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by | Aug 25, 2013 | Miscellaneus | 222 comments

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This has been in my Opa’s house for as long as I can remember.  It’s always sat in the corner by the fireplace, so I always assumed it was a bellows.  As we were cleaning out his house, we had a pile in the middle of the family room that was the “up for grabs” unclaimed pile.  Believe it or not, this was in that pile.  Although I love all things old and appreciated it, I don’t have a fireplace and I didn’t want to take it home to sit in my basement.

But then, my uncle started playing around with it and he told me what it was.  Well, it was too cool to stay in the middle of the room, so I moved it to my pile.

Does anyone have any idea what it is?

It’s about 3 1/2′ long, so it’s pretty big.

Maybe I’ll send a prize to the person who gets it right first!

Guess away…

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    222 Comments

    1. Tammy

      Foghorn?

    2. Michelle Harmon

      fire place stoker

    3. Carrie

      Bellows? For giving the fire more oxygen?

    4. Shanna N

      Part of a bag pipe? or some other musical instrument?

    5. Tracy

      Maybe a very old vacuum of sorts?

    6. PJ

      Definitely part of an old nautical fog horn, my husband used to be in the Navy and loves old stuff like that!

    7. Jen Plummer

      A Foghorn!

    8. Tracy

      Or an instrument tuner

    9. Judy

      It’s a bellows for the fireplace.

    10. Dijana

      Hello MMS,

      That is something used to kindle the fire…when you start a fire initially it needs oxygen to give it a bit of momentum (almost like a resuscitation for the flame). As the flames start burning up the paper you place around the small pieces of wood, kindling, you use this thing (officially it is called “the poker’ or “the bellows”) to ever so gently blow air on the fire which will help it move the ash that is being created by the burning paper, which in turn gives more air to the fire. As the fire gains that momentum and starts consuming the kindling as well, the poker has done its job. If you don’t have the poker it is at this time that you kind of hop around the fire, or your fireplace, blowing and fanning the small flame(s) with a magazine hoping the fire will start. If you have one of these blowers, as I like to call them, the job of lighting a fire gets much easier. And your lips don’t hurt as much from blowing on the fire ;-).

      Hope this helps…

    11. Margaret

      It’s a fireplace bellows! My grandfather had one, too. I wonder where that is, hmmm.

    12. Abby

      It’s for putting more air onto the fire to make it “grow.” I know nothing about fire or wilderness:) My parents and grandparents used to have something that looked exactly like that- at least I think it looked like that. They used it to get the fire” going”.

    13. Gloria Lawrence

      It’s a fire siren horn…I also have a bigger one..Hugs Gloria

    14. Roxanna

      It is a primitive fireplace bellow. Compress the handles together and it forces air out to help start a fire faster. My grandparent’s were farmers and always had one by the fireplace too. I often wondered whatever happened to it when my papa passed.

    15. deborah k

      rudimentary vacuum cleaner

    16. Julie G

      Foghorn or steamship horn.

    17. Jeanne

      Fun history!
      If you check out Bonham’s Auctions website you will find Item# 3007 with this description and a photo similar to Marian’s Bellows Fog Horn

      A Triton model bellows fog horn
      Allonxxx… & Orion
      Birmingham, England (British, 19th century)

      with original leather bellows, heart shaped end panels, leather handles, brass throat and neck attaching to a copper speaker tube.
      34 x 11 in. (86.3 x 27.9 cm.) (2)
      Sold for US$ 2,074 (CA$ 2,191) inc. premium

    18. Jane

      That’s right Jeanne, just was going to post the same thing, but you beat me to it!

    19. Paola Norman

      It is bellow 🙂

    20. Jeanne

      On the Worthpoint website I found this great bit of history too! There is a photo and more on their posting if this history interests you too.
      Marine Ship Leather Bellows Foghorn Brass Fog Horn 1890 Marine Antique!
      1890s Leather Bellows Style Ship’s Foghorn

      Every once in awhile something comes in the door, never before seen and likely never seen again. Case in point, a ship’s bellows-style fog horn. What?

