Thanks to our friend "Acme Ron" in Phoenix, we are going to take you back to an Appliance Show held sometime in the late 1920s or early 1930s. From your perspective, the refrigerators, ranges, washers, etc. are pretty mundane -- everyone has these things. However, eighty years ago, things were very different -- those noisy and small General Electric (GE) "Monitor Top" refrigerators were the cutting edge of technology. They sold for $215 when $1/day was a good wage for workingmen (The Average Joe of the time would have had to work almost 7 months to earn enough to pay for this. $215 then is equivalent to about $10,000 today.)

The Appliance Show was just a little bit more upscale than the Appliance Store. Here is a photo of a typical appliance store of the late 1920s





Schneider's Appliance Store

circa 1929... Click to Enlarge





So, as you look through these photos, put yourself in the mindset of going to a fabulous home design expo to see all the marvelous (and expensive) things that the rich and famous have today. Also, make a note that these items, overpriced in 1932, were to become commonplace. So, if some movie star, drug dealer, or environmental lawyer has an exotic gadget today, you'll be able to afford one tomorrow.

For those of you who came in from a search engine with a specific interest, here is a quick way to navigate the page:

Others should just scroll along and pretend that they are walking around the show.

The GE Booth(s)

Here is the booth of the Pacific Tire Company, one of two purveyors of General Electric appliances at the show. At the time, many stores that dealt with auto products diversified into home appliances. Examples are the Western Auto chain and Firestone stores.





The Pacific Tire Company Booth

Click Photo to Enlarge It



Here is the booth of the L.H. Bennett Company that seems to be offering the same products as Pacific Tire. The only difference seems to be that the Bennett Company has taken great pains (and 24 inch letters) to advertise its "4 Year Service Plan."





The L.H. Bennett Company Booth

Click Photo to Enlarge It



GE was popular at the show: the L.E. Kinkaid Company offered GE appliances as well. This booth features a display that shows clearly how the "Direct Drive" dishwasher (see below) works.





The L.E. Kinkaid Company Booth

Click Photo to Enlarge It



The Refrigerators

Household refrigerators, of a sort, had been on the market for about 20 years before this photo was taken. GE was the first, marketing in 1911 a wooden model invented in France by a French monk, Abbé Marcel Audiffren. Called the Audiffren, it sold for $1000, twice the cost of a car, and was produced in France. Spurred by World War I, the first successful US-made refrigerator to enter full scale production in the US was the Kelvinator after Lord Kelvin the father of Thermodynamics. Introduced in 1918, it was made of wood, and looked pretty much like a small bedroom night stand, with a single door. (See the Westinghouse page below).







Advertisements for the Monitor Top

(left) Suggests that the Monitor-Top Would Last Longer Than Time

(right) Dollars and Sense argument

Click Photo to Enlarge





This one-of-a-kind iconic unit was one of the first "affordable" refrigerators for the "average" American family, costing about $215 at the time for a basic model. (i.e. an 80% reduction from the "boutique" price, but still a very serious expenditure) They were produced from 1927-1937 and became a universally recognized icon. Note that a lot of the appliances have Queen Anne style "legs". This made it easy to clean under the device.





(L.) The Two-Door Model (R.) Good for the Whole Family

Click Photo to Enlarge





Freon was discovered in 1930 by Delco chemist Thomas Midgely. Non-toxic, Freon was adopted by all manufacturers, and refrigerators became safe for use in the home, until it was found to be creating a hole in the Ozone layer. Now, other environmentally safe (but much more expensive...) chemicals are used.

Apparently, the Queen Anne legs were not compatible with the Streamlined Era -- In 1929, just two years after the "Monitor-Top," the Kelvinator Four refrigerator debuted with a flat top. Its cabinet and compressor were cleanly encased in a simple white metal box. It set the design type form for home refrigerators for the rest of the century.







Patent Diagrams for the Monitor Top and Its Major Competitor

GE Monitor Top Patent Nos. 2,059,016 and 2,002,444

Kelvinator Four Patent No. 1,955,910

Click to Enlarge

Click here if you want to learn how to get Patent Drawings





From then on, it was a battle of the Industrial Designers...

General Electric, noticing the success of the Kelvinator Four, engaged Henry Dreyfuss to re-design its Monitor-Top, who designed a flat top version, placing the compressor beneath the cabinet to achieve the simple white box shape. The design was introduced under both the GE and Hotpoint brand names in 1933. Norman Bel Geddes designed an Electrolux refrigerator for Servel in 1934, who had introduced their first model in 1926, using a gas-heat absorption system invented in Sweden. In 1935, Sears, Roebuck & Company wanted to join the fray, and asked Henry Dreyfuss to design a refrigerator for them. He was too busy, so recommended Raymond Loewy. Subsequently, Loewy did the Coldspot Super Six for Sears, making it a leader in the industry, and, not incidentally, providing Loewy with his first major career boost. (We'll see more of Loewy further on down this page...)







Industrial Design Enters the Kitchen!

