newer though, with non-metallic trays.
I look forward to seeing pics.

I took some photos this morning, didn't get a chance to upload yet.
 
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Private Lugnutz

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Private Lugnutz

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The contents of the main compartment were a variety of stuff that didn’t really give me too many clues.

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The squeeze oiler with the long skinny offset stem, the Kodak film canister (filled with a thick lube), and the Bristol tee handle wrench are possibly original and related. Maybe the circuit tester. The junk drawer utility knife is generic. And I think the classic WALDES TRUARC snap ring pliers were thrown in later, unless the guy found a dual-use for them on the job for some similar kind of retaining rings on a machine. I have no idea what the thin copper tube fitted into the steel tube is, but it looks like a component to me, and one that might distribute a liquid substance such as ink – giving a little of the potential identification away.

Also no idea on this – which is either a clothes hanger for a Lilliputian’s closet, or an elaborately made clip of some kind.

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The contents of the thinner of the two pull-out trays was not much different.

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Nuts and bolts, thumbscrew fasteners, twist wire connectors, fuses, a set of loose hex (“Allen”) wrenches, and another thin copper tube.

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Private Lugnutz

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The second tray was more revealing.

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More fasteners, a set of keys (Rifkin ARCO LOCK, Wilkes-Barre PA, which date to the 1970’s, used on sliding latches)...

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...a neat little wrench with a twist in it for easy finger turning (part number 2155x22)…

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…and these three tools:

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A block, a special 6-point socket wrench with a built-in spin handle, and a special 12-point socket wrench with a built-in spin handle.

The tools are all marked “GESTETNER” and “MADE IN ENGLAND”, “Tool No. 101”, “Tool No. 103”, and “Tool No. 171”.

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Per Wiki, link here, “The Gestetner, named after its inventor David Gestetner, is a type of duplicating machine, its brand name and the associated company. Despite Wiki claiming that "Gestetnering" became “somewhat of a verb” in the early 20th century (if this is true, not quite on par with Xerox), I had never heard of it before. They were built in London, England, from 1906 through the 1990’s, and operated in 153 different countries.

Per Wiki, “The Gestetner Cyclograph was a stencil method duplicator that used a thin sheet of paper coated with wax (originally kite paper was used), which was written upon with a special stylus that left a broken line through the stencil - breaking the paper and removing the wax covering. Ink was forced through the stencil - originally by an ink roller - and it left its impression on a white sheet of paper below until repetition provided aquantity.”

Here’s what it looked like:

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In short, I think this guy was repairing primitive copy machines in the 50's, maybe earlier, and then more modern and electronic machines into the 1970's before he retired.
 
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