Made-in-Chicago Museum - An Industrial History in Everyday Objects: 1900-1970

Web Name: Made-in-Chicago Museum - An Industrial History in Everyday Objects: 1900-1970

WebSite: http://www.madeinchicagomuseum.com

ID:130328

Keywords:

Museum,An,Chicago,

Description:

Museum Artifact: Bally Mechanical Slot Machine Reel, c. 1930s Made By: Bally MFG Co., 2640 W. Belmont Ave., Chicago, IL Bally is one of the most recognizable and yet seemingly untethered brand names in America. It s associated—depending on your age and demographic—with arcade video games, casinos, rollercoaster theme parks, fitness club chains, and, starting in 2021, a stable of regional TV sports networks. The consistent thread, Museum Artifact: Ace Pilot Stapler 404, c. 1950s Made by: Ace Fastener Corp., 3415 N. Ashland Ave., Chicago, IL Trying to pinpoint the age of an Ace Pilot stapler—much like trying to figure out the complicated history of the Ace Fastener Company itself—is a bit of an exercise in futility. This stylishly utilitarian 404 model of the Pilot was based on a patent that Ace acquired way back in 1938, Museum Artifact: McLaughlin s Imperial Mocha Java Coffee Tin, c. 1900s, + 19 McLaughlin XXXX Coffee Trade Cards, 1890s Made By: W. F. McLaughlin Co., State Street and South Water Street., Chicago, IL Tastes Good—Always. You get the extra good quality in this coffee because it is imported direct and sold direct to retail dealers by W. F. McLaughlin Co., the largest exclusive coffee roasters in the world. Museum Artifact: Paymaster Series X-550 Check Writer Machine, 1960s Made By: The Paymaster Corp., 1811 W. Winnemac Ave., Chicago, IL The only way to have the Paymaster system when you NEED it is to have one all the time—NOW! —tagline from 1951 Paymaster sales manual Often kept well out of sight in the backrooms of banks and the HR departments of small businesses, Museum Artifact: End of the Trail Native American Print Wood Frame, 1925 Made By: Borin Manufacturing Company / Borin Art Products Co., 1325 S. Cicero Ave., Cicero, IL When it comes to talented men of potentially questionable character, some folks say you must learn to “separate the art from the artist”—to appreciate their work on its own merits. It’s not clear if this same philosophy applies to the art dealer, Museum Artifact: Swing Girl Electronic Mantle Clock, c. 1950 Made By: MasterCrafters Clock Radio Co., 216 N. Clinton St., Chicago, IL The MastersCrafters Clock Radio Company was a literal mom and pop shop through most of its 50 year existence—operated first by Ben Lerman and his wife Kate in the 1940s and ‘50s, then by their daughter Doris and her husband Bernard Ellman into the 1980s. Museum Artifacts: QRS Player Piano Autograph Word Roll #340 Forever is a Long Long Time, 1916 Made By: The Q-R-S Company, 412 Fine Arts Building Factory at 4829 S. Kedzie Ave. “Up to the advent of the Q-R-S Autograph Roll all player piano music rolls were much alike—all made the same mechanical way. . . The Q.R.S. Autograph Music Roll is hand played—it is practically a photographic record of the hand playing of an artist. Museum Artifact: Shure 708A Stratoliner Crystal Microphone, 1940s Made By: Shure Brothers, Inc., 225 West Huron Street, Chicago, IL “We know very well that absolute perfection cannot be attained, but we will never stop striving for it.” —Sidney N. Shure, founder of Shure Brothers, Inc. Introduced in 1940, the “Stratoliner” microphone in our museum collection finds the world famous Shure, Museum Artifact: Squirrel Nut Cracker, 1910s Made By: Kelling-Karel Company / Double Kay / Kelling Nut Co., 217 W. Huron St., Chicago, IL “The ‘Squirrel’ Nut Cracker is suitable for all kinds of table nuts, and is so designed that it cracks the shell but not the kernel. It is adjustable for different sizes of nuts—pecans, hazelnuts, walnuts, etc.. Are all easily cracked with it. Museum Artifact: Shotwell s Popcorn Brittle 3-to-1 Wax Candy Wrappers, 1920s Made By: Shotwell MFG Co., 3501 W. Potomac Ave., Chicago, IL The Shotwell Manufacturing Company is one of Chicago’s forgotten confectionery giants; a former popcorn, candy bar, and marshmallow maker that operated from 1903 to 1952. The firm was notably opportunistic in its business practices—sometimes a tad shady even—and it wouldn’t achieve the longevity or cultural relevance of local rivals like Cracker Jack, Museum Artifacts: 1933 Chicago World s Fair Postcards (C.T. American Art and C.T. Colortone), published by Max Rigot Selling Company Made By: Curt Teich Company, 1733-1755 W. Irving Park Rd., Chicago, IL “If one were seeking the vernacular aesthetic of a period, the postcard is where you will find it . . . It is the least elitist form of artefact.” —Tom Phillips, Museum Artifact: Olson Rug 75th Anniversary Calendar, 1949 Made By: Olson Rug Co., 2800 N. Pulaski Rd., Chicago, IL No other manufacturing business in Chicago ever had a headquarters quite like that of the Olson Rug Company. From 1935 to 1965, the sprawling Olson factory campus at the northwest corner of Diversey Avenue and Pulaski Road—with its stunning man-made waterfalls, rock gardens, sculptures, Museum Artifact: Deagan 4-Bar Dinner Chime Bells Mallet, 1920s Made By: J. C. Deagan Inc., 1770 W. Berteau Ave., Chicago, IL When you summon your guests to the dining room with a Deagan Dinner Chime, your invitation is carried to their ears by the sweetest musical sound in the world. At once compelling, yet entrancingly beautiful, it carries with it the spirit of hospitality, Museum Artifact: $1000 Guaranteed Moth Killer, 1928 Made By: B. Heller Co. / Chicago Insecticide Laboratory, S. Calumet Ave. and E. 40th St., Chicago, IL “We guarantee that $1,000.00 Guaranteed Moth Killer will kill clothes moths—and carpet beetles and their eggs and larvae—when it is thoroughly sprayed upon them, and agree to forfeit $1,000.00 to anyone proving to us that it cannot do this.” —Chicago Insecticide Company, Museum Artifact: Hump Hair Pins Set No. 6, 1920s Made By: Hump Hair Pin MFG Co. / Gaylord Products Co., 1936 S. Prairie Ave., Chicago, IL “Ingenuity is not always confined to skyscrapers and bridges. The inventor often achieves fame through smaller means. The Hump hairpin is a new invention ingenious enough to secure a niche in the woman’s hall of fame for the man who devised it.” —Hump Hair Pin advertisement,

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An Industrial History in Everyday Objects: 1900-1970

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