Dreyfuss-designed GE Flat-Top Patent No.2,114,880

Norman Bel Geddes Servel Refrigerator, Patent D-95,817

Raymond Loey Sears Refrigerator, Patent D-103,823

Click to Enlarge

Click here if you want to learn how to get Patent Drawings





Although the photos shown below come from the 1940s, they will give you some idea of what conditions on a refrigerator assembly line were like



The Refrigerator Assembly Line c. 1946

Click Either Photo to Enlarge It



The Dishwasher

1909 the Walker brothers, hardware merchants in Syracuse, applied for and received a patent for a new dishwashing machine. As a marketing dvice (to see if anyone would be interested in buying their machines),they sent out postcards showing a rather small lady operating the machine prospective customers . The response was so good that they decided to manufacture the machines in the rear of their store. The 1911 model shown below included a pulley and a belt so the machine could be operated "automatically" by means of a gasoline engine. Of course like the earlier dishwashers the machine still need to filled with water and emptied by hand.





Early Walker Dishwashers (l.) 1911 (r.) 1918

Not Exactly the Stuff that Dreams Are Made Of



In 1913 when the Walker Brothers hardware store was wired for electricity they produced thier first electric dishwasher. It sold for $120 as compared to the $20.00 hand crank model. Following World War I, the Walker dishwasher took on a new look. The tub was smoothed out and painted and the legs were shaped to harmonize with the age of short skirts. The building boom of the early 1920's stimulated the design of a Dishwasher-Sink combo which drew the attention of the builders of the day. These early machines were driven by an external motor through gear





In-Sink Dishwashers (l.) 1924 (r.) 1927

These Models Convinced GE





In 1930 GE acquired the Walker Brothers Company and moved the dishwasher production to the Hotpoint factory in Chicago. The first General Electric branded dishwasher was produced in 1932. It had a square tub, a single control handle, rubber coated steel dish racks and the first automatic water level measuring valve. The free standing unit (shown in the Pacific Tire photo) had a front panel which served as a shelf when raised.



Operating the Insink Dishwasher

Dishwasher Patent No. 1,583,710

Click Either Photo to Enlarge It

Click here if you want to learn how to get Patent Drawings





General Electric still uses "Direct Drive" in is advertising.

Those of you with need for even more detail about the history of dishwashers should consult this website.

The Hotpoint Range

So, why were all the GE appliances named Hotpoint?

Earl H. Richardson was a meter reader for the Ontario Power Company in the early 1900’s. (This is Ontario, the suburb of Los Angeles, not the place in Canada...) In his spare time, he experimented with electrifying flat irons. Designing a small, lighter weight model (flatirons could weigh 5-10 pounds each), he convinced his company to generate power all day every Tuesday (ironing day) so power customers could use his new iron. He reasoned that if enough electric irons were in use, customers would demand more power and the high rates would be reduced. It worked. By 1904, he left the power company and started up the Pacific Electric Heating Company on Euclid Avenue just below the railroad tracks to manufacture electric irons.

A major problem was soon identified: the iron got too hot in the center of the ironing plate. Richardson asked his wife Mary for advice. She suggested that he make an iron with more heat at the point for easier pressing around buttonholes, ruffles and pleats. He fabricated this new improved version and gave several to local laundresses to try for one week. When he returned, they refused to part with "the iron with the hot point". In 1905, he made and sold more electric irons under the"Hotpoint" name than any other company in America.

I love this part!

Between 1911 and 1917, Richardson found other innovative ways to marry electricity with household appliances. Thus was born the "El" line (El meaning "electric"): El Perco (an electric coffeepot), El Chafo (chafing dish), El Tosto (electric toaster), El Stovo (an early hotplate), El Eggo, El Teballo (electric teapot),El Boilo (an Immersion Heater) and El Warmo (electric heating pad). An early crockpot, (the "jug cooker) came out in 1929.





Saturday Evening Post Ad for the El Perco, y mucho mas





Here are some of the patents that Earl Richardson and his employees at the Pacific Electric Heating Company obtained:





"El-Patents" de Hotpoint

Patent for the Calrod Electric Stove Heating Element, No. 780,226

Patent for the Iron with the "Hot Point", No. 792,792

Patent for Submerged Heating in a Percolator, No. 1,092,523 [viva El Perco]

Patent for an Electric Curling Iron, No. 900,292 [possibly the "El Curlo"]

Click to Enlarge

Click here if you want to learn how to get Patent Drawings





The Curling Iron may take some explanation: at the time, ladies heated their curling iron by using an alcohol burner. The hot iron would be wound around the hair to permanently alter the fibers of the hair, creating curls. The "El Curlo" model would have screwed into a lamp socket! When it was hot enough,, milady would use the wood handles to unscrew it and proceed with heat treating her hair.

We were thrilled and delighted when our reader Kevin actually found an "El Perco". He devoted a lot of time and energy in taking (and sending) these excellent photos.





Exterior of the "El Perco"







Details of the Handle and the Manufacturer's Plate

Click to Enlarge







The El Boilo

Thank You, Terri!!

