THAT is effing awesome. When I worked on the bridge we still had tooling from Coast in Oakland... so many of the cool mom and pop machine shops that built our nation and kept it running... lots of great history gone forever. (BTW,, Coast Tools in Oakland is now - best sit down - a Supercuts in an upper class neighborhood. Used to be blue collar light industrial, now it's where the wealthy kids go to get bespoke concierge pizza.... Grrr....) Sign of the times - my favorite BBQ house (Flints) went under because the people who supported it for a generation or 2 could no longer afford to live there. I know it happens everywhere, that one just hit close to home.
Sadly I watched a lot of the old school blue collar neighborhoods in the "east bay" (across the SFOBB from SF), and the family businesses that raised, fed, and clothed generations, generations of skill as machinists, ironworkers, foundry operators, stamp press men, industrial architects, welders, pipefiters, mechanics, riveters, and families who put it all on the line to start a business become yuppie retail outlets, Venmo and Grubhub centric areas... and ran out those generations who weren't afraid to get their hands dirty for a paycheck. Sorry... watching it happen kind of hurt. A lot. (Especially since I was one of those blue collar nuts who maintained huge bridges - I can still give you specs on torque for a 2 1/4" A325 bolt series, and the tightening sequence used...)
Sorry, got distracted!
Drill bits? Hell yeah. The ones I love are the larger sizes wrapped in waxed paper, cosmolined, and in woven cotton bags. Mostly WW2 and earlier, but yeah, those are great. AND... I can go to hardware stores here, the old old ones in little towns that have been run by the same family for a few generations, and still find stuff like that. Makes me a little nostalgic, and more than a little happy!