The
National Museum of American History has a huge collection of vintage lunch boxes. When I was a kid we had to tote our peanut butter sandwiches to school every day and getting a new metal lunch box was part of the back to school routine each September. One year I had the plaid one below.
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This steel lunch box was manufactured by the Ohio Art Company in1957.
It features a metal snap for a hinged lid and a collapsible red, plastic handle.
The exterior design is a red, brown and yellow plaid design. |
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This tin-plated iron lunch box was patented in 1871 by Charles C. Moore. The box folds in flat on itself. bout three inches tall in its box form; it collapses down to less than half an inch when folded. |
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This tin-plated steel lunch box was manufactured by the Ohio Art Company in the 1920s. It features a removable lid and two pinned metal handles, as well as images of children playing with a cat on the top and sides of the box. |
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This tin, plastic and glass thermos bottle was made by Thermos in 1960. It has a red plastic, screw-on cup lid and a red and white plastic, screw-on stopper. The bottle has an image of an officer using a submarine’s periscope. |
Lots more here
I had that plaid one too!
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