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View Full Version : What Happens When They Close the HS Woodshop



Mark Wyatt
05-18-2011, 9:47 PM
Or, this could be titled, "what was I thinking?" I guess I'll be the Midwest's largest distributor of late model Stanley #5 1/4 planes. Oh, and braces.

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Norman Hitt
05-18-2011, 10:05 PM
Wow!!!!!!!!:eek:
Now you've got the material to really make a killing, (money wise). Just advertise a combination Fettling/Sharpening workshop/class for a fee that lets the attendees take the Plane that they work on home when the class is over.;) What an opportunity.:D

Those are sure some nice looking Braces.

Jim Koepke
05-18-2011, 10:11 PM
Quite a haul there.

I bought two #5-1/4s that came from a High School. Both of them were beat to heck and back.

It kind of feels a bit awkward to me in the size and all. They see occasional use.

jtk

Mark Wyatt
05-18-2011, 10:12 PM
Ha! I think I could fit two into my shop at a time. Actually, we live across the street from a park where they hold summer farmer's markets & craft sales on the occasional weekend. I've spent some time with kids (mine and others) in the park making small items - like assembling simple birdhouses from precut parts. Somehow, I got it into my head that if Public Schools won't teach basic woodworking, maybe I could. That, and I couldn't stomach seeing these go to the metal scrappers (their destiny if I didn't buy them I think).

Indianapolis Public Schools decided several years ago to stop teaching wood shop. The tools have been sitting dormant until they decided the change was permanent. I guess this means the change is permanent. School districts around the country have reached the same conclusion.

george wilson
05-18-2011, 10:34 PM
In 1964 I started teaching school shop(so I could use the shop after hours). There was a shop for the older students across the hall. The toolroom was full of well organized transitional Stanley planes,wooden spokeshaves ,most of which had never been used,and all manner of wooden tools looking so nice in their old,golden varnished finishes. They took all those tools away at some point,and replaced them with more up to date tools. I have no idea what happened to them. Probably got tossed. This was WAY before anyone I ever heard of collected tools,or valued old tools. If we just had the foresight.

I also wish I had had the foresight to keep a 1952 Telecaster guitar that I got for $75.00 a few years later. Today it would be well into 5 figures.

Johnny Kleso
05-18-2011, 10:38 PM
Too bad they are not all corrugated you would be set...

Looks like a few pre-type 15s

Mark Wyatt
05-18-2011, 10:56 PM
I have to admit, I did rummage around the boxes to see if there were *any* corrugated. Nope. That would have been profitable.

Mark Wyatt
05-18-2011, 11:15 PM
In 1964 I started teaching school shop(so I could use the shop after hours). There was a shop for the older students across the hall. The toolroom was full of well organized transitional Stanley planes,wooden spokeshaves ,most of which had never been used,and all manner of wooden tools looking so nice in their old,golden varnished finishes. They took all those tools away at some point,and replaced them with more up to date tools. I have no idea what happened to them. Probably got tossed. This was WAY before anyone I ever heard of collected tools,or valued old tools. If we just had the foresight.

I also wish I had had the foresight to keep a 1952 Telecaster guitar that I got for $75.00 a few years later. Today it would be well into 5 figures.

If I had kept all the fishing lures (and their boxes) I went through as a kid, I'd be a rich man! Especially the ones I "borrowed" from my dad. They were selling barrels full of files and rasps today which had to weigh hundreds of pounds. $20 and off to the metal scrap heap. The ones on top looked like they had been used once. It kills me sometimes.

Roy Lindberry
05-19-2011, 12:41 AM
Wow. How much for that haul? (if you don't mind me asking)

Steve Branam
05-19-2011, 6:23 AM
I'm surprised to see they still had hand planes and braces around. Were they actually still using them in class, or had they been sitting in some corner of the shop unused for the last 20 years?

I took wood shop in south east Pennsylvania in the mid-70's, and I don't recall ever seeing hand planes, although maybe I was just too dazzled by the big power tools.

jim goddard
05-19-2011, 7:56 AM
The school district I used to live in decided, with the help of their lawyers, to sell all for scrap. That was hand and machine tools, the entire lot. The buyer also had to agree to truly scrap his purchase rather than selling it in whole or part for its intended purpose. So, I'd say you made out well in all fronts.