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A few of the woodworking tools inherited by Charles and Ben Prowell.

 

 

 


The Stanley Level #98

One of the older tools inherited by Charles. Kept in it's original box on a shelf in the library of his home. This tool was officially retired a few decades ago, at about the time someone visited the shop and appeared surprised to see the rare tool. And shocked that it was a working tool in a working shop. They mentioned its value, and the next day it was retired to the library.

Brass bound rosewood. 9" long. Side handy-grip grooves (patented by Stanley in on June 2, 1891). Ground glass vials.

It's history is confusing. Charles' father died at 28, in 1955, when Charles was short of his 6th birthday. His mother remarried, to the carpenter George Glenn, whose own father, Wyman, was a part-time furniture-maker with a fully equipped shop in Champaign, Illinois. It was this shop that first ignited Charles' interest in woodworking, and his step-father's job sites as a custom home builder that first ignited an interest in structures.

Wyman's father is an unknown. The name embossed on the original case for the Stanley level is "C.E. Glenn." But unfortunately there are no surviving members of that family. They are all gone, and consequently no distant aunt to ask the question: 'Who was C.E. Glenn?' Was it Wyman's father? It would be a reasonable assumption, in that the level was patented in 1891 and the chronology would be about right, putting Wyman's father as a working woodworker in the early 1900's.

 


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stanley level #98

The verification stamp, with the Patent # 6-2-91. 2-4-96 6-73-96.

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Stanley level #12

 

 

 
 


 

 


The Stanley Joiner Plane #7.

Recently, while at North Bennet St Woodworking school in Boston, Ben Prowell learned how to restore and care for planes. The sole has been trued. The cutter honed. The body cleaned and burnished.

A useful tool if, like Charles, you happen to be a woodworker who prefers hand joiner planes to a power shop joiner.

Circa approximately 1901.

 


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stanley plane #7

The Bailey stamp on the bed. Still the original blade, stamped "Made in USA.". Rosewood knob.

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stanley joiner plane #7

 

 

 
 

 

 

 


A few of the many surviving drafting tools inheritted from Charles' mother--an illustrator / painter / draftsman--as her brother, Uncle Charley, a graduate in architecture at the University of Illinois. Uncle Charley passed away prematurely in 1949 and Charles' mother --or Ben's grandmother--followed in 2001. The tools eventually made up a portion of the drafting tools Charles had acquired and used while at at Southern Illinois University. Son Ben has recently purchased a new set and to this added his grandmother's and Uncle Charley's originals have been retired to the attic.

 


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drafting tools

In the early 1990's, Charles transitioned from the pleasant pasttime of the drafting board, to the more practical format of CAD drawings.

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drafting

 

 

 
 

 

 

 


'Blindman's' Fold Rule

Used regularly in the shop until recently, when one of the complex hinges broke clean. Solid brass joints. Circa late 19th or early 20th century.

 


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antique fold rule

 

 

 
 

 

 

 


A few tools that Charles first began using about the 6th grade, and that remain in use to this day (with the exception of the yankee screwdrivers, which became obsolete with the advent of the battery power drivers.)

Two tape rules from the 1920's
Two Yankee screwdrivers--once a staple to any finish carpenter.
Tin snips--circa 1930. Wire cutters--1930
Needle nose pliers.-1920's

 


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antique woodworking tools

Another hand-me-down from either Wyman or C.E. Glenn. A chisel that continues to be used almost daily.

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wood chisel

 

 

 
 

 

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