Allied Radio Corp., est. 1928

Museum Artifact: Knight Radio Tube, c. 1940s

Made By: Allied Radio Corporation / Allied Electronics, 833 W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Autopoint Company, est. 1918

Museum Artifact: Mechanical Pencil, 1947

Made By: The Autopoint Company, 1801 W. Foster Ave., Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Spartus Camera Corp. / Galter MFG Co., est. 1934

Museum Artifact: Spartus Full-Vue Camera, 1940s

Made By: Spartus Camera Corp. / Galter MFG Co. / Utility MFG Co. / Monarch MFG Co., 711 W. Lake St., Chicago, IL

In 1953, a Chicago business owner submitted an application to the U.S. Trademark Association for a new line of cigarette lighters he’d developed. All the paperwork seemed in order at first, until reviewers saw the actual name the applicant wanted to register for his product… “Kodak.”

At that point in history,

Case-Moody Pie Corp., est. 1929

Museum Artifact: Case-Moody Pie Pans, c. 1940s

Made By: Case-Moody Pie Corporation, 1807 W. Walnut Street, Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

A.L. Hansen MFG Company, est. 1920

Museum Artifact: Hansen Tacker / Stapler, c. 1940s

Made by: A. L. Hansen MFG Co., 5037 N. Ravenswood Ave., Chicago, IL

The vintage Hansen Tacker pictured above looks and functions much like the manual staple guns of today—it’s spring-loaded, uses tough wire staples (also made by Hansen), and has an upturned squeeze-trigger handle for one-handed efficiency. It was used for the same sorts of handyman tasks,

General Television & Radio Corp., est. 1932

Museum Artifact: General Tube Radio 19A5, c. 1947

Made By: General Television & Radio Corp., 2701 N. Lehmann Ct., Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Page Boiler Company, est. 1905

Museum Artifact: Chicago Stadium Boiler Room Blueprint, c. 1940s

Made By: Page Boiler Company, 815-819 W. Webster Avenue, Chicago, IL

In 2015, the Page Boiler Company shut down its last Chicago plant at 2348 N. Damen Avenue in Bucktown, and I guess I can say I attended the funeral.

After 110 years of designing, building, installing and repairing the finest water-tube boilers in the Midwest,

Chicago Electric MFG Co., est. 1902

Museum Artifact: Sterling Desk Fan, c. 1940

Made By: Chicago Electric MFG, Co., 6333 W. 65th Street., Chicago, IL

Some time in the early 1970s, the singer/songwriter Gram Parsons—pioneer of the genre later known as “alternative country”—was hanging out with his buddy Keith Richards, talking about song ideas.

“I’ve been writing about a guy that builds cars,” Parsons said—this according to Richards’ own account in his 2010 memoir,

The Detect-O-Ray Company, est. 1940

Museum Artifact: Detect-O-Ray Photo-Electric Switch, 1940s

Made By: Detect-O-Ray Company, 2622 N. Halsted St., Chicago, IL

Its name sounds like a comic-book doomsday device and it looks more than a little like an evil robot owl, but sadly, the Detect-O-Ray is neither one of those things. In fact, this intimidating technological marvel of the World War II era was briefly marketed—of all places—in the pages of the F.A.O.

Fitzpatrick Bros. & Kitchen Klenzer, est. 1894

Museum Artifact: Kitchen Klenzer Scouring Cleanser, c. 1940s

Made By: Fitzpatrick Bros., 1300 W. 32nd Place, Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Schwinn Majestic Bicycle Head Badge by Arnold, Schwinn & Co., 1940s

Arnold, Schwinn & Co. / Schwinn Bicycle Company, 1718 N. Kildare & 1856 N. Kostner Ave., Chicago, IL

These days, a head badge on the front of a bicycle is basically just an identification tag—a flat plastic hood ornament for lazy brand recognition. As you can tell by this flashy metal Schwinn “Majestic” badge from the deco era, however, even a small, functionally irrelevant bike part used to get the full VIP treatment down at the Arnold,

S-K Hand Tools / Sherman-Klove Company, est. 1918

Museum Artifact: S-K Tools Socket Set, c. 1940s

Made By: S-K Hand Tools / Sherman-Klove Company, 3535 W. 47th St., Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Western Clock MFG Co. (Westclox), est. 1888

Museum Artifacts: Luminous “Big Ben” & “Baby Ben” Clock Dials (1940s) and Style 1A “Big Ben” Alarm Clock (1920s)

Made By: Western Clock MFG Company, aka Westclox, 350 5th St., Peru, Illinois

A clock without hands might seem indifferent to the passage of time, but these old “Big Ben” and “Baby Ben” dials have some serious stories to tell.