Click to Enlarge



During our extensive resarch, we found a highly copyrighted photo of a sign in the Arizona Power Company and Prescott Gas and Electric, (dated March 28, 1916) lists the costs of operating various electric appliances, such as"El Grillo, Toast and Eggs 12 cents";"El Tosto, 8 slices toast 12 cents";"El Perco, 7 cups coffee 11 cents";"El Chafo, Welch Rarebit 11 cents"; El Boilo, Heat Your Shaving Water 6 cents";"El Stovo, 12 cents"; El Comfo, 1 cent";"Curling Tong Heater 6 cents";"El Teballo, "El Teballo, 11 cents"; "Iron with a Hotpoint Iron 11 cents". If you visit the above link, you'll see that on display are several types of light fixtures and light bulbs, a hot water heater, a gas stove and a vacuum cleaner. Small appliances such as toasters ("EL Tosto") and a waffle iron appear to be for sale as well as several lamps, including an Arts and Crafts style table lamp in the foreground. There is only one light fixture which is not for display high above the work area - not very good lighting for a power company. Multiply by about 30 to find equivalents in 2008 dollars - the El perco would have cost you about $3.30 in electricity alone to brew 7 cups of coffee (close to 50 cents per cup!)

I think that if I could have any one of these, it would be the "El Perco", although the "El Stovo" would be a close second. These certainly are "non-PC".

With World War I raging in Europe, a merger was proposed with Richardson’s Hotpoint Electric Heating Company, George Hughes (owner/inventor of the electric range) and the heating device section of the General Electric Company. The new company, formed in 1918, was known as the Edison Electric Appliance Company. In 1952, Hotpoint became a division of the General Electric Company. The Ontario plant continued to manufacture electric irons until it closed in 1982.

It gets better:

Several milestones marked the Ontario plant’s history: the 20 millionth iron (gold-plated) was presented to Una Winter, Earl Richardson’s sister in 1941; the 50 millionth produced in 1956 with President Eisenhower looking on; the 100 millionth in 1969 and the 150 millionth in 1980. Legend has it that in 1982, the last iron was buried in the grounds of the Ontario plant.

"Hotpoint" became the generic name for all of GE's resistance heat devices. As far as stoves are concerned, GE acquired the patents for a removable burner element called a "calrod". The metallurgical properties of this gadget enebled the burner to reach cooking temperature in a very short time. It also made it easy to change burner elements. This was a major advertising gimmick. here is an ad from the Montreal Jewish News from August of 1927:





The Calrod was the Key to the Hotpoint Range





Here's a lady cooking on the mirror image of the range at the trade show





Although these photos come from the 1940s, they will give you some idea of what conditions on a Hotpoint assembly line were like



The Hotpoint Assembly Line c. 1946

Click Either Photo to Enlarge It



The Magic Maid Mixer

In the background, you will see a "Magic Maid" fold-away mixer, designed by Patrick J. Fitzgerald of Torrington, Connecticut. The mixer dates from the early-1930s. The photos were sent to us by our friend "Acme Ron" from Phoenix.



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The Magic Maid Mixer

Manufacturers Plate

Magic Maid Patent No. 89,565(folded)

Click to Enlarge





Mr. Fitzgerald provided a very ingenious mixer with a handle and locking device that allowed it to supply power in both a vertical mode (mixing) and a horizontal mode (juicing), cutting, etc.





The Versatile Magic Maid Mixer

Patent No. 89,565 (Vertical)

Patent No. 89,565 (Horizontal)

Patent No. 1,898,945 (Internal)

Patent No. 1,898,945 (Juicer)

Click to Enlarge

Click here if you want to learn how to get Patent Drawings





So, with that, we bid farewell to the Pacific Tire Booth.

The Chanslor and Lyon Booth

(Leonard Appliances)

Chanslor and Lyon were the dealership for Leonard appliances. You'll note their clever use of cutout figures of housewives using the product.





The Chanslor and Lyons Booth

Click Photo to Enlarge





Those cardboard cutouts are serving a purpose -- they are illustrating the New Feature for 1932, the "Len-a-Dor" foot controlled door latch (red arrow) that was specifically designed to aid "The Juggler" -- the busy housewife with both hands full of dishes.





The 1932 Leonard Refrigerator

..with the Len-a-Dor





The Leonard Company was founded in 1881 by Charles H. Leonard in Grand Rapids, Michigan. The famous Leonard "Cleanable" Refrigerator came about after a mishap in the Leonard home: a pail of hot cooling lard was left inside an ice box on top of a cake of ice, resulting in melted ice, a spilled pail and cooled lard spilled all over. Charles created his refrigerator with removable liners and flues. In 1885, Leonard introduced metal shelves and improved the door-locking mechanisms. 1907 saw the introduction of porcelain lined interiors, which further enhanced the cleanability and sanitation of refrigerators. The refrigerator cabinets were made of highly varnished carved-oak, brass fixtures, and enhanced with mirrors. Electrical refrigerators were introduced in 1918, and by 1925, Leonard was building one out of every five refrigerators produced in the United States, which amounted to 1000 refrigerators per day. Leonard merged with Kelvinator in 1926. The Leonard brand of appliances continued to be sold exclusively through Leonard dealers (such as Chanslor and Lyons), as well as through Canadian and English dealers.

