
Caledonian Steel Works Nameplates
Three brass nameplates from the offices of the Caledonian Steel Works, charting the changes of ownership from Donald Clerk & Son to A G McFadden to Miles Druce.
Three brass nameplates from the offices of the Caledonian Steel Works, charting the changes of ownership from Donald Clerk & Son to A G McFadden to Miles Druce.
A copper medal celebrating the opening of Edinburgh and Glasgow railway in 1842. On one side, what’s now Queen St Station, on the other the viaduct over the Almond, designed by Robert Telford.
A promotional paint tin opener from Craig & Rose, the Scottish company that made the iconic red oxide paint for the Forth Bridge.
A planimeter made in Glasgow by McAughtry & Son, engraved with the name of the MV British Valour, an oil tanker launched in 1927 by Lithgows in Port Glasgow. A planimeter would be used onboard a ship to calculate engine power – it can measure the area under a curved graph.
A 1980 mixed-media painting of a North Sea oil rig by the artist Peter Sumpter, who died in 2020.
A large bundle of keys for the Barclay Curle drydock in Whiteinch, Glasgow.
Glasgow inventor George Bennie is famous for his futuristic Railplane which only ran on a test track, but he also invented this ashtray. Opinions differ on whether it was made to promote the Railplane, or was for use aboard ships.
A little Art Deco medal celebrating industry and commerce from the 1924 Empire Exhibition.
A twist drill, about 5 feet long, used to drill holes for explosives in mining.
This little tin case was made for the Motherwell Bridge & Engineering Co. Ltd., to celebrate the rebuilding of the Boyne viaduct in Drogheda in 1932. It may have been for calling cards or business cards, the wear pattern on the inside is possibly caused by a coin.
A maker’s plate from British Polar Engines Ltd., dating from 1973.