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Vintage Set of 4 Used Copper Chase USA Moscow Mules Drinking Mugs Cups

$ 39.6

Availability: 100 in stock

Description

This is a set of four vintage Chase Copper mugs or Moscow mules that have the Centaur shooting an arrow hallmark.
They are in used condition and have some scratches, dings, dents and so forth, they are not in mint condition. Please look at the pictures.
Any questions please ask.
The Chase Brass and Copper Company is one of the most significant manufacturers of ingot, brass rod, and other metallurgical products in the United States. The company was established and incorporated in 1876 in Waterbury, Connecticut, by Henry Sabin Chase, who also served as its first president. The advent of Chase and other similar firms was what gave Waterbury its nickname—“the Brass City.”
The company erected a plant on Babbitt Road in Euclid, Ohio, in 1929, its first foray into the American Midwest. That year, Kennecott Utah Copper—for a time, the primary producer of copper in the country—absorbed Chase, making the latter a subsidiary of the former.
In the 1930s, renowned designers Walter Von Nessen, Rockwell Kent, and Russel Wright engineered a line of chrome Art Deco household items aimed at consumers. Less than a decade later, World War II dominated geopolitics, its waves rocking governments and businesses alike. As a result, Chase’s chrome products were discontinued, their brief shelf-life dramatically boosting their status as collectibles. While the world was at war, in the 1940s, Chase bought a tube mill built in Euclid by the U.S. federal government, adding it to the company’s list of holdings.