Milner Safe Serial Numbers

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This page will help if you want work doing to a safe, or need to know what cash rating it is graded to. Click the link which best matches your safe. Important questions. Does your safe have a turn handle?

Key Elements Locksmiths Opening a Milner Safe that had not been opened in 20 years, & makeing a new set of keys visit - www.kelocks.net.

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Or just the lock? The style and position of the handle really helps us to identify your safe.

Can you see the hinges? Or are they concealed? The shape and any numbers/letters on the hinges really helps us to ID your safe. Is it a key lock? A mechanical combination lock?

An electronic combination lock? Is the key/code lost or just stopped working? Is there any name, numbers or logo on the door, on the hinges, on the backpan or the bolt ends?

What colour is the safe? Is the door a different colour to the body? Freestanding safes as shown. Wall safes as shown. Safes set into the floor.

Can be underfloor or floorboard / cupboard safes. Freestanding - Wall safes. Normally constructed using a single layer of steel which gets additional protection from the wall once fitted.

Usually the lock itself moves the locking bolts.

April 2016 - Chubb Archives Peter Gunn passed the website www.chubbarchives.co.uk to The History of Locks Museum, together with associated tables, registers etc. March 2015 - Chubb Collectainia Some sections of the archives of Chubb and Son and predecessors (collection reference CLC/B/002) are available for consultation at London Metropolitan Archives (LMA) by prior appointment. Requests to view the records should be addressed to LMA. Contact details can be found on the 'Links' page. February 2015 - Thanks to Volunteers Since 2010 volunteers based at LMA have been item-listing in detail each document in the scrapbooks.

As of February 2015 just under 15,000 item level descriptions have been completed which is an amazing feat. LMA wishes to thank all volunteers who have helped make this possible. 2010 - Volunteering The Chubb Collectanea (LMA catalogue series reference CLC/B/002/10/01) consists of 110 scrapbooks (originally held by the company as 48 numbered volumes) charting the history of Chubb and Sons from 1818 to 1980s, which were created by the company. These special volumes contain a rich variety of documents, cuttings, photographs and other items which are essential to our understanding of the development of Chubb and the security industry in the United Kingdom and beyond.

There are limited indexes to this series and LMA therefore established a volunteer project to make this series more accessible. For more information please contact: ask.lma@cityoflondon.gov.uk 020 7332 3820. September 2004 - Chubb Lock Serial Numbers Lord Hayter’s 1828 lock on the Home page is unusual in not being marked with a serial number.

Housed in a leather bound presentation case, with the label shown on the right, this lock has been handed down through the Chubb family. It was thought to be the only one in existence and to have been individually made for Charles Chubb.

An article in the Sept. 2004 Newsletter of the American Lock Collectors Association proved this was not the case. The picture in this extract from the ALCA article clearly shows a similar lock. The serial number 14858 is part of the inscription on the visible side of the bolt head.

The owners contacted the Guildhall Library and were advised that lock number 14858 was dispatched to Hatton & Co. In Liverpool, on Dec.23rd 1837. I have no doubt this information appears against that serial number but we now know that several blocks of serial numbers were duplicated and I believe this lock was almost certainly made at about the same time as Lord Hayter’s. Major factors are the design of the detector mechanism and the bolt head inscription “Chubbs Improved Patent”. The 1833 New Patent introduced a completely new design of detector and lever shape. Although the label shown above states it was “made for the Bank of England”, the lock is obviously intended as a sample.

The belief is, having secured orders from England’s National Bank, Charles Chubb authorised production of several identical samples, with a view to securing similar orders from overseas. Only one of the keys shown above will operate the lock correctly. The other is a ‘false’ key. - Chubb Samples Throughout the 1800s Chubb produced samples of their different lock models with the lock case ‘cut-out’ to show the internal mechanism. Two keys were included, one of them being a ‘false’ key to demonstrate the function of the Detector mechanism. Providing a leather bound case gave them protection during transit to potential customers. This photograph shows a sample drawer lock from my collection.

The serial number dates it to 1859. - SERIAL NUMBERS ON CHUBB SAFES, STRONGROOM DOORS etc.

Although Chubb registered their first Safe Patent in 1835 they did not begin serially numbering their equipment until 1845, some eight years after opening the first manufacturing plant in London. The numbers were recorded along with details about the product and delivery arrangements. Chubb continued numbering all Safes, Doors and other Safe Works products until manufacturing ceased in Wolverhampton in the late 1990s. NOTE: THE EQUIPMENT RECORDS WERE NEVER PART OF THE CHUBB ARCHIVES. THEY WERE ALWAYS KEPT AT THE SAFE WORKS.