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  2. Malleable Iron Range Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malleable_Iron_Range_Company

    Monarch vintage wood stove. ... U.S. patent 1,413,990 Latch for oven doors - 25 Apr 1922; ... U.S. patent D110762 Design for a Cooking Stove;

  3. Metters Limited - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metters_Limited

    Logo from 1937 An abandoned Metters Improved Stove No 2. A small fire was built behind the sliding doors at top centre. Metters Bros. Ephemera Circa 1890. Metters was a brand of stoves and ovens made by Metters & Company, an Australian company established in Adelaide in 1891 by Frederick Metters (1858–1937), who patented and manufactured a number of kitchen appliances notably the 'top-fire ...

  4. List of stoves - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_stoves

    The term commonly refers to wood-burning stoves for domestic heating, although it is also applied to cooking stoves. Cocklestove or ceramic stove or tile stove; Community Cooker; Cook stove – heated by burning wood, charcoal, animal dung or crop residue. Cook stoves are commonly used for cooking and heating food in developing countries. EcoZoom

  5. Kitchen stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitchen_stove

    A wood-burning iron stove A stove at Holzwarth Ranch, Colorado. A kitchen stove, often called simply a stove or a cooker, is a kitchen appliance designed for the purpose of cooking food. Kitchen stoves rely on the application of direct heat for the cooking process and may also contain an oven, used for baking. "Cookstoves" (also called "cooking ...

  6. Wedgewood stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wedgewood_stove

    The Wedgewood stove was manufactured in Newark, California, originally by the James Graham Manufacturing Company and later as a division of Rheem. Gas ranges and stand-alone ovens marketed under the Wedgewood brand were particularly popular in the Western United States in the early and middle of the 20th Century.

  7. Wood-burning stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood-burning_stove

    A 19th-century example of a wood-burning stove. A wood-burning stove (or wood burner or log burner in the UK) is a heating or cooking appliance capable of burning wood fuel, often called solid fuel, and wood-derived biomass fuel, such as sawdust bricks.

  8. Round Oak Stove Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Round_Oak_Stove_Company

    The company also added new products, like furnaces and cooking stoves, and introduced a popular mascot around 1900 – Chief Doe-Wah-Jack. Chief Doe-Wah-Jack, a fictional Native American Indian, appeared on most Round Oak Stove Company and Estate of P.D. Beckwith Inc. advertising and stoves until the company's demise in 1946. Chief Doe-Wah-Jack ...

  9. Griswold Manufacturing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Griswold_Manufacturing

    Griswold cast-iron pots and pans, skillets, dutch ovens, and other kitchen items had a reputation for high quality, and they are well known to antique collectors and sellers. The easily recognized "cross" logo seen on Griswold products from the 1910s through the 1960s was modified several times over the years.

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