The Norge Booth

This photo shows an owlish salesman surrounded by Norge refrigerators and vacuum cleaners. Note the interesting art deco rug in the foreground.





The Norge Booth

Click Photo to Enlarge





The Norge refrigerator line was headed by a brilliant engineer named Howard Blood who dabbled in both technical and aesthetic aspects of refrigeration. Of some note, the early Norge refrigerators were among the first to offer "features" in addition to a cold box. The following patents illustrate adjustable shelves, and a "water reservoir" the fore-runner of today's Ice and Cold Water dispensers. Of note, Mr. Blood also designed the distinctive base that the refrigerator cabinet sat upon.







Norge Refrigerator Features

Howard Blood Design for the Norge Base, D-92,158

Norge Adjustable Shelves, patent No. 2,080,907

Howard Blood Design for a Cold Water Reservoir for the Norge Refrigerator, Patent No. 1,867,135

Click to Enlarge





This year's big technical advance was the "rollator" that was promoted very heavily. The company sponsored $25,000 Crossword Puzzle Contest (a VAST sum in the middle of the Depression) to make people aware of the vast benefits and advantages offered by this marvelous scientific breakthrough. In fact, the gadget was invented in the 16th century! This device is basically the rotary pump with an eccentric piston first described by Ramelli in 1588, although in that instance the rotary drum was located above the center of the cylinder, such that the weight of the blades was to effect closure. This mechanism has had application as a water pump amoung other uses. Eventually, the general principle found common usage in household refrigerators of which the Norge "Rollator" compressor was an example in the 1950's. This turned out to be a lot more efficient than other forms of compression and formed the basis for Norge's claims that (1) vast amounts of money could be saved and (2) the machine was ideally suited to the tropics where cooling loads would be high.





The 1932 Norge Refrigerator

..with the the Rollator





The Norge company history is a sad tale of corporate mergers. Norge was bought by Magic Chef which in turn was absorbed by Maytag which is now a division of Samsung. Today, the Norge refrigerator is mainly remembered for Dan Ackroyd's portrayal of a Norge repairman on Saturday Night Live.

It also appears that the salesman is offering the Premier Duplex vacuum cleaner:







Advertisements for the Premier Duplex Vacuum

Click Either Photo to Enlarge





The Premier Duplex vacuum "system" offered the lady of the house the opportunity to vaccum and scrub floors. (The vaccum configuration is on the table, the scrubber is on the floor). This was a fairly expensive "multi-function" appliance. In general, the appeals were based on savings of time, so a larger up-front outlay meant more leisure time in the future. These appliances were manufactured in Cleveland, Ohio. Through the miracle of YouTube, here is a video of the Premier Duplex in action

The Maytag Booth

Right next to the Pacific Tire Company was the booth of the "Maytag West Company" featuring a big display of marvelous washing machines and two wide-awake salesmen.





The Maytag West Company Booth

Click Photo to Enlarge





Howard Snyder, a former mechanic whose inventive genius had led him to eventually head Maytag's development department came up with one of the most significant inventions in laundry appliance history. Its revolutionary washing principle was to force water through clothes with a vaned agitator mounted in the bottom of the tub.

Maytag first introduced this type washer in 1922, and it was a great success. The new washer design put Maytag exclusively into the washer business, prompted the end of farm equipment manufacturing and propelled the company to a dominant position in the young laundry appliance industry.





Shipping Washers Five Trainloads at a Time





Trainloads of the Maytag "Gyrafoam" washers went out from Newton plant, and by 1927 the company had produced its first million. It has now produced more than 40 million laundry and kitchen appliances.

In 1925 the company went public with a listing on the New York Stock Exchange. The company did not, however, turn its back on its rural base. It soon began providing butter churn and meat grinder attachments for its washers and adapted it Multi-Motor for use with a cream separator and, in the 1930's to function as a light generator. The power take-off for these appliances is shown in the picture. In 1924 an iron had been introduced as a companion appliance to the Maytag washer. From 1926 to 1940 the company was headed by E. H. Maytag, another son of the founder.

Although these photos come from the 1940s, they will give you some idea of what conditions on a Maytag assembly line were like



The Maytag Assembly Line c. 1946

Click Photo to Enlarge It



Maytag continued with a reputation for excellence, as typified by its iconic trademark -- the repairman who has nothing but time on his hands. Alas, Maytag was sold to Whirlpool in 2006, the Newton factory was shut down and all work outsourced to China. Consumer Reports indicates that Maytag is now right at the bottom of the quality scale... Apparently, the Chinese don't do washers any better than they do Human Rights.

Looking to the left, there is also another photo of the Magic-Maid Mixer in the Pacific Tire Booth.

The Westinghouse Booth

With the Girls Scouts as their neighbor, the Colvin-Templeton Company presented a display of refrigerators







The Colvin-Templeton Company Booth

Click Photo to Enlarge





For 1932, the slogan was "Dual Automatic." Logically, this referred to two "miracle" features:

The Built-In Watchman , an internal device that kept the compressor from overheating. The Westinghouse propaganda literature says that this is " ..an invention worthmore than a million dollars...

