Showing 7 items matching "range cooker"
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Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and VillageDomestic object - Stove, Cox and Rizzetti Stove Works, ca. 1918-1930s
... ...range cooker...Flagstaff Hill Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village Warrnambool Maritime Museum Maritime Village Great Ocean Road Shipwreck Coast Stove cast iron stove combustion stove wood-burning stove wood stove wood oven solid fuel stove cooker The Planet Planet Planet No. 3 kitchen equipment baking domestic cooking cooking equipment food preparation Planet stove Planet cooker cooking range slow combustion stove antique range cooker Cox and Rizzetti Harnwell and Sons Melbourne manufacturer Chimney flue, "[within rectangle] THE / PLANET" Stove door, "(within oval) PLANET / No 3" Stove; a compact, blackened cast iron combustion cooker, installed within a fireplace and enclosed by bricks on both sides. ...Cast iron stoves burn solid fuel such as wood or coal, and are used for cooking and warmth. The stoves have a firebox with a grate where the fuel is burned. The hot air flows through flues and baffles that heat the stove top and the oven. Before cast iron stoves were invented, cooking and heating were carried out in outdoor open fires, and later, in fireplaces inside the home. In 1642 the first cast iron stove was manufactured in Lynn, Massachusetts, where molten cast iron was poured into a sand mould to make rectangular plates that were then joined together to make a box. Benjamin Franklin invented the more efficient Pennsylvania stove in 1744, and this efficient design is still used today. After the mid-19th century cast iron stoves were produced with burners in different positions, giving varied temperatures, so a wide variety of foods could be cooked at the same time at the most suitable heat, from slow cooking to baking scones. In contemporary times people the new wood-burning stoves had to meet the anti-pollution standards now in place to protect our environment. By the 1920s gas cookers were being introduced for domestic use, and by the 1930s electric home cookers were being offered to householders. PLANET STOVES In August 1925 the firm Cox and Rizzetti, Stove Works, and also Sydney Road, South Melbourne, advertised in the Brunswick and Coburg Leader of November 11, 1925 as "formerly with Harnwell and Sons" and as "specialists in solid cast iron Planet stoves ... which merit an inspection from builders and householders". The firm continued in business and was mentioned as sponsors in the King Island News in 1971. Harnwell and Sons was listed in the Victorian Government Gazette of 1894. It is curious that the firm was mentioned in an article in the Sunrasia Daily of June 14, 1934 titled 'Planet Stoves' as a manufacturer of Planet Stoves. This Planet No 3 stove is an uncommon example of cooking equipment used in kitchens in the early 20th century, as the firebox is above the oven rather than beside it. The cast iron combustion stove is significant as part of the evolution of domestic cooking. Previously cooking was mostly carried out in outdoors in open fires, and later in fireplaces indoors. Cast iron stoves are still used today and have additional features such as thermostats to monitor and maintain temperature, water heating pipes connected, and environmentally approved anti-pollution fittings. Stove; a compact, blackened cast iron combustion cooker, installed within a fireplace and enclosed by bricks on both sides. The upright rectangular stove has a flat top with three round, removable cook plates and a flue connected at the back. The front has three doors with round knob handles; a swing-down firebox door above a sliding ashtray, and two side-hinged oven doors above a sliding opening. Inside on the side walls are two pairs of runners. Behind the pair of doors is an oven with two pairs of rails and two removable metal shelves. The stove has cast inscriptions on the chimney flue and on the front of the right hand side stove door. The model of the stove is The Planet No 3, made in Melbourne.Chimney flue, "[within rectangle] THE / PLANET" Stove door, "(within oval) PLANET / No 3"flagstaff hill, flagstaff hill maritime museum and village, warrnambool, maritime museum, maritime village, great ocean road, shipwreck coast, stove, cast iron stove, combustion stove, wood-burning stove, wood stove, wood oven, solid fuel stove, cooker, the planet, planet, planet no. 3, kitchen equipment, baking, domestic cooking, cooking equipment, food preparation, planet stove, planet cooker, cooking range, slow combustion stove, antique, range cooker, cox and rizzetti, harnwell and sons, melbourne manufacturer -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)Equipment - Oven
