So I made an interesting discovery today...
On a recent Precision-Bilt thread, linked
here, GJ member notlob recently posted some excerpts from the 1955 Spiegel Christmas catalog, which he got from a site called the Wishbook Web. It’s an archive and resource for collectors of vintage direct-order catalogs such as Sears, Montgomery Ward’s, and Spiegel and the like. I started poking around to see if any of the other catalogs might help fill some holes we have, and sure enough, there is a
1946 Sears Christmas catalog with four (4) pages of tools!
That’s important because the Craftsman catalogs in the public domain in this era are 1942 and 1948 (technically, November 1947), both available for viewing on Tools Archive. I don’t know of a source for anything in between, and that gap, from wartime to the post-war catalogs, a time of transition for Craftsman, including changes in wrench and socket wrench set suppliers, has always been fraught with questions and theories.
I don’t know if the 1946 Sears Christmas catalog answers any of them, and it may actually raise more.
The machinists’ chests and toolboxes shown on page 203, linked
here, already have metal “Heritage” badges, not “Long/Geometric C” decals.
The pieces in the socket wrench set (16-pc 1/2-inch drive, Set No. 99 N 04409) shown on page 205, linked
here, are all =CRAFTSMAN= =V= (thought to be Moore Drop Forge) in shape and style and markings, not New Britain “Long/Geometric C”. (See Thumbnail for excerpt.)
I did not expect to see that, frankly.
Heck, the 1948 (11/47) Craftsman catalog still includes some New Britain “Long C” BE/(H) type pieces mixed in with the =CRAFSMAN= =V= type pieces. Not until 1949 were they completely dropped.
And, if you do a direct one-for-one comparison, that same 16-pc set (No. 99 PC 04409), shown on page 2 of a Craftsman catalog published a year
later (November 1947), is all New Britain tools!
Christmas 1946 is way earlier than I expected to see the MDF introduced, and a longer transition or overlap period of mixed suppliers/styles (over
two years, Christmas 1946 to 1948) that I have been previously thinking of as only one year, basically 1948.