, an internal device that kept the compressor from overheating. The Westinghouse propaganda literature says that this is " The 7-point adjustable-automatic Temperature Selector with constant freezing point, which seems to be a thermostat just like on modern machines. The freezing point remains constant at 32 degrees (F) whether or not you own a Westinghouse appliance...







The Built-In-Watchman Ad







Westinghouse Refrigerator Patents

(L to R) One Door Flat top Patent No 1,789,913, Two Door Flat Top Patent No 1,789,914

Two Door Variant No. 1,789,916, Thermostat and Built-in Watchman No. 1,934,609

Click Photo to Enlarge It



This campaign (in the middle of the Depression) was aimed at assuring folks that you got twice the value if you spent $180 (F.O.B. Mansfield, Ohio, more like $250 in the stores, equivalent to about $7,000 today). These gadgets definitely were NOT for the 25% of the country that was uneployed nor were they for the typical factory worker who made 17 cents per hour -- if he was lucky enough to get a job. It is no wonder the ads (below) feature folks in Tuxedoes regaling themselves over a midnight snack or teenage girls imploring the maid to keep the door open on a hot day.





Woman's Home Companion Ad for Westinghouse

Click Photo to Enlarge







It is of some note that this model was apparently the first to feature an electric light, adevrtised thusly: "... Simply opening the door floods the entire food compartment and automatic electric froster with brilliant light No more groping - you put your hand sinstantly on what you want. Light switches off automatically when door is closed..." If you ever wondered what happens to the refrigerator light when you close the door, you have the word of the Westinghouse copy-writers that the light goes out. This must have been a big deal because Westinghouse took out a two-page ad in the April 16, 1932 issue of The Saturday Evening Post, a monumental expense, akin to buying air-time during the Super Bowl.



Saturday Evening Post Two-page Ad for Westinghouse

Click Photo to Enlarge





There is a direct "jab at the GE "Monitor Top" refrigerator -- the hernetically sealed cooling unit makes it possible to eliminate the external cooling coils -- and the resulting flat top is sold as"... the convenience of the flat, usable Buffet Top at shoulder height...."









At Those Prices, the Refrigerator Had Snob Appeal

You cannot cool off by opening the door... the girls don't understand economics or thermodynamics!

These things were shown at salons -- compare that with Costco!





Of note, Colvin-templeton had a "skeleton model of the underlying mechanics of the refrigerator. This would help relieve the concerns of folks who did not immediately see the condenser coils that they had come to expect based on the GE "Monitor Top."







Skeleton Model of the Westinghouse Innards





The Sears Booth

In 1927, Kenmore first appeared on a Sears laundry appliance, an agitator type, wringer washing machine. By 1936, Sears had already sold 1 million Kenmore laundry items. Its popularity hasn’t slipped. Today, nearly one in every three American homes contains a Kenmore appliance. You can see why, when you look at Kenmore’s history. The Kenmore brand boasts a long list of firsts in automatic appliances, energy efficiency, and stylish, modern designs.

The first appearance of the Kenmore brand washing machine almost escaped notice. The Kenmore washing machine did not show up in the venerable Sears catalog that year, and no known photograph of the 1927 washing machine with a Kenmore brand on it exists. The origin of the name Kenmore is equally vague. One suggestion is that Kenmore came from Kenmore Avenue, a prominent street in Chicago.

With nearly 99 percent of urban homes wired for electricity by the end of the 1920s, Sears recognized the huge untapped market in household appliances. To reach this market Sears offered a wide assortment of Kenmore appliances, as illustrated in the line shown below:





The Sears Roebuck Booth

Click Photo to Enlarge It



As you can see, by 1932, Sears was offering quite a variety of Kenmore brand appliances. We'd first like to draw your attention to the washing machine on the left. We'd like to "sandwich" it between 1929 and 1933, remembering that the appliance show was held in 1932. On the left, you'll see a page from the 1929 Sears Catalogue showing the "Water Witch" washing machine. In addition to the strange name, note that it looks pretty flimsy -- more like an oil barrel on stilts. This sold for about $80 (something like $2,400 today). By 1932, you can see (click to enlarge the photo if you wish...)that the machine has acquired a fairly Victorian look about it, especially the pressed metal "Queen Anne" legs. The price also dropped by 18% ($64.95 vs $79.50). During the Great Depression, people thought that electricity was "modern" and thus wanted their appliances to be "modern" -- and, as we have seen with refrigerators, the great Industrial designers of the time applied their magic. We invite you to compare the washing machine shown in 1932 with the "Toperator" designed in 1933 by Henry Dreyfuss (of Twentieth Century Limited fame). With chrome bands and all controls on a panel at the top (hence "Top-Operator" or streamlined as "Toperator), this machine is the epitome of Modern and was ordered in great numbers by all social classes -- even folks served bt the TVA who had just got their first taste of electricity. (We observe that for $122.75 you could have bough a gasoline powered washer back in 1929)





1929 (l.) and 1933 (r.) Sears Washers Showing Evolution to "Modernity"

Click the Ad to Enlarge It







Patent Diagrams for Various Points in the Evolution of "Modernity"