... Range Cooker...National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM) 25 Veterans Drive Newhaven phillip-island-and-the-bass-coast Range Cooker Cooker Range 4 Steel upright cooker with flat bi-fold hinged lid, handles. ...Steel upright cooker with flat bi-fold hinged lid, handles. Comprising cabinet, cooking utensils (egg slide, ladle, rolling pin), petrol operated burner belowRange 4range cooker, cooker -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)Equipment - Equipment, Army, 1967
... National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM) 25 Veterans Drive Newhaven phillip-island-and-the-bass-coast Field Range M59 355051 8. US Armstrong Products Corp 1967 Steel upright field cooker with curved hinged lid and handles. comprised cabinet, cooking utensils and petrol operated burner. ...Steel upright field cooker with curved hinged lid and handles. comprised cabinet, cooking utensils and petrol operated burner. Catering for fifty personnel355051 8. US Armstrong Products Corp 1967field range m59 -
Mont De LanceyPudding Basin, Grimwade's, Circa 1911
... Mont De Lancey 71 Wellington Road Wandin North yarra-valley-and-dandenong-ranges Pudding basins "Gold Medal London 1911 The Quick-Cooker" Grimwades's Pat Nos 12835/09 and 1504/09 and 12181/11 Excellent for stews of all kinds" etc White ironstone "Quick-Cooker" pudding basin with lid and written cooking instructions in green. ...White ironstone "Quick-Cooker" pudding basin with lid and written cooking instructions in green."Gold Medal London 1911 The Quick-Cooker" Grimwades's Pat Nos 12835/09 and 1504/09 and 12181/11 Excellent for stews of all kinds" etcpudding basins -
Mont De LanceyCooking pot
... Mont De Lancey 71 Wellington Road Wandin North yarra-valley-and-dandenong-ranges cooking equipment cooking pots Patent no. 12835/09 Quick cooker used for stews. ...Quick cooker used for stews. Meat will keep hot for hours without overcooking and getting dry. White/green.Patent no. 12835/09cooking equipment, cooking pots -
Mont De LanceyDomestic object - Kitchen Stove, C. Andrews, c1900's
... ranges The cast iron combustion stove is significant as part of the evolution of domestic cooking. Previously, cooking was mostly carried out in the outdoors on open fires, and later in fireplaces indoors. The cast iron combustion stove is significant as part of the evolution of domestic cooking. Cast iron stoves burn solid fuel such as wood or coal, and are used for cooking and warmth. The stoves have a firebox with a grate where the fuel is burned. The hot air flows through flues and baffles that heat the stove top and the oven. By the 1920s gas cookers ...The cast iron combustion stove is significant as part of the evolution of domestic cooking. Previously, cooking was mostly carried out in the outdoors on open fires, and later in fireplaces indoors. The cast iron combustion stove is significant as part of the evolution of domestic cooking. Cast iron stoves burn solid fuel such as wood or coal, and are used for cooking and warmth. The stoves have a firebox with a grate where the fuel is burned. The hot air flows through flues and baffles that heat the stove top and the oven. By the 1920s gas cookers were being introduced for domestic use, and by the 1930s electric home cookers were being offered to householders. A vintage cast iron kitchen stove set in the back wall of the Mont De Lancey Slab Kitchen. It has two steel decorative hinged doors with a handle to open and close. There is one pull out metal shelf in each compartment. Between the two doors is a round door which opens to reveal the wood box with a slatted base. This allows the ash and small coals from the fire to fall though to a pull-out tray below to be emptied outside when cooled. There is another lift-out kid to clean the ash and coals underneath.On the chimney plate 'Andrews, Patent Non Pariel' On the front of the stove below the round wood box 'C Andrews Geelong'cooking equipment, cooking stoves, fuel cooking stoves, domestic ovens -
Parks Victoria - Wilsons Promontory LightstationDoor, oven
... The collection includes a small number of cast iron kitchen range components which appear to originate from more than one fuel-burning cooker. ...Parks Victoria - Wilsons Promontory Lightstation Lighthouse track Wilsons Promontory National Park 3960 gippsland The collection includes a small number of cast iron kitchen range components which appear to originate from more than one fuel-burning cooker. ...The collection includes a small number of cast iron kitchen range components which appear to originate from more than one fuel-burning cooker. They are possibly relics from the two nineteenth century kitchens destroyed in the 1951 bushfire or bits from abandoned obsolete cookers. There are two oven doors, both with different types of hinges and handles discernible despite their badly corroded condition. One door is rectangular with a raised edging and a handle in the shape of a fist gripping a rod; the other door has a slightly curved top and is also framed and retains its strap hinges and central lock/handle. Door from a fuel burning domestic oven. It has a slightly curved top, is framed and retains its strap hinges and central lock/handle
