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  2. Eagle Lock Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eagle_Lock_Company

    Products included trunk and cabinet locks, as well as high quality security-grade padlocks, and, in the early twentieth century, screw-machine products. The company experienced precipitous growth with the onset of the First World War , and even greater expansion during the Second World War , nearly doubling the number of employees to 800.

  3. Slaymaker lock company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slaymaker_lock_company

    At the time the Pennsylvania Railroad was the largest railroad in the country and the Fraim-Slaymaker Hardware Co. getting their business was a real coup. In 1930 S.R. Slaymaker bought back control of the company and changed the name back to the Slaymaker Lock Co. Eventually his son Samuel C. Slaymaker took over running the company.

  4. Latch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latch

    A slam latch uses a spring and is activated by the shutting or slamming of a door. Like all latches, a slam latch is a mechanism to hold a door closed. The slam latch derives its name from its ability to slam doors and drawers shut without damaging the latch. A slam latch is rugged and ideal for industrial, agricultural and construction ...

  5. Philip Corbin (manufacturer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Corbin_(manufacturer)

    Philip Corbin (1824-1910) was an American industrialist who founded P&F Corbin Company, a major manufacturer of decorative hardware. It was first based in New Britain, Connecticut, where he founded it with his brother Frank Corbin.

  6. Mortise lock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortise_lock

    Mortise locks may include a non-locking sprung latch operated by a door handle. Such a lock is termed a sash lock. A simpler form without a handle or latch is termed a dead lock. Dead locks are commonly used as a secure backup to a sprung non-deadlocking latch, usually a pin tumbler rim lock. [note 1] [according to whom?]

  7. Simmons Hardware Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simmons_Hardware_Company

    A Sioux City warehouse was opened after the corporation bought out the stock of the Baker Hardware Company, which was located in the city. Their intention was to have the same quality in that location. [8] The company was involved in a legal case, titled "Simmons Hardware Co. v. City of St. Louis", that was heard by the Supreme Court of ...

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