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  2. Sears' Crescent and Sears' Block - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sears'_Crescent_and_Sears...

    The Sears' Block is now the location of the "Steaming Tea Kettle", an 1873 trade sign commissioned by the Oriental Tea Company that was located on a Court Street building demolished in 1967 during the construction of Government Center. [3] The kettle was refurbished and reinstalled in 2016 after being damaged, apparently by a truck. [4]

  3. Hitler teapot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hitler_teapot

    The Michael Graves Design Bells and Whistles Stainless Steel Tea Kettle, colloquially known as the Hitler teapot, [1] was a stainless-steel kettle sold in 2013 by the American retailer and department store chain JCPenney. [2] [3] It attracted attention on social media due to its perceived resemblance to the Nazi German dictator Adolf Hitler. [4 ...

  4. Revere Ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revere_Ware

    The line focuses primarily on consumer cookware such as (but not limited to) skillets, sauce pans, stock pots, and tea kettles. Initially Revere Ware was the culmination of various innovative techniques developed during the 1930s, the most popular being construction of stainless steel with rivetlessly attached bakelite handles, copper-clad ...

  5. Government Center, Boston - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_Center,_Boston

    The golden steaming kettle mounted on the corner of the Sears' Block, 63-65 Court Street, pre-dates the Government Center redevelopment. It was manufactured for the Oriental Tea Company in 1873, which held a contest to guess the volume of the kettle and staged a spectacle in which nine children and a tall man crawled out of the kettle.

  6. Griswold Manufacturing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Griswold_Manufacturing

    The first aluminum cookware was a tea kettle made around 1893. In 1903 the company moved to new premises at 12th and Raspberry Streets. In the 1920s Griswold began producing enameled items, and in the 1930s had added electrical items to their product line. [4] Griswold acquired many patents over the years. [3]

  7. Design For All (product line) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Design_For_All_(product_line)

    The products designed by Graves were household items, the first and most notable of which was a tea kettle that bore a close resemblance to a well-known kettle Graves designed for Alessi in 1985. [1] The Target version of the tea kettle offered a similar design at a more affordable price.