Thank you. For any Bonney roundhead ratchet experts, I revived an old thread as my first post. https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/threads/bonney-ratchet-question.288043/#post-10997153Bumping this for @tpm2.

Right? When even a Chevrolet Dubl-Duti Step-Van was cool! Granted, it's cooler that it's toting immediate postwar Bonney tools, but I'd've been happy donning a uniform and driving that if it was a milk truck!Why do I feel that I missed some of the best times in USA, Private Lugnutz???
Great work, nothing about Bonney? I estimate his ownership to about 1888-1905/6. Very very little on Bonney during that time. Some ads, but that's about it.
These few links list him as the sole proprietor of BonneyThe records I checked are all Census, which don't record business titles. In 1910, he's still recorded as a Hardware Manufacture Employer. So he's doing something past your 1905/6 date (is that Durham buyout, maybe?). Maybe he continued to run Philadelphia Bonney while the Durhams got Allentown up and running.




There must be a record of sale somewhere.
What thread are you referring to?Jumping over here from the Vise Info thread, where Bonney is the subject du jour.
What thread are you referring to?
The first thing I did was check IA. I also collect mission furniture from around 1910 and the old catalogs are a huge resource. Its always exciting when a new one unearths itself.Catalog No. C-1 was an important catalog for collectors. Catalog No. 46-J (1946) was only 25 pages long, filling a void from No. 41 (1941). No. C-1 was the first major postwar catalog they published, ushering in some new styles, and a logo change. It's available on Internet Archive, but original paper copies are always nice to own. Nice find!
Nice Crescent-manufactured 5” slipjoints.


Welcome to the rabbit hole! Hopefully you will find it as fun as I have.I'm now officially a Bonney tool owner.
I bought an open end wrench at the thrift store with 13/32 on one end and 15/32 on the other. H-something.
For some reason, it looks new.
Just wanted to hijack this so I could share something I learned about Bonney fine tooth ratchets with a tiny selector spring inside that people often break taking apart the ratchet. I go these from a disposable Bic lighter with a short stick on the lighter. The tiny springs are basically the same diameter. I measure around 1mm OD on my broken one for a Bonney T708!
Well now I’ll have to see what the street sweepers have left behind… Today, just two $35 parking tickets, because I lost track of the day of the week, repainting my bedroom while on “vacation,” with a blend of “oops” markdowns from Home Depot - so I’m still ahead compared to retail.
There’s a guy in my neighborhood that collects cigarette butts up and down the block, so I’ll have to be cautious not to trigger him into thinking he’s got competition. (See - I’m not the most thrifty guy in my neighborhood!)

The gentleman has good taste!.....I really like Bonney wrenches




