Free Westinghouse Sewing Machine Serial Numbers

  

If you have a machine manufactured by New Home or Free Westinghouse and want to know the year of manufacture, please send the serial number to the New Home Sewing Machine Co, PO Box 25901, Los Angeles 25, California. The serial number for your machine is the AL3614864 number. Free Westinghouse Sewing Machine Serial Numbers The Free-Westinghouse Electric Sewing Machine Model 52F in a Cabinet has an estimated value on the secondary retail market for an of average of $300.00-325.00, depending on the condition and where it is for sale. BRITISH Machines Part 1; BRITISH Machines Part 2; BRADBURY & Co. BRITANNIA SEWING MACHINE COMPANY; BRITISH SEWING MACHINE COMPANY Ltd; ECLIPSE MACHINE COMPANY; ESSEX; GRAIN E. IMPERIAL SEWING MACHINE CO. DATING & IDENTIFYING Jones Sewing Machines; Jones Decals Chronology; Jones HS Machines (High Speed.

Numbers

HISTORY OF THE COMPANY


The St. John Sewing Machine Company, which was the predecessor of the Free S.M.Co., was founded in 1870. In 1883, it was renamed the Royal Sewing Machine Company. After the company relocated to Rockford, Illinois, it was renamed once again in 1897 as The Free Sewing Machine Company after company president William C. Free.

Most machines made by the Free company were for sale by mail-order companies and department stores. For instance, machines that are marked “Illinois Sewing Machine Co.” were made by Free.

In the mid-1920s, Free became associated with Westinghouse which became the sold supplier of motors and electric equipment for Free brand sewing machines. As such, the earlier electrically driven Free sewing machines are labeled Free-Westinghouse.

The Free sewing machine company merged with the New Home Sewing Machine Company in 1927. In the early 1930s New Home models were phased out of production and ‘New Home’ basically became a brand of The Free.

The post World War II period saw the large scale importation of cheap Japanese-made sewing machines into the United States. Trade barriers favorable to American companies had protected the country’s sewing machine industry from lower cost (and quality) foreign made goods. However, the Marshall Plan coupled with the new ideas of free trade slowly eliminated them.

In an effort to stay solvent, Free/New Home merged with National in the early 1950s. However, the resulting corporation was not able to compete against cheap overseas labor, and the company was bought out by the Japanese in 1954.

The historical and technical contribution of The Free to sewing machine development was negligible. Like many of the other small manufacturers, they basically made machines based more or less on designs from the larger manufacturers.

--From The Encyclopedia of Antique Sewing Machines, 3rd Edition


Royal sewing machine (Photo courtesy of G. Bethell)
Oiling diagram for the sewing machine head
Parts diagram for The Free sewing machine head
Threading diagram for The Free
The Free vibrating shuttle sewing machine head

Free Westinghouse Sewing Machine Serial Numbers And Dates

(Courtesy of Bobbie Kopf)
Underside view of The Free sewing machine (Courtesy of Bobbie Kopf)
View of The Free sewing machine in a treadle cabinet Serial(Courtesy of Bobbie Kopf)
Illustration of a Victorian woman readying the machine for use (Courtesy of Bobbie Kopf)

Free Westinghouse Sewing Machine Serial Numbers

Side view of The Free sewing machine cabinet (Courtesy of Bobbie Kopf)
Close-up shot of throat plate area
The Free Elgin sewing machine (Photo courtesy of G. Bethel)
The Free sewing machine (Photo courtesy of G. Bethel)
The Free McCaskill sewing machine (Photo courtesy of G. Bethel)
The Free sewing machine (built-in motor) Serial(Photo courtesy of G. Bethel)

Copyright © 1996-2001 by Charles Law (Webmaster)
Object Name Machine, Sewing
Caption Number 5 treadle sewing machine made by The Free Sewing Machine Company
Description Number 5 treadle sewing machine made by The Free Sewing Machine Company. Patent dates listed on bobbin cover:1902, 1905, 1907, 1908, 1909, 1910. Purchased c.1912 by Grover and Mabel LeMaitre Finney, grandparents of donor Charles Reiner. Mabel used the machine to make clothes, pillows, rag rugs and so forth. Her name was listed as a knitter and a sewer in the Hutchinson branch of the American Red Cross, McLeod County Chapter. She completed a suit of pajamas in October, 1917 for the war effort of World War I.
Mabel was born June 17, 1888. She and Grover Finney were married in Hutchinson on December 25, 1909. Mabel died on August 17, 1972. Grover was born July 23, 1885 and died July 11, 1966.
The machine is set in an oak cabinet with curved lines and rounded surfaces. It has an automatic lifting lid and three side drawers on each side. When lid is closed over the machine the side drawers automatically lock. The word 'Free' is on the head and designed into the treadle. The stand legs were described as being of French design, nicely curved to conform to the furniture.
Includes original illustrated instruction book, guarantee envelope and metal box of numerous attachments. Drawers contain thread, bobbins, needles, needle wax, chalk, ruler, buttons, razor blade, beads & cord, early drapery hooks and early picture hangers.
The St. John Sewing Machine Company, founded in 1870, was the predecessor of the Free Sewing Machine Company. In 1883 it was renamed the Royal Sewing Machine Company. After the company relocated to Rockford, Illinois it was renamed again in 1897 as The Free Sewing Machine Company after company president William C. Free. Most machines made by the Free company were for sale by mail-order companies. In the mid-1920s Free became associated with Westinghouse and machines were labeled Free-Westinghouse. In 1927 the Free company merged with New Home Sewing Machine Company.
Catalog Number 2016-0179-001
Search TermsSewing machines
Free Sewing Machine Company, Rockford, Illinois
Subjects Sewing machines
PeopleFinney, Grover
Finney, Mabel LeMaitre