What was inside all the boxes?
We now get to see!
Close your eyes. Imagine it’s 1948. You recently ordered a big set of Youngstown Steel Kitchen cabinets. The delivery truck has just arrived. The delivery men tote the big boxes into your garage. They begin to open them up. You are so excited!
Now: Open your eyes. It’s 2015 — not 1948 — but we all get to experience the thrill of opening up all the boxes! Yes: Today we get to see the very first photos of the big set of New Old Stock Youngstown Steel Kitchen cabinets that reader Ben recently discovered in storage. As you may recall, we first showed these cabinets — but still hidden in their boxes — in this story earlier this month.
They are just as pretty — just as shiny and new — as they day they were packed into their boxes. So pretty! So shiny! So new!
And woah, Nellie, hang on, because, there is a 1948 General Electric stove to go with. It is brand new, too.
Ben said the price tag was still on it: $270.
In case you didn’t catch that: Brand new. Reader Janet in ME piped right in and said it’s a GE Airliner. A GE Airliner! Woot! Our readers are So Smart. Thank you, Janet in ME!
Apparently, not one scratch new. It was all crated up.
Brand spanking new. Oh my goodness.
New new new new new. It doesn’t get much better than this.
But wait, it does get better than this. The best part, imho: New Old Stock Cusheen vinyl countertops to match up with the Youngstown Steel Kitchen cabinet bases.
There are a lot of steel kitchen cabinets around (of course, not NOS), and there are a lot of GE ranges around (ditto) — but pristine Cusheen countertops? These are flipping amazing.
Ben says that the Cusheen vinyl is adhered straight onto steel. As you can see in the photo above, there is a steel channel underneath and multiple short channels behind the backsplash to reinforce the structure. What I mean to say: There is no wood substrate to these countertops! They are Cusheen-on-steel. Ben says it’s 16 gauge. It’s honking heavy stuff.
You screw the countertops right onto the cabinets. I think those are the screws, above.
Note: The drainboard sink was used; Ben says it’s in great shape, though. Also: The sink front was used and needs some work; Ben says the paint has yellowed, and it will need to be repainted to match the other cabinets. Back story seems to be: The complete kitchen was purchased back in ’48 or ’49 with a remodel in mind. Obviously, the remodel never happened. But the owners used the sink base and the sink in another location. In addition, there likely were wall cabinets — but these were also used in another project, long gone.
What is the total tally of what was found? Ben has not made up a list — but he took photos of the boxes, and they are in the slide show, if you want to count.
Ben wants to sell these
What is going to happen to these cabinets? Ben wants to sell them. I really think they belong in a museum and am reaching out to my museum friends right away today to see if they can help get these things to a museum. Meanwhile, Ben is open to offers. He wants to sell everything as a set. (UPDATE: See below; sold. — great follow up story!)
Update: How the story ends
- UPDATE: The cabinets went to a museum — a result of our story! See how the story ends by reading this story here.
More about Youngstowns and Cusheen:
- Must see: “The Mullinaires” sing the praises of Youngstown Steel Kitchen Cabinets in 1953. Classique!
- See our story about Cusheen countertops here. It was an alternative to linoleum, available in a variety of rich colors.
- See the original Cusheen countertops in Brian and Keri’s kitchen here.
- Click here to see this late-1950s catalog showing these countertops — and lots of pretty Youngstown kitchens.
Yowza. Eight years nine-and-a-half years (yowza, I just checked — it’ll be 10 years soon!) into doing this blog daily. Just when I think we will run out of stories, stuff like this comes at us. Yay!
Thank you so much, Ben, for sending all the photos. What a great thing you did by rescuing these! Be sure to tell whoever buys them about RetroRenovation.com and to give them our contact info — we want to see where they land!
CONTINUE to next page to see the SLIDE SHOW — 80 double-sized photos:
Tips to view slide show: Click on any image… it will enlarge to 1000 pixels wide on your screen … click anywhere to move forward, and look for previous and next buttons within photo to move back or forth… you can start or stop at any image:
Diane says
If I hadn’t redone my kitchen three years ago, I would seriously go for all that wonderfulness.
Michelle says
WOW, cooler than cool! What an incredible find, I wouldn’t be able to part with anything, esp that oven! Is he selling them at 1948 prices? haha of course. 😉 If they went to a set design company or museum that would be most excellent.
pam kueber says
My guess is that if he sold them at 1948 prices adjusted for inflation — it would still be a lot of money. Stuff was quite expensive back then, given incomes. People saved a long time to make major purchases…
I checked the inflation calculator online — $1 in 1948 = $10 today.
Robert says
I like the stove… my grandma had that very one many years ago…
Phyllis Vance Wise says
I love the Youngstown kitchen cabinets and the stove, oh! The stove! I wanted these kinds of kitchenry when I designed my home, in the late seventies. When I was putting materials out on.BID, I never found info on metal cabinets those it may have been available. I knew the value of the use they had versus modern day stock wood cabinetry. Today the result is my cabinets are separating at some places. Oh I long for those beauties in all there armored glory .
pam kueber says
Well said: “… in all their armored glory” !
Laura says
Oh.my.goodness..this makes me a little faint just looking at it! Gorgeous!
Diana says
I don’t think I’ve ever wanted anything so badly. Especially since they look like they would fit my kitchen perfectly. Ohhhhhh…
Deb says
When I moved into my former house 25 years ago the kitchen had these exact white cabinets and drawer knobs and pulls. The counter tops were not this dramatic but had the steel edging and trims. The
home was built in 1948. I lived in a house with an original interior.
What fun!!!!!!!!!! Nothing like retro!
MagBot says
Am I seeing a second sink, sitting on its end, in the 5th photo down from the top on this page?
Linda says
Love this sooo much that I would even learn to cook with that electric stove! Cool beans!!!!
Joe Felice says
Lawdy, lawdy and land agoshen! Who wouldn’t want to have that kitchen? I know I could never afford it, but do we know the approximate asking price? I always wondered about those counter tops with what I thought was linoleum on them. These were pre-Formica days, I think. This particular pattern is not my fave, but we have to remember that the pizzaz of the ’50s was yet to come.