865

Antique Cast Iron No. 43 Mc. Clary's Van Stove Do

Currency:CAD Category:Collectibles Start Price:10.00 CAD Estimated At:NA
Antique Cast Iron No. 43 Mc. Clary's Van  Stove Do
CURRENT BID
0.00CAD+ applicable fees & taxes.
ENTER YOUR MAXIMUM ABSENTEE BID[?]
You must bid at least
10.00CAD
CAD
10.00 x 1 unit = 10.00CADApplicable fees & taxes are added at checkout.
[?]Bidding Ends At 2024 Oct 27 @ 13:12 (UTC-6 : CST/MDT)
Payment can be made at our Building 5113 50 Ave Ponoka, AB on both Pick Up Days: Mon. Oct 28: 11-5 and Tuesday Oct. 29: 11-5
Address: 5113 50 Ave. Ponoka, AB

You can use e-transfer (auctionplaceltd@gmail.com), Debit, Cash or pay by Credit Card (+3%)
Shipping is available.

Train Caboose Sign McClary wasn't the only stove manufacturer, but was the best known. Other stove makers included Beach, Moffat, Findlay, Home Comfort, and Guelph. We Canadians don't often think that many successful businesses ever originated in Canada, but we can be proud of the story of the McClary stove
John McClary was the 11th of 12 children, leaving him excluded from inheriting any part of his father’s farm near Westminster, Ont.
His older brother, Oliver, trained him as a tinsmith and the two formed a partnership called J. and O. McClary in 1852, based in London, an ironworks foundry. At the time, Oliver McClary already had a business making plowshares but John saw a need for stoves in this rapidly expanding country. They built a new foundry for stoves, which became their mainstay.
They formed a new business in 1871 called McClary Manufacturing, making farm implements, ironware and machinery, in addition to stoves.
In 1880, they added a product line of enamelware and small kitchen accessories. Today, you may see, in some museums and even some modern kitchens, a display of cast-iron frying pans or crockery bearing the McClary name..