Should be delivered to me this Friday.I'm waiting to hear if Unaiu got the eBay Zenel No. Z25 6-piece GMTK wrench set that chrstrumpetdude tipped off last week. I had contacted the seller and he said he thought all the wrenches were "W" (1945) and Unaiu told me he was going for it if it stayed low, which it did, selling on 1 bid for the asking price ($35), which is a great deal for that set.

1921M 1922N 1923O 1924P 1925QNo date code, but the B-Shield and BON{/}NEY name date it to 1921 to 1925.
I will go through my loose wrenches later, but I pulled some wrenches off my board.They managed to get those forged-in date codes onto the H-series wrenches, so I don’t think the small size of the 21 is the reason the date code isn’t on it; I think it’s because it predates the date codes. I’ll try to pull one of that era (with no date code) in a larger size.
That would probably help, Todd, and I know I have copious notes on this somewhere, too, and I can't find them - but the issues are the variance of other markings (e.g. MADE IN U.S.A. vs U.S.A., the way the sizes are expressed - no standards, one standard only, two standards, etc) on wrenches with the same trademark, and slight variations in the shield on the trademark itself. See the wrenches I just posted for examples.I found all those trademarks. I believe they're on way back machine version of my site.
You have a point about the embedded-shield logo - it may have taken some time to develop it after the Durhams took over. But the Princeton-shield has to date from 1909 or so, and been replaced soon after with the B-shield, with maybe the transitional combined shield in between.
Lacking clear dateable illustrations, my argument is psychological: in 1909 the worthiest thing the Durham brothers had done was graduate from Princeton. It makes sense they would use that shield then, because of their ardor for their alma mater. But as they got things rolling in Allentown and experienced a bit more of life (and perhaps also encountered pressure to establish a less derivative logo), the B-shield, unambiguously representing the Bonney company name, replaced it. I think all that happened in the early teens, maybe by 1913. Certainly by 1914, because the transitional shield is all over the catalog. The stamped embedded-shield logo on the face by the mid-teens, and the addition of the forged-in “U.S.A.” or “MADE IN U.S.A.” (Depending on size) to the B-shield on the shank around 1920. Date codes start to show up on these, then the B-shield ends around May1925 and “Made in U.S.A.” is stamped on the face.
They managed to get those forged-in date codes onto the H-series wrenches, so I don’t think the small size of the 21 is the reason the date code isn’t on it; I think it’s because it predates the date codes. I’ll try to pull one of that era (with no date code) in a larger size.

Oh man...
I hope you get that! My roller is missing a top box...![]()
Yes those mismatched handles kinda ruin it. If you pay the shipping I will take it off your hands.Yes those mismatched handles kinda ruin it. If you pay the shipping I will take it off your hands.
I find a few Bonneys in my travels and always pick them up, as they show pretty good resale demand. Any help dating this one? as I noticed that it didn't make the "cutoff" on the newest end of Alloy Artifacts, I reckon it really isn't too old. Looks like great quality in the open end fittings, and comparatively lousy forging at the shanks.......
Yes. I may never know. Cool, nonetheless.
Here’s today’s eDelivery: a 1931 (EW) battery wrench 6481.
Nice snag George.Found a triangular blade razor knife today at a pawnie shop. Don't need another one - but it was a Bonney! And - for 50 cents - I could spare the change.
Cleaned up nice.
Bonneyman, I'm kicking myself as I can't seem to locate it right at the moment, but I'm certain I have the same blade handle with the same Part No. but branded Stanley. Possible?