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A handful of period documents from the personal collection.

 
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An 1861 brochure from Harvey Waters:





Emerson & Stevens 1935 catalog materials:





1952 Sta-Tite Snath ad from Hardware Age industry publication:



From the North Wayne Tool Co. Catalog No.117 (1951):











1893 David Wadsworth & Son price list:











From a rare Derby, Ball, & Edwards catalog:

 
pollinator
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12$ in 1893 I wonder what that would be worth now
 
Benjamin Bouchard
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David Livingston wrote:12$ in 1893 I wonder what that would be worth now



It depends on what method of calculating relative worth you use.

Roughly $326 of today's dollars if using the "real value" method (best used for commodity goods like a bundle of bread, milk, eggs, etc) but $1620 if using the unskilled laborer wage method or $2720 if using the production worker wage method. I'm inclined to believe that the production worker wage method is the most accurate in this case, which would put their top-shelf blades at a dealer cost of $226.66 of today's dollars.
 
Benjamin Bouchard
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This online calculator utility is a handy resource when looking at historical prices, as it breaks down a bunch of different method calculations with explanations of what indexes were used in the calculation.
 
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