      Believe it or not, 100 years ago when a sailing ship was enshrouded in fog and there weren’t any vuvuzelas (those annoying South African soccer horns) on board, they grabbed up the bellows and started tooting.

      Back in 1650 a fellow named Onions (pronounced like O’Nye-uns) started making bellows and quickly cornered the market in England. His company merged with a competitor named Alldays (interesting names, wot?) in 1889 to form Alldays & Onions , which went on to make cars and motorcycles and whatnot.

      This bellows-style fog horn would have been used on a sailing ship before horns were powered by the steam boilers, and one of the deck hands would have slowly pumped it to produced the long, low sound associated with tugboats.

    21. Brini Isaacs

      Bellows for a home fireplace! I have one at my house and so do my parents and grandparents 🙂

    22. Cindy

      Since people are saying it’s a foghorn, I looked it up. SO cool.

    23. Carolina

      Vintage Fireplace Bellows!

    24. Arlene

      A fog horn that looks like and functions like a bellows that was used on sailing ships before horns were powered by steam boilers. When slowly pumped, the bellows-fog horn produced a similar sound to a tugboat noise.

      By the way, speaking of tugboats,at church yesterday, the minister spoke about “tugboat christians” as opposed to “sailboat” and “raft” christians. Which ones do you think weather the storms?

    25. Rita C

      A smoker for bees!

    26. Eileen

      It’s a fireplace bellows, used to blow air into into the embers.

    27. Danielle

      That is a bellows. It blows air into the fire to get the fire going.

    28. Samantha

      An early “dustbuster”???

    29. Rue

      My grandson said he saw it on the show Oddity, he said it was a fog horn on a ship. He said it made a really loud sound.

    30. dianne anderson

      It is a foot bellows for a pump organ, before electricity.

    31. mary w.

      Are people not reading the post before they guess? This was good for a morning giggle with my coffee…cheers! I want to take bets on how long it will be before you are compelled to restyle this item to fit better with your decor. Bet it turns out gorgeous!

      • Ray Ray

        I was thinking the same thing! It’s funny reading everyone guessing “bellows” 😉

    32. Melissa M.

      My grandparents had one of those too! It’s to keep the fire going in the fireplace. We used to play with that thing all the time…oh the memories 🙂

    33. Alice R.

      A musical instrument made out of a fireplace bellows.

    34. Melissa

      steamship horn

    35. ashlea

      Looks like a thingiemagigie to add oxygen to fire, but also makes me think of a glass blower! A old home glass blower!

    36. Helen

      Hi
      What a neat piece!! Just don’t see bellows like that anymore!!! I will be interested to see how you display it !!!

    37. PATTY P

      It’s a fog horn :o)

    38. Peggy

      Too Funny ! Marian, can’t we rig up our computers to hear you play,,I mean “sound” the foghorn?

    39. kipper

      A new way for you to call the kids to come home from the backyard!

    40. Goedele - Old Red Barn

      My parents still have one. I could use one in Winter to put the fire back on.

    41. April chamberlain

      It is a fireplace bellow!!

    42. JulieD

      Is it a steamship horn? I think I saw one at a museum once!

    43. kathy

      Abbe’s Paint Blush

      • kathy

        oops!! That comment is for name that color..

    44. Lisa Miller *Malone Street Studios

      I know! I know! It is something they used in the olden days to puff at the fire to get it started up in the fire place! We had one next to our fireplace when I was growing up. It was handed down thru our grandparents.

    45. Lelia Logan

      I have read a few posts. It sounds like an item with many uses a bellows, a fog horn, or I was thinking maybe a car horn too. My brother installed one of those fun ooga horns in his first car years ago. Maybe this was the first proto type.
      I love to guess on fun items like this?