Henry Dreyfuss Washer Patent D-90,616

Henry Goldblatt's Patents D-127,498 and D-127,499

The 1963 Lady Kenmore, the last wringer washer sold by Sears

Click to Enlarge the Diagrams

Click here if you want to learn how to get Free Patent Drawings





Sears also used a certain coyness in naming its refrigerators "Coldspot" -- compare this with "Hotpoint" discussed above. Over the years, Sears used Raymond Loewy (mentioned above) to keep their refrigerator line throughly modern:



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Design Advances in Refrigerators

Raymond Loewy Refrigerator Designs for Sears, Patents D-127,829 and D-130,000

Click to Enlarge





The other appliances shown are an ironer and a vacuum cleaner. We have an entire page devoted to irons and ironing with great details about Ironing machines. Please feel free to consult that page, should you want any more information about those devices. It suffices to say that even for Sears, these machines were for the homes of the relatively well-to do. And, you can be certain that they got streamlined very quickly.

The Kenmore Vacuum Cleaner is obscured in the photo from the show, so here is a large picture of the device in an ad from a contemporary Sears Catalogue:





The Kenmore Vacuum Cleaner

Click Photo to Enlarge It



The Rettberg and Collins Booth

Rettberg and Collins seems to have hitched their wagon to the "Buckeye" line of appliances. Unfortunately, this brand seems to have vanished from the face of the earth.





Rettberg and Collins Booth

Click Photo to Enlarge It



Little can be found about the "Buckeye" brand -- from the signs, they were offereing a one door (Model 51, 3 cubic feet $129.50) and a two-door (Model 71, 7 cubic feet, $189.50) refrigerator in 1932. These refrigerators looked a lot like the Westinghouse models (above), but were priced about 20% less. About the only thing that we could find in the internet was this long-dead trademark for these appliances, held by the Buckeye Water Heater and Appliance Company of Cleveland, Ohio. Please Contact me if you know more about the Buckeye brand.





The Buckeye Trademark



The Sherman, Clay and Company Kelvinator Booth

Sherman, Clay and Company had a booth for Kelvinator appliances and also had a separate booth for RCA Radios.





Sherman, Clay and Company Booth

Click Photo to Enlarge It



The Kelvinator Company was founded in 1914, in Detroit, taking its name from William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin, who developed the concept of absolute zero and for whom the Kelvin temperature scale is named. The name was thought appropriate for a company that manufactured ice-boxes and domestic refrigerators. In 1926 it acquired Leonard (see above), which had been founded in 1881. In 1928, George W. Mason assummed control of Kelvinator; under his leadership the company lowered its costs while increasing market share. On January 4, 1937, the company merged with Nash Motors to form Nash-Kelvinator Corporation as part of a deal that placed Mason at the helm of the combined company. In 1952 it acquired the Altorfer Bros. Company, which made home laundry equipment under the ABC brand name. (The Altorfer Ironing Machines are discussed on our Irons and Ironing Page.)

Nash-Kelvinator became a division of American Motors Corporation when Nash merged with Hudson in 1954. Kelvinator introduced the first model frost-free side-by-side refrigerator in the early 1950s. In the 1960s, Kelvinator refrigerators introduced"picture frame" doors on some models allowing owners to decorate their appliance to match décor of their kitchens. Acquired from AMC by White Consolidated Industries in 1968, Kelvinator joined a company that had acquired the rights to Frigidaire (formerly owned by General Motors), Gibson, Tappan and White-Westinghouse product lines. In the early 1990s, the name of the Dublin, Ohio based holding company changed to Frigidaire Company. In 1986, Frigidaire Corporation was acquired by Sweden’s Electrolux.

It looks like Sherman, Clay was selling Kelvinator at the peak of the company's growth. Here are some advertisements from 1932 that show the one-and two-door models being sold at the booth.







1932 Advertisements for Kelvinator Refrigerators

$112 in 1932 is equivalent to about $3,000 Today

Click Photo to Enlarge It

Click here if you want to learn how to get Free Patent Drawings





In the background, you'll see a water cooler and a refrigerated display case. You'll also note that the cooler and the refrigerators are standing on those "Queen Anne" legs. Here are some patents that illustrate the effect of streamlining on these appliances.







Other Appliances in the Picture

Refrigerated Display Case, Patent No. 1,771,998

1935 Deco Case for Water Cooler D-96,259

1939 Deco Case for Water Cooler D-114,689

Click Photo to Enlarge It

Click here if you want to learn how to get Free Patent Drawings



The Singer Sewing Machine Company Booth

Almost every city had a Singer store. The company's products were absolutely first rate and lasted forever. You can still buy parts for almost every Singer model that was made, and they can be dis-assembled and repaired by almost anyone. The only real differences between the Singer of 2009 and the Singer of 1932 have to do with plastic parts (and some computer-type automation.) The older machines will sew through anything -- four layers of denim, leather, upholstery fabric, etc, etc. For my money, the old mechanical button-holer works much better than the modern equivalent. Here's the Singer booth at the Appliance Show.





