The Acquisitions Dept got rained out at the flea this morning and he's been in the Curator's way all morning with his nervous unspent energy, so the Curator stalked off to think about some of yesterday's finds, leading to this short soliloquy on Mossberg.
Best known for very early, iconic, pressed-steel socket sets in wood boxes, which we have a thread for
here, and for their mass production of early tools aimed at Ford vehicles, some examples on this board
here, they're not nearly as well-known for their later production, after the industry got pushed into hot-forged sockets, which we have some examples of
here, or for their early production after their merger with the Automotive Parts Company (APCO), such as these excellent single offset DBE's, shown
here.
But they're
far less known for their wartime production, which AA doesn't even mention, ending their history section on Mossberg with a blurb on APCO-Mossberg's reputation as makers of torque-related products in their twilight years.
During WWII (and based on some of the markings and construction, probably Interwar and prewar and brought into service from old stock), Mossberg was a major supplier of spark plug wrenches (as in sh*tloads of them, and, harkening back to their roots, all pressed-steel!) and various 1/2-drive bars and handles to the US Army QMC and Ordnance Dept. The latter were forged, but crudely.
That's right, in an era when 600-lb gorillas like Plomb, Snap-on, Williams, and Blackhawk were just flexing their military production muscles, quirky old Mossberg was still out back in the blacksmith shed turning out extensions like these - often with just their Diamond-M logo and the wartime Federal Stock Numbers!


They're not that commonly found, but we've got a few in the stockroom!