    46. Lori R.

      Portable foghorn. There is one in a local restaurant here on the mouth of the Grand River where it meets Lake Erie. The restaurant is filled with vintage nautical items.

    47. Marsha

      It is a bellows. We have one and it isn’t even vintage. We got it at Sutherlands I think. I am guessing the long pipe thing on the end is so sparks don’t burn holes in it. If it gets a hole in it then its no good.

    48. Wendy

      We used to have one by our fireplace growing up. It’s a bellows.

    49. Candy Thayer

      It’s a bellows used for the fireplace to get the fire started.

    50. Jamee

      Foghorn! I googled the company name…

    51. Mikki

      Its an antique foghorn being used as a fireplace bellows………

    52. Diane S

      It’s a foghorn or Steam ship horn! What a deal you have there! At auction they sell for over $1K. They were made in Birmingham, Englad in the 19th Century. Very nice save there!

    53. DeborahW

      definitely Bellows for the fireplace.. 2nd place? 😉

    54. julie Bergeron

      Boy they beat me by a minute….

    55. Mikki

      …and if thats the case, I’d say that your Opa was repurposing back in his day….just as much as you do in yours!!!

    56. Fran C

      Is it bellows?

    57. Debbie

      Vintage Wooden Bellow Fire Place Blower

    58. Tami

      I am guessing it was used to “blow” air into the fire to get it going!?

    59. Mikki

      Its an antique foghorn being used as a fireplace bellows………???

      …and if thats the case, I’d say that your Opa was repurposing back in his day….just as much as you do in yours!!!

    60. Bonnie

      If your fire syarys to go out, its kinda like blowing on it to get the fire to come back!

    61. Lisa Cotter

      Is it a Bellows Steamship foghorn?

    62. Cindy Knighten

      Is it something to do with an old camera?

    63. karen piehl

      a steamship horn!

    64. Diana

      Concertina bellows

    65. linda

      It must be the fog horn thing but I was going to guess a tire pump!

    66. PJ Bronson

      Vintage Bellows Foghorn

    67. Pam

      Some kind of a wind instrument!

    68. Nancy

      There is an instrument just like this that adds air to pipe organs!

    69. Wendy D.

      Is it some kind of animal call? Thought maybe a goose, but with the word Triton i’m thinking some sea creature or maybe to call the crew on deck. Love all the details.

    70. Andrea

      It does resemble what was used to fan fires……

    71. Dianne

      Vintage bellows for forge in blacksmith shop/metal works

    72. Micki Martin

      That is some kind of musical instrument

    73. Laura Van Scott

      Is it a bellows-blown bagpipe?

    74. Alexis

      Diane S is correct! It’s a hand held fog horn and Triton made them!

    75. Audrey Zumwalt

      Antique fireplace bellows to blow the flame to start the fire or rekindle (re-start) it.
      Audrey Z. @ Timeless Treasures

    76. Stacey Stuwe

      Foghorn! the auction page i found had a similar item sell for over $2000.00 maybe you should auction it??

      http://www.bonhams.com/auctions/18528/lot/3007/

      Great piece of history you have their Miss!!

    77. Gwen

      My grandparents had this in France where I grew up. It is to start the fire when using wood and paper and if you have only ashes or coal and want to add more fire with big pieces of wood. This is called a a soufflés in French so maybe translate it gusset/blower. It works like an accordion, pull the handles apart, close and it blows some air into the fire to fuel it

    78. Helen Williams

      Yes, I believe it is definitely an Antique Fireplace Bellow to blow air on the coals and make the fire flare up better!

    79. Karen

      Well the metal part may be a little too big, but it looks like a smoke enama.

    80. cathy

      A bellows pipe musical instrument!

    81. cathy

      Yep, a steamship horn, not a bellows pipe, thought that might be the other name

    82. Vanna

      I agree with Alexis and Diane S. It’s a fog horn. *winks* Vanna

    83. Anke

      It’s to get a fire going. Use it’s air on the burning coals and voila……there should be flames.