Purchased from a man who claimed to have salvaged them from the backroom of an unnamed Chicago watch repair shop,

The Simoniz Company, est. 1910

Museum Artifact: Simoniz Car Wax Tin, 1940s

Made By: Simoniz Company, 2100 S. Indiana Avenue, Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Clipper Products Co., est. 1930s

Museum Artifact: Modern Finished Bleached Wood Clipper Cleaner Polish, 1940

Made By: Clipper Products Sales Co., 3223 N. Sheffield Ave., Chicago, IL

Who was A. Maxwell Brown? If you can solve that riddle, you might be one step closer to piecing together the story of Clipper Products—one of the more obscure and mysterious companies included in the Made-in-Chicago Museum.

Fittingly, our introduction to the Clipper brand took place in a quiet corner of a dark basement in Albany Park.

Excel Projector Corp., est. 1933

Museum Artifact: Excel Film Projector, c. 1940s

Made By: Excel Projector Corp. / Excel Movie Products Inc., 4234 Drummond Place, Chicago, IL

From the late 1930s to the early 1950s—in that pop cultural gap between the height of the movie palace era and the birth of television—film projectors emerged as the first great visual medium for home entertainment. Along with the ever-present Kodak, several Chicago companies became key suppliers in this new home movie industry,

Kraft Foods Company, est. 1923

Museum Artifact: Kraft Cream Cheese Wood Cartons, c. 1930s

Made By: Kraft Foods Company, 505 N Sacramento Blvd., Chicago, IL , Factory at 500 Peshtigo Court

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Regal Musical Instrument Co., est. 1908

Museum Artifact: Regal Soprano Ukulele, c. 1940s

Made By: Regal Musical Instrument Company, 3209 W. Grand Avenue, Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

Sterling Electric Heater by Chicago Electric MFG Co., c. 1940s

Chicago Electric MFG, Co., 6333 W. 65th Street., Chicago, IL

This impressive looking mid-century coil space heater is one of two items in our collection made by the Chicago Electric Manufacturing Company. You can read the full epic tale of Chicago Electric and its most famous president, Errett Lobban Cord, on our page for the heat lamp’s summertime sister, the Sterling Desk Fan.

Read the Full Company History of the Chicago Electric MFG Co.

Vail MFG Co., est. 1926

Museum Artifact: Victor Stapler, c. 1940s

Made By: Vail Manufacturing Co., 900 E. 96th St., Chicago, IL

Research is underway on this one and a full write-up will be coming soon.

30 LB Kitchen Scale (Mint Green) by Pelouze MFG Co., c 1940s

Pelouze Scale & Manufacturing Co., 232 E. Ohio St., Chicago, IL

There’s no getting around it. Kitchen scales, aka “family scales,” take up a lot of the real estate in the Made-in-Chicago Museum. This mint green beaut is one of several scales in our collection made by the Pelouze Manufacturing Company, maybe the best known of the many Chicago based spring scale companies of the early 20th century.

Besta Miniature Bakelite Camera by Monarch MFG Co., 1940s

Monarch MFG Co. / Utility MFG Co. / Spartus Corp., 711-15 W. Lake St., Chicago, IL

The “Besta” is merely one of dozens of brand names slapped on the lens plates of this 1940s bakelite minicam mold. Known as the “Chicago Cluster,” the cameras patented and mass-produced by Jack Galter at his 711 W. Lake Street factory were famously marketed under numerous brand AND manufacturer names. You can get the complete story on Galter and the tangled Spartus Corp.

Candex Miniature Bakelite Camera by General Products Co., c. 1940

General Products Co. / Utility MFG Co. / Spartus Corp., 711-15 W. Lake St., Chicago, IL

Here is yet another of the many bakelite minicams produced out of the same Lake Street factory in the 1940s. These cheap-o “candid” cameras were marketed under literally dozens of different brand names AND manufacturer names, with no rhyme or reason as to which name would appear on which model type. The motivations behind this strategy are quite interesting,