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Grier Bros Star I
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Grier Bros Star IV
Grier Bros Star V Marking
  Grier Bros Star V.JPG - GRIER BROS STAR BRASS II - Brass and tin face lamp, marked on side in shield S*T*A*R* GRIER BROS. PITTSBURG, PA, single spout with drip shield, 2 3/16 in. tall to lid, 1 3/4 base dia. (The Grier Bros. Co. was founded in 1839 in Pittsburgh, PA to manufacture miner's equipment.  By the 1880s the company was very active in the manufacture and sales of oil wick lamps with branches in Hancock, MI and Dubois, PA.  They produced  a line of face and driver's wick lamps for both oil and Sunshine fuels including the popular STAR brand in a shield trademark.  As wick lamps started phasing out with the increased use of carbide lamps, the company started producing carbide lamp models perhaps as early as 1910.  They marketed at least 26 different numbered carbide cap lamp models.  In 1924, the Grier Bros. plant and product line was purchased by the Gem Manufacturing Co. and a year later a product line of carbide lamps with the GEM product name was introduced that lead to at least 18 different GEM lamp models being advertised (check out the Grier and Gem lamps in the carbide cap lamp photos); see Pohs, Miner's Flame Light, pp 245, 429-434)  
Grier Bros. Star with Weaver and Hough Shield
Hough and Weaver Patent
Hack Sanner LSide
Hack Sanner Marking
Hack Sanner RSide

Grier Bros Star V | GRIER BROS STAR BRASS II - Brass and tin face lamp, marked on side in shield S*T*A*R* GRIER BROS. PITTSBURG, PA, single spout with drip shield, 2 3/16 in. tall to lid, 1 3/4 base dia. (The Grier Bros. Co. was founded in 1839 in Pittsburgh, PA to manufacture miner's equipment. By the 1880s the company was very active in the manufacture and sales of oil wick lamps with branches in Hancock, MI and Dubois, PA. They produced a line of face and driver's wick lamps for both oil and Sunshine fuels including the popular STAR brand in a shield trademark. As wick lamps started phasing out with the increased use of carbide lamps, the company started producing carbide lamp models perhaps as early as 1910. They marketed at least 26 different numbered carbide cap lamp models. In 1924, the Grier Bros. plant and product line was purchased by the Gem Manufacturing Co. and a year later a product line of carbide lamps with the GEM product name was introduced that lead to at least 18 different GEM lamp models being advertised (check out the Grier and Gem lamps in the carbide cap lamp photos); see Pohs, Miner's Flame Light, pp 245, 429-434) Download Original Image
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