    84. Karen

      Can’t see my earlier post?? I tried to leave an ebay link. There’s one that sold . it doesn’t look as nice as yours.
      great piece!!!!

    85. Kim

      It’s a lifeboat foghorn, manually operated, as there would be no power for this in the lifeboat.

    86. Karen

      Oh and I searched under antique foghorn. Really cool!!!!

    87. Peggy Thal

      Bellows Steamship Horn !

    88. Kae

      http://www.bonhams.com/auctions/18528/lot/3007/

      A Tritonmodel bellows fog horn Allonxxx… & Orion
      Birmingham, England (British, 19th century)
      with original leather bellows, heart shaped end panels, leather handles, brass throat and neck attaching to a copper speaker tube.
      34 x 11 in. (86.3 x 27.9 cm.) (2)

      There is a photo of one on this website…..

    89. Kae

      Triton model bellows fog horn. See the photo on the website given.

      http://www.bonhams.com/auctions/18528/lot/3007/

      A Tritonmodel bellows fog horn Allonxxx… & Orion
      Birmingham, England (British, 19th century)
      with original leather bellows, heart shaped end panels, leather handles, brass throat and neck attaching to a copper speaker tube.
      34 x 11 in. (86.3 x 27.9 cm.) (2)

    90. AnnW

      I haven’t read any of the comments, but I think it is some kind of bellows, Or maybe it sucks out the old ashes. I’m itching to clean up the brass on it though, I Love English Brass!

    91. debbie

      It’s an antique Yacht fog horn.

    92. Linda Owens

      I think it may be a steamship foghorn.
      Linda O.

    93. Jami at freckled laundry

      I’ll have to agree with a ship’s fog horn…I JUST something like this on Pawn Stars or Antiques Roadshow! Apparently at sea, you can hear low tones much better than high-pitched whistles. Thought that was interesting!

    94. Patti

      It is a Uilleann Pipes chanter set or a musette de cour or baroque musette – a musical instrument of the bagpipe family.

    95. Carolyn

      Vintage life line or life boat fog horn with leather bellow.

    96. Laurie

      It is used to dust for insects on flowere and vegetables!

    97. Camille

      Miniature accordion?

    98. Patsy52

      An early vacuum cleaner.

    99. NANCY

      Yep, it’s a fireplace bellows.

    100. frankie angelo

      It is a fireplace bellows; to keep the fire going and hot

    101. Katherine Dunn

      It’s definitely a vintage/antique hand fireplace bellow used to furnish a strong blast of air to make a fire burn more fiercely. Very cool find love bug! Europe has a long history with using fireplace bellows. 🙂

    102. Sadie Udy

      It’s a Triton Bellows Foghorn made by Alldays and Onion in Birmingham England. Alldays and Onion made things from bellows to cars in the 1800s. These big fog horns were used on ships to alert others with a loud “honk”.
      Today it could be used as an alarm clock for sleepy teens on a school morning!

      • Sadie Udy

        What a cool find by the way!

    103. Allison

      Why is everyone guessing bellows when she already said that wasn’t it? She clearly knows what a bellows is.

      • Sadie

        A bellows is a device constructed to furnish a strong blast of air. There are fire place bellows, bellows in foghorns and also in old cameras.

      • Sharon

        I was thinking the same thing, Allison. They must not have actually read the article properly. Some other interesting answers though. I think a lot of people just jump to the bottom of the comments and don’t read them all either. Very interesting piece.

    104. Cindy

      haha – no idea what it is!

      Cindy

    105. Claudia

      BELLOWS used to fan a fire to get it going

    106. Ann

      An Early Triton Hand Bellow Fog Horn – recent Ebay price $100-200.

    107. Lou Ann

      It looks like a bellows to me……but what do I know. lol You could even use it for decoration by a gas fireplace.

    108. SusanC

      Something to do with gun powder?

