

Stiletto, a brand of Baker and Hamilton Hardware, of Sacramento, California. It was used on tools and cutlery. The trademark is now owned by Milwaukee Tools.
A good summary is located here:
Stiletto Tools History
Why don't you put a bug in Woody's ear and start a thread on the Stiletto history? It would be a nice place to host our photos of the cool logo, and flesh out the history for posterity!I need to drop the site owner a note. He's missing about the first 50 years of their history, including the famous owners who started it all, then branched out to Railroads, and Land Baroning
RTM had a good start here.Here is a quick summary of what I know of the Baker Hamilton Stiletto pre-history. I will start a new thread sometime soon with a bit more of the details (Hopefully do Woody73 proud). This is mostly assembled from the UC Riverside California Digital Newspaper Collection, Google Books, and other internet sources. This may be slightly out of order, as my notes aren't real clean yet.
Here is the twisted family tree, with several parallel paths combining over time. Every time I dig up a new branch, or root, it creates a whole ton of more digging to be done. This has been mostly untouched since 2013... And, as they keep adding more articles to the CDNC and Google Books, I get more sources.
Company started as
(Marcus C Hawley moved to SF in 1849)
Hawley Bros 1852
Hawley & Co 1867
Hawley Brothers Hardware incorporated 1882
LA: Hawley Kind & Co
San Diego: Hawley & Todd
Bought by Miller Sloss Scott 4/1/99
Sloss & Co started in 1856
Sloss Bros started 1894
Miller Sloss Scott started in 1891 as a mercantile. (Charles Miller president)
Huntington and Hopkins (Collis Huntington Treasurer, Mark Hopkins)
Unknown date EH Miller added to firm. Some of those names may be familiar in this article.
1868 Charles Miller added to firm
1871 SF Branch of Huntington Hopkins & Co formed
Huntington Hopkins Co incorporated (Feb 1888) Charles Miller onboard
1894 HHC sold to Miller Sloss Scott
1901 Firms of George Gibbs (no prehistory yet) and Miller Sloss Scott consolidated, to be know as Pacific Hardware and Steel
1908 Sloss Bros sold out to Pacific Company
Baker Hamilton (no prehistory) merged with Pacific Hardware and Steel, to be known as Baker-Hamilton Pacific Company
Eventually they dropped the Pacific.












Possible that 'cross' mark, as well as the Circle D, were identifiers of the casting suppliers who actually made the wrenches.Thanks 4.c! I don't get how Delco hoped that design would serve as name recognition for them, but what do I know?
From my Implement wrench days it reminds me of Milwaukee Harvester. Maybe post on tooltalk, a few farm tool guys over there.Here's a logo I hope someone can identify. It is on an tool I picked up at an estate sale the other day.
It appears to me to be a pseudo-surfers cross with either a vertical line or number 1 rampant.
I'm using an image off the internet because the logo on mine is difficult to see.
My tool is shown in the thumbnails and the logo on mine is located on the other side of the tool than depicted in the internet image.
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If by "more user-friendly" you mean something other than a random mess, A-Z is the only approach.I have been holding off on posting any more logos in this thread until I can devise a means to make it more user-friendly.
Here is a thread on old handsaw medallions, organized in a similar way to what Lugz is suggesting. very picture heavy. Great reference..
One solution would be to start a new 'Logos and TM's Guide' thread organized like your A-Z Mfgr's thread, where you control the first 20+ posts. Everything after that would be queries ("What is this logo?" "Help please, I can't seem to find this TM anywhere") or new entry recommendations. GJ'er (or non GJ'ers) who have found a tool with an unknown logo could page through the thread alphabetically looking for it.