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  2. Eagle Lock Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eagle_Lock_Company

    Products included trunk and cabinet locks, as well as high quality security-grade padlocks, and, in the early twentieth century, screw-machine products. The company experienced precipitous growth with the onset of the First World War , and even greater expansion during the Second World War , nearly doubling the number of employees to 800.

  3. Philip Corbin (manufacturer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Corbin_(manufacturer)

    In March 1844, Philip Corbin began working for the Matteson, Russell & Erwin Company (later Russell & Erwin). In the fall of 1844, Corbin worked for Henry Andrews, who had secured a contract to make locks for North & Stanley. At the Henry Andrews Company, Corbin apprenticed and learned the art of lock making.

  4. Single-point locking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-point_locking

    Single-point locking is a locking system in cabinet doors where locking takes places only at the point halfway up the edge of the door, where the latch engages with the doorjamb.

  5. Slaymaker lock company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slaymaker_lock_company

    The lock company, Slaymaker, Barry and Company, was founded in 1888 by Samuel R. Slaymaker and John F. Barry of Connellsville, Pennsylvania.Samuel Slaymaker had become interested in switch and signal locks while working for the Pennsylvania Railroad as a civil engineer.

  6. Mortise lock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortise_lock

    Mortise locks may include a non-locking sprung latch operated by a door handle. Such a lock is termed a sash lock. A simpler form without a handle or latch is termed a dead lock. Dead locks are commonly used as a secure backup to a sprung non-deadlocking latch, usually a pin tumbler rim lock. [note 1] [according to whom?] Mortise locks have ...

  7. Bramah lock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bramah_lock

    The Bramah lock used a cylindrical key and keyhole, as does the current lock. The end of the key has a number of slots of different depths which, when inserted into the lock and pressed against spring tension, would depress a number of wafers to a specified depth and enable the key to turn and open the lock.

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