    109. Teddee Grace

      Well, it is a bellows but if it wasn’t used to encourage a fire to flame perhaps it was used to suck up the ashes…then you could whoosh them out into the outdoor ash pile. I grew up with wood stoves and still have one in my cabin in the Rockies and such an invention would really be helpful.

    110. Cynthia

      It’s a ships foghorn, often confused with fireplace bellows,but makes a loud noise.

    111. Jessica @ Dear Emmeline

      Looks like you could blow all the dust out of you workshop with it!

    112. Marianne@songbird

      A kind og Austrian bagpipe. So a musical instrument.

    113. Jan Ross

      You are getting some funny comments, but I too think it is a bellows meant to blow air onto the fire which ignites a flame again from the smoldering wood.

    114. Robin

      It’s a foghorn!

    115. Karen

      Is it a dryer?

    116. Melissave

      This item is a foghorn bellows made by the Triton Company to be used on a ship as a foghorn.

    117. LindaC

      It’s a ‘whatchamacallit’ made in the 1800’s devised to make later generations wonder. lol

      • Stephanie Hobson

        Exactly!

    118. Junitta Shockley

      foghorn

    119. Steph

      A musical instrument- horn of some type?

    120. elma

      It is called a vintage fireplace bellow:)

    121. Liz Rvera

      Its a vintage vacum cleaner, only blows the dust and dirt around.

    122. Laura J

      Looks like a bellows bagpipe — a musical instrument.

    123. osiris steward

      It blows air in the fire to get it going

    124. Ingrid

      It was use to create more fire in the furnace/chimmney

    125. Kathy mosher

      You fan a fire to get it going after you start it with kindling……like blowing on it or fanning with a newspaper…it does the work for you in quick measure

    126. Jean

      Definitely a “bellows” used to force air into the fire to make it burn better.

    127. Portia McCracken

      Is it the bellows for a set of Irish uilleann bagpipes?

    128. Marie Claire

      I was thinking of some folksy kind of simple bagpipes, too.

    129. gabrielle

      Antique Whoopee Cushion?

    130. suek357

      It’s an old fashioned fog horn! How cool is that!

    131. M

      I’m pretty sure it’s a Bellows. I used to have one something like it – just not so old.

    132. Jo

      I thought you might be interested in a deal I ran across this week. Go to onlinegoodwill.com which is the Nashville online site. Look at ‘all categories”. Then search pressed glassware. There are two sets of 8 piece blue glasses. The size seems to be juice glasses but they are very pretty. I know you like blue! The bid right now is $5.00 for each set plus shipping. The main site is shopgoodwill.com. I have gotten some great deals on the online goodwill site. If you shop at the one in your area then you can go and pick up your treasures with paying shipping which is why I only shop at the Nashville area site. .

    133. Kellene

      a bellows!

    134. Lora

      I know! It is the pilgrim version of the thigh master.

    135. Carolyn

      I didn’t know the true name but just as you, I knew it was an instrument to stoke a fire in the fireplace – please you knew or at least some member in your family as it laid in the pile. I am going to ask again in front of all your followers since you refuse to respond to my questions. That’s right, ladies, she doesn’t respond to me. I am already working on fall and in an attempt to make a little change to help me live when will you disclose how to make the boxwood wreaths as well as the magnolia wreaths – this is my 3rd request without any response……. If you want to keep it a secret I understand but I thought you were all about DIY and sharing. I follow only a few people and all of them disclose – why not you? I am very disappointed in you MMS.

      Carolyn

      • Karen

        I was so surprised to see your post… Marian shares so much with her readers. Keep reading… I am sure the tutorials for the wreaths will come out soon. Don’t be discouraged by not getting a response. Marian is a young mother and wife with a lot on her plate. I am sure she means no disrespect. I can only imagine how it must be to walk in her shoes – busy, busy, busy – her business is growing so fast that it must be crazy, overwhelming, uncontrolled chaos. I hope you find what you are looking for, if not in this blog – in another. Blessings to you, fellow blog reader! 🙂

      • Miss Mustard Seed

        Carolyn, I’m so sorry I didn’t respond to your questions, but, as much as I try, I just can’t answer every single question. In a few of the posts where I showed the wreath, I shared that the tutorial was one I wrote for HGTV.com, so it will not be posted on my blog, but I will share a link to it when it is live on their site. I will stay true to that promise and will share it when it is posted.

