I read about the Syracuse Wrench co. But didn’t see the connection because I didn’t know this is an automotive tool. Those sets seem to be pretty rare, so it would be sacrilegious for me to keep this tool away from a set it came in (if it is truly from that company. A cursory look at the stuff on A.A. This morning didn’t show me anything, but I didn’t think it was them. Thanks for the replies folks, this is a good thing. I had that in my ‘to be cleaned’ pile for well over a month and it got lost under there. I hope it finds a rightful place…No maybe about it. Definitely a thing in the Teens and early 20's. As I alluded to in post #6, they came in the big Mossberg sets, too. As I was telling SGT41 in a PM, though, I have never seen the big Syracuse set. I have a small one and a medium one. Plenty of Mossberg 14's around. A few Blackhawk (all in your shop probably!Maybe a thing back then.
. Last day of the only estate sale in this area in years. I spent most of three days digging through everything and buying too much of it. One drawer in a bench couldn’t be opened because something heavy was in the way. That thing finally left , and I finally got to open it. Full of nice files and some taps and small stuff. I shoveled it all into a bucket and paid for it, didn’t find the tool we are talking about for a month. Threw it in the evaporust for a couple days, it wasn’t really rusty, but some or most of the original black oxide finish was flaking off. I saw that in the beginning and thought the letters st were part of the word Stanley-so a carpentry tool. Anyway I hope to see this go to a set it came in, and heartily thank the Brain Trust on this site for all the great help.! Hats Off!No maybe about it. Definitely a thing in the Teens and early 20's. As I alluded to in post #6, they came in the big Mossberg sets, too. As I was telling SGT41 in a PM, though, I have never seen the big Syracuse set. I have a small one and a medium one. Plenty of Mossberg 14's around. A few Blackhawk (all in your shop probably!). But that Syracuse set is rare. When I found it in a drawer full of files I was in a hurry, last day of the sale and I had gone through everything at least twice. One drawer had something big and heavy in front of it, couldn’t be opened…when that left I opened the drawer and bought pretty much everything in it for a few dollars. The piece we are talking about looked good, not much rust, but the original black finish was flaking. I thought it said Stanley, tossed it in the bucket. I soaked it in evaporust and hand cleaned it up.
EDIT: Just to qualify..., split pin pullers were clearly made and sold individually. I have a few. Vlchek, V&B if I remember correctly, and unmarked, too. I didn't mean to suggest otherwise. But putting them in bigger master mechanic type sets was clearly a "thing", and the SYRACUSE marking on that one strongly suggests it was from the No. 99 set.
Private Lugnutz said:There could be more.
The pullers were very common, and it is interesting to see them in roll ups (I'd love to find one if the rollup kits Vlchek was making for the Army QMC during WWI). Just to qualify, though, again, I've been focusing my comments explicitly on them being issued in big wood box socket sets, due to the Syracuse marking.They were ubiquitous well into the 1920s
Combine harvesters and balers have loads of them too... A tool like that is very useful!Model A and Model T rod nuts and main bearing nuts used cotter pins. Wheel bearings did all through the ‘60s and ‘70s. I’ve always considered them pretty common.
Private Lugnutz said:The pullers were very common, and it is interesting to see them in roll ups....
Oh, I knew you understood the significance, and I enjoyed you following it into auto kits. I was just further qualifying that while the tool was common, and may have even been more common in rollups, it wasn't that common in big wood box socket sets. In addition to identifying the handful of mfgrs who stuck one in their biggest sets, I also identified those who apparently didn't: Bog, Bay State, Billings & Spencer, Will B. Lane, Edgar C. Guthard ("Billmont"), and Chicago Hardware and Manufacturing. So, still a "thing", but not as widespread of a thing as I may have originally thought. Other than the Mossberg sets (plentiful) and the Blackhawk sets (rarer), I don't remember seeing examples of the Walden, RAY, or Syracuse sets with the cotter pin puller inside here or AA or anywhere else. Just the ads for the sets.Your comment regarding the OP's specimen is not lost on me -
We see BIG cotter pins occasionally, in a display, never installed. There's a shop somewhere breeding cotter pin pullers, a few grow up to be pry bars, runts are hoof picks for equestrians.Biggest cotter pin puller? Normal one for scale.