The Singer Booth and the Lady in White

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You'll note that the demonstrator is dressed completely in white. During the 1930s, the discipline of "Home Economics" was on the rise, teaching home makers about the latest, most efficient, most nutritious, etc. etc. domestic items and practices. During this time, pratcitioners of Home Economics wore white uniforms, probably because the only female authority figures were nurses. You can be certain that this lady took her professional responsibilities seriously.

Here is a closer look at the machine that was being demonstrated -- the 1932 Singer. Notice the "medallion" in the right picture. These are very important in identifyng the date, place of manufacture, etc, etc of the wide variety of Singer machines.







The 1932 Singer Sewing Machine





Here are some patent diagrams that begin to illustrate the internal workings of the Singer machine. As you can see this is not simplistic. Nevertheless, it was assumed that the owners of this machine could, in fact, repair any part of it. The instruction booklets are written in clear English that has not been "dumbed down". Too much of what passes for technical documentation assumes that the average American is a moron. Given the sad state of our public schools, this may not be far from the mark, but at one time, Americans were a lot more self-reliant...







The Insides of the Singer Sewing Machine - Quite a Difference That 12 Years Makes

All Models were Upward Compatible, Unlike Most of Today's Technology

1921 Singer Patent No. 1,369,405

1933 Singer Patent No. 1,908,280

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The Cabinets that house the sewing machine were an important part of "making the sale." In general, people lived in small houses and it was important that the sewing machine serve some other purpose when it was not being used for its primary purpose. The Singer company developed a very ingenious cabinet that hid the machine well, but could rapidly be converted to a sewing table. As shown in the Patents below, these cabinets came in a wide variety of styles and shapes, and did not really change at all even to the present day.







Cabinets for the Singer Sewing machine

Note that by 1946, the sewing machine had been "streamlined"

1920 Singer Cabinet Patent No. 1,349,678

1938 Singer Cabinet Patent No. 2,133,127

1946 Singer Cabinet Patent No. 2,409,758

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You might be interested in our restoration of an Art deco Singer Sewing Cabinet.

The Singer Company also made other electrical appliances. This booth is also showing the Singer Vacuum Cleaner, which (by the way) is still made today. Here is an ad for this cleaner and some of the early patent diagrams.







The Singer Vacuum Cleaner

1932 Singer Vacuum Cleaner Patent No. 1,879,710

1932 Ad for the Singer Vacuum Cleaner

1936 Singer Vacuum Patent No. 2,063,061

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Our final observation is that there is a tea set at the right of the picture. The demonstrator could invite an interested buyer for a relaxing cup of tea while the myriad functions of the machine were demonstrated.

The Eastern Outfitting Company Booth

Purveyors of Easy Brand Washers and Ironers

Here we see a salesman who is a dead ringer for the young Thomas E. Dewey demonstrating an "Easy" brand Ironer. To the right is a display of Norge Refrigerators and Premier Duplex vacuum cleaners as discussed above. The interesting items are the Easy Ironer and the Easy Washer. Although you may never have heard of this brand, it was second only to Maytag in volume of appliances sold prior to the Depression.







The Eastern Outfitting Company

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The "Easy" company had its roots in a business called Dodge and Zuill, named for two Vermont natives, which manufactured clothes washing devices from 1877. Cyrus Dodge was the inventor of the original product, called a 'funnel-on-a-stick' or a 'cone-on-a-stick,' which was a hand operated unit. In 1907, experimentation began on a power washer operated by an electric motor. By May of 1910, the first motor-driven machine was sold to P. F. Schneider of Detroit, Michigan. The washer had a galvanized tub and was designated as a model F. As the machine was improved over the years, it was renamed the model C, and in 1915 it was granted the highest award in the model kitchen exhibit at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition.







Giveaways and Incentives

It was common for power companies to promote the sale of electric appliances

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The company entered a golden age of growth under the leadership of John N. Derschug. An enterprising young salesman and advertising executive, Derschug invested in and joined the company in 1915. With his encouragement of outside investment, the company reorganized as the Syracuse Washer Corporation in 1917. High overhead, in part from the rental costs of cramped manufacturing facilities, prevented profit for the next two years. By 1919, under Derschug's leadership, significant outside investment was again attracted and the business was once more reorganized, this time as the Syracuse Washing Machine Corporation. In 1920 the firm moved into a large new plant. Business was difficult during a national recession, but by 1923 production output was double the previous year's, and was reported to have been the greatest of any home laundry equipment factory in the world. In August 1932, the firm's name was changed to the Easy Washing Machine Corporation. Derschug died in 1936. During his presidency, over $100,000,000 worth of washing machines had been sold by the company. The company continued in business and had a peak year in 1948, when 474,831 washing machines were built. In 1955 the business was sold to Union Chemical and Material Co.; in 1957 the firm's assets were sold to Murray Corporation of America. At that time, they were operating in five plants totaling 500,000 square feet and employing about 1,400. Murray ultimately sold the Easy Washing Company to Hupp Corporation, of Cleveland, Ohio, which closed down operation in 1963.