        I am sorry to hear you’re disappointed.

        Marian

    136. Wendy Manning

      Bagpipe??

    137. Natalie

      ‘Red Factor’ Charolais- for your love of cows!
      Mountain Coral- after the jewelry this color but I like the name for the significance of mustard seeds and mountains!

      Love the new color!

    138. Ann

      It is part or most of a uillean bagpipe, needs a few more pieces like the end and reed, etc. to work properly. It was just a very simple version of the instrument we know as bagpipes.

    139. Becky Duncan

      Looks like a bellow for a fireplace or stove but I think you said that isn’t what it is. Is it something to do with a boat? Maybe a device that was used to blow air into a coal fire on a boat?

    140. Nina Varni

      Is it a gun powder measuring gauge?

    141. Madeline

      This is a BLASBALG (German). It means “BELLOW”…

      Definitions
      a mechanical device that blows a strong current of air; used to make a fire burn more fiercely or to sound a musical instrument

      My husband, who is from Switzerland, told me what it was!

    142. Tyson

      It is an old-time bellows. Blacksmiths used them to inject air into fires to superheat the metal they were forming.

    143. Tricia

      It’s a musical instrument.

    144. Wendy

      Like some others have said, I’m pretty sure it’s a foghorn!
      Way fun
      🙂

    145. Terri

      Wow Carolyn, I think you are just being cynical, Marian has opened her heart, her lifes’ work on this blog, and taught with step by step instructions so much. She is an inspiration and I find her to be amazing.

      She also said ” I assumed it was a bellow’s” so I think that it must be something other than, maybe some type of horn.

    146. sue

      I had to look it up and I think it is a foghorn. That might be dangerous to have in a household with two youngsters.
      I once wrote to Marian about some tiles that she got and kind of whined about how it must be nice to get stuff, etc. a little green eyed, feeling sorry for myself, but in a polite way. Well, Marian took the time to write back to me and explain her perspective of the situation. I was amazed, humbled and very impressed that this busy, talented lady would take time to write to me and tackle what others might have seen as just sour grapes. Marian is the real deal and I would bet that she just messed up, like we all do. I have been reading her blog from the beginning and she just is a natural talent.
      I wish I could get a transfusion of her energy…it would be wonderful. Thanks, girlfriend, you are doing the best you can and we all appreciate it.

    147. Emily

      It is a Alldays & Onions Oak and Leather Foghorn Bellows. See Information: Alldays & Onions Oak & Leather Foghorn Bellow.

      A late Victorian or Edwardian era maritime fog horn, fashioned from Oak and Leather, finished in brass with the Birmingham England maker’s mark, ALLDAYS & ONIONS.

      A fellow with the last name of Onions (Pronounced as o-NYE-uns) founded a bellows-making company in 1650 and quickly cornered the market in England. His company merged with Alldays in 1889. Later, the company produced some of the first English cars and motorcycles.

    148. Laura Strack

      It is a Portable Triton Foghorn often used by the English Navy….see the brass “Horn” on the end?

    149. Tina

      It looks like a weapon!

    150. Laurie

      It is used to add more feathers to a feather bed!

    151. Sarah

      We have one of those too! We use it to help get the fire going in the wood stove! It was given to us by my husband’s step father, I believe it may have been passed down through the years.

    152. Manja van Aar

      It’s a European thing.Grew up with those.It blows air in the fireplace to get the fire going .

    153. Judy Musick

      I think they were called bellows, and were used to blow air into the fireplace.

