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Great to hear you have some interest in old tools. I grew up in a house that my great, great grandfather had originally built, and was then added on to and modernized somewhat over the years. His tool chest (and I do mean chest, as it was a literally a wooden chest about '6 to '7 long, by about '3 tall, and about 3' deep) with all his tools in it was in my attic growing up. He ran a drydock and maintained and repaired canal boats on the Ohio Canal back in the early to mid-1800s, in what is now part of the Cuyahoga Valley National Park. There is a marker on the towpath in the park showing where the dry dock was located at, just a little ways down the street from where my childhood home was, right across from the 11-mile lock that is still in place. The tools were oversized wood and metal, and especially made for working on the canal boats. Unbelievable shape for their age. Unfortunately, when my grandparents, who lived next door, and my parents all moved out back in the 70s, because the National Park Service wanted to take over and remove the residents and houses from the newly created National Park, my family donated the tools and tool chest to the National Park Service, who was supposed to then use it for display in a sort of historical village they were going to erect in another part of the new National Park. Typical government though, lied about it, never did the development, and years later when I went to various offices/locations in the park and asked park personnel what ever happened to the tools, nobody knew anything. My government tax dollars at work. And especially glad to hear you may have rescued some old tools that otherwise could have just been discarded. Who knows what historical importance they may have had. The only thing left from my old house was a pair of metal ice skates that you would clip onto your shoes/boots to then go ice skating with. They were probably from the late 1800s/very early 1900s, and I used to play with and try to use them on a local pond or two when I was young. For whatever reason, the park service did, and still does, have them displayed at the Canal Visitor Center in Valley View, on a part of the still existing Ohio Canal. The only things apparently still left from the old tools and items my family had donated. What a waste. I doubt there would have been many, if any, complete surviving tools sets from people who worked on the Erie or Ohio Canal canal boats from back in the day. No one in the family ever thought to take pictures of the tools and the chest because we believed the government, and expected everything donated to end up on display one day. Like I said, so much for trusting and believing a branch of our federal government!!! |
#2
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Bob thanks for sharing that story! Yes too bad about the vintage tools, but at least they still have the ice skates. As far as the tools, I had many vintage tools handed down from my dad who had them from his dad. I still use many of them today in my business. So I am always on the hunt for tools. The person I bought the tools from at the garage sale had tools and other neat items all the way back to the Civil war handed down through his family all these years, including that 1914 CJ Bender.
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In my case, had I known then what I know now, I would have squirreled away some of the tools and items from the house for myself, and made sure to at least get pictures of everything. Oh well, I can still reminisce at least. And again, great pickups for you. I'd love to run across a garage sale like that. Last good deal I came across was at a flea market this past Memorial Day weekend. Got a complete, nice condition 9/1/41 Life Magazine with Ted Willams on the cover, along with a 1969, Jim Beam commemorative baseball whiskey decanter, for a combined $25. Nowhere near as great what you came across, but was cool for me. |
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how negotiations went down for the '14 CJ? Unless I missed it in the thread. Or the backstory of how the owner came int possession of the card.
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Pete, see above in this thread as to how it happened.
He was an older man who had many things passed down from grandfather to his Dad and finally to him. Some things were passed down from his Great grandfather going back to the Civil War that he showed me. From what he told me the CJ Bender was in his family pretty much from back around 1914.
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Pete Midwest
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