The Hale Brothers Booth

Selling Johnson Washers and Majestic Refrigerators







The Hale Brothers Booth, Johnson Washers and Majestic Refrigerators

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The Johnson Washer Company of San Francisco (later Oakland) California was fairly well-known on the West Coast during the 1920s. As you can see, the styling did not keep up with the national brands such as Maytag or even Sears. The company did not survive the Depression. Here are some of the key patents for the Johnson Washer.







Key patents for the Johnson Washer

Johnson Washer Exterior Design Patent No. 1,705,070

Johnson Washer Driver Patent No. 1,641,770

Johnson Washer Gearing Patent No. 1,150,433

Johnson Washer Wringer Patent No. 1,656,570

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We have entered "Johnson Washer", Johnson Wringer", "Johnson Driver" with a straight face, we expect the same of you when you read this...



The Grigsby-Grunow Company was formed in 1928 as a manufacturer of fine radios. The company's radio sales were extraordinary due to the superiority of their speakers over that of others on the market. However, the Depression soon caught up with Grigsby-Grunow, and by 1933, the company was bankrupt. The business was re-formed into the Majestic Radio & Television Corporation which made the Majestic line and General Household Utilities which was an attempt to diversify into other appliances such as refrigerators. In 1932, The Majestic Household Utilities Corporation was located in Evanston, Illinois . Note that in one of the advertisements below, the Majestic Refrigerator was being sold by a radio store.







Majestic Refrigerators

Ad for Majestic Refrigerators, the Altamont Enterprise, April 5, 1931

Majestic Refrigerator Design Patent D-83,145

Majestic Refrigerator Recipe Book

Ad For Majestic Refrigerator, St. Petersburg Evening Independent Oct 5 1932

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The Sherman, Clay & Co. Radio Booth

This booth shows off some very high end RCA radio receivers and phonographs. At the left is the top-of-the-line R-341 model that allowed you to make your own recordings at home.







The Sherman-Clay RCA Radio Booth

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The detailed photos of the RCA sets shown below are presented in the order that they are shown (l to r) in the Sherman Clay Booth Photo.







VERY HIGH END RCA Receivers for 1932

RCA Model 341 - Home Recording Studio

RCA Model 240

Promotional Bank in the Form of a RCA Model 240

RCA Model 380 Home Recording Studio

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More RCA Receivers for 1932

(left to right): R-50, R-78, RE73, R74

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The Northern California Electrical Refrigeration Bureau

Here we see a forest of refrigerators (as discussed above) on display together.







The Northern California Electrical Refrigeration Bureau

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This was a government entity that promoted the sale of refrigerators through stressing the health, economic, and conservation benefits thereof.

The Empire Company Booth

This company appears to be selling built-in window fans. They will also remodel your house to bring it up-to-date, electricity-wise.





The Empire Electric Company

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Window fans (called window ventilators have been offered in a variety of shapes and sizes since the advent of electricity. Here are three patents for such appliances. From the picture, it looks like the "1933" patent describes the functioning -- a combination of fans and filters to move and condition the air. It is likely that a complex system like this would be offered to the high end buyers at the appliance show.







Window Ventilators

1933 Window Vent Patent No. 1,916,907

1935 Window Vent Patent No. 1,988,810

1950 Window Vent Patent No. D-157,642

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Along with the window fans, something called the "Building Improvement Company" was offering home-remodeling services, using a dollhouse to show all the zippy new appliances that could be purchased. In case you can't read it, here's what the sign says:

MODERNIZE YOUR HOME!

Are you satisfied with your home? If not, let us help you solve your problems.

Lowest prices since 1913!

12 months to pay.

Free Estimates

Building Improvement Company DOuglas 5354



Not Appliances

The show featured a number of booths that were not involved in selling appliances. Here is the Progressive Optical Company who would measure you for glasses "While U Wait". When was the last time that a woman dressed as a nurse was seen in an optician's store?





The Progressive Optical Company Booth

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Apparently, upscale consumers in the 1930s were addicted to Health Food much like their 21st Century Yuppie descendants. Here is the "Original Health Food Store" featuring items like the Nutradiet System and "Grant's Hygenic Crackers." The guy with the spectacles doesn't look any too healthy...





The Original Health Food Store Booth

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Here is a "Food Product Display" that was back in the corner along with the Parent Teacher Association. It looks like this might be part of some nutrition education project.





The Food Product Display Booth

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The Grand Ball

Apparently, a Ball or a large public reception was held, featuring comely young ladies dressed as appliances. These are, of course, my kind of girls.





The After Party

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Of these, I think that the Washer is the most creative, using balloons to simulate bubbles.

THE PRIZE WINNERS

The show held a lottery and here is a photo of the lucky winners:





The Empire Electric Company

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You can read more about all these appliances (left to right) at the following places:

We hope that you enjoyed your tour of the Appliance Show, because...

The Ugly Discount Future

By the 1940s, appliances were a mass market item and the word "discount" crept into the nation's vocabulary. All of the elegant trimmings vanished and the cattle call began. Here are some photos taken in 1946 at the Polk Brothers Store in Chicago, one of the first "discount" vendors.





Polk Brothers Store c. 1946

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