    154. joann kradel

      fog horn?

    155. Diana

      a blacksmith’s bellow

    156. Irene G.

      I think it might be some kind of plunger???

    157. Tonda

      I think it may be a yacht foghorn, maybe 19th century? It’s vey cool!

    158. Mary

      Ok ! You were right at the beginning and knew it was (originally) bellows but I think the pipe bit has been changed – so I’m going to guess it now plays some kind of sound, maybe like a cow mooing or a wee tune. Mary

    159. Christie

      I was so excited when I saw the picture and knew what it was but then I read the comments and found I wasn’t the only one! 🙂 Maybe I watch too many old movies and read to many books set in the past. I was going to say a thing to blow air in to the fire and that one looks a bit longer in the part that goes near the fire to keep you away from the heat when you are using it. I wasn’t sure how to spell bellows but I see the other ladies got a handle on that. 🙂

    160. Susie

      It “blows” air to build the flames of a fire when it is pumped. When pumped properly (slow & steady), it blows a steady continuous steam of air to fuel a fire, much more productive than our lungs! Beautiful piece! I’m sure you can find many spaces on your walls for it in your beautiful house, and what a fantastic PHOTO PROP for you, and sentimental as well, lucky girl!

    161. Karen Alexander

      It’s a foghorn ~ for real ! Love to have one of those 🙂

    162. Teresa

      Could it be a bellows pipe used to make musical sounds Like a bagpipe?

    163. AshleyM

      It’s a Triton leather bellows foghorn most likely English. Super duper cool!

    164. Amanda

      They had something like this in the housekeeper’s room at Biltmore. It looked like a bellows, but the guide said it was an old vacuum! Is that what this is?

    165. Marijke

      It,s a blaasbalg 😉 in dutch it blows air into the fire.

    166. Anne

      It’s called a “soufflet” ; this is the French word. I have one near my fireplace.
      Sorry but I do not know the English name for it.
      Anne from France

    167. Jean Coulombe

      steamship horn

    168. Daisy

      I think it is a musical instrument of some kind?

    169. Cindy Rosborough

      It’s a foghorn… but I won’t lie… I looked it up by Googling “Triton bellows.”

    170. Lorianne

      Fireplace Bellow. OK, I’m 51 and can’t believe how few people knew what the item in the photo was….LOL. My parents had one and when the fire would start to die out, I would press the two handles of the Bellow together (actually pumping action) to produce air toward the fire so the fire would get more oxygen and ignite or flame up more. Yummy, then throw some marshmallows on a stick and slowly roast them!

      • Julie

        um MMM said it isn’t bellows- re read above 😀

    171. Colleen

      Is it a fog horn?

    172. Sherill

      I don’t know what it is…but certain parts of the leather sure look a lot like your new paint color??…hmmmm

    173. Elizabeth

      My next door neighbors had one of these. I never knew the name of it, I just liked to play with it and blow it in my sister’s face when she annoyed me! It always smelled of smoke. I don’t remember ever seeing them actually use it on a fire, but they kept it on the hearth.

    174. Judy Goshy

      Don’t know what it is but it can’t be a bellows because that is what you assumed it is. Then your uncle explained what it is. Looks like a bellows, sat beside the fireplace, but evidently isn’t.

    175. Jane

      When will you tell us what it is? I am dying to know!

    176. Emily M

      Its a horn for a steam ship! my grandpa has one too! so cool!!

    177. Barb P

      It is a Bellow which is used to give a blast of air for your fireplace

    178. vikki

      Most definately a fog horn.

    179. Gloria

      It’s a fireplace bellow….we use an old one, as well, to create a draft and help ignite the crumpled paper/kindling wood in the fireplace.

    180. annel

      Yep, the ones who said it is a fan to get the embers aflame are correct. Pretty cool, or should I say hot item! Ha! Blessings

    181. Frankie Laney

      Looking at the manufacturer’s name, Triton gave me a hint. Triton was a fish