I've heard of International Harvester trucks, but refrigerators too?

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revvinkevin

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I was scrolling through a 1951 edition of LIFE magazine on Google books and came across an ad for an International Harvester refrigerator.   I know lots of companies dabbled in many things, but had no idea this truck and tractor maker also got into home refrigeration.

 

Kevin

[this post was last edited: 9/29/2014-19:49]

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Hi Kevin, I think IH refrigerator line was a clever way to market in rural communities.  They could  sell to those tight fisted farmers..  Deep in the boonies rural electricity did not arrive until after WWII,  when it did arrive many times it was ceramic fixtures in the ceiling of every room with a pull string and 1 outlet in the kitchen for a refrigerator and iron, one in the living room  for a radio and fan.  IIRC Whirlpool ended up with IH refrigeration business.
 
Internationa Harvester refrigerator

The refrigerator in the girls apartment in the Friends series is a single door International Harvester, quite similar to the one in the first pictures. It can be clearly seen in dozen of episodes.
 
Used IH fridges....

from the 40s and 50s turn up here in Phoenix every couple of months it seems. This city was basically a citrus orchard for all the years up to about the late 50s/early 60s. So....I've seen at least 8 of them for sale in the last year and 1/2.
 
The DMV in Bryan, Texas had one in their break room the last time I was there back in college in 1999.

 

Here is another odd one: last month I took delivery of a late 40s or early 50s Firestone upright freezer. The data tag says Firestone Tire and Rubber.
 
That one in Phoenix is awesome!  I know someone locally that's looking for an IH fridge, but I doubt he'll be willing to ship it from Arizona. :/
 
The thing I remember about most of the International Harvester refrigerators I saw come in as trades was the bottle opener built into the door latch. I thought it was a clever idea.

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International Harvester Refrigerators and Freezers

Made some great refs and freezers, IH invented and patented the way they made the steel liners for their chest freezers, they took a huge sheet of steel welded into a band and did a continuous weld of steel tubing to the outside of this band of steel. Then they bent it into a rectangular shape and welded a bottom on to it, then the whole thing was sprayed with powered porclean and fired in an oven at around 1500F degrees.

Whirlpool bough IH in the mid 1950s and continued to build chest freezers this way through the 80s, WPs and Sears chest freezers were the best built freezers by a long shot during this time period. WP also bought also bought Seeger refrigeration in the mid 1950s and this is where they got the Seeger designed rotary compressor, WP continued to use this compressor design into the mid 1980s and incorporated it in nearly all refs, freezers small A/Cs and 50LB IMs. My brother Jeff and I among others consider this Seeger Rotary Compressor to be by far the best compressor ever used in a home ref or freezer. They NEVER wore out or lost any pumping capacity unlike a piston compressor and you could a unplug a running refrigerator and plug it right back in and the compressor would restart instantly.
These compressors were also virtually silent in operation, it was always hard to tell if it was running if the ref had even a condenser fan running.

I had a funny warranty call on a new WP ref in about 1980 where the customer said that her new WP refrigerator was too noisy. It was a basic model with a condenser on the back. After looking over the new ref that was barely humming I explained that there was probably no ref made that was any quieter than this ref, and I asked her what kind of ref she had before, and she said it was also a WP. Then I noticed that there was a recently capped gas line behind the new ref and we determined that she had had a gas WP gas ref, and I could understand why even the slight hum of the new one was noisy to her, LOL.
 
IH

My grandparents had an enormous International Harvester deep freezer at their lake cottage, which I found a little fascinating since my dad drove a lot of IH Scouts back then.
 
<span style="font-family: georgia, palatino; font-size: 14pt;">The science lab in the parochial school I attended had an IH fridge like the one pictured in reply #11.  The general manager, assistant manager, and 2 salesmen of our local IH dealership were all members of my parish at one time.  This easily explains how it might have been acquired. </span>

 

<span style="font-family: georgia, palatino; font-size: 14pt;">About 10 years ago I passed up the chance to acquire one for free from the late 1940's.  It belonged to an elderly couple that was downsizing and were moving to an apartment.  It was their kitchen fridge.  It was in excellent condition, and only needed a new door gasket.  Sadly, it was bought by our local utility for $50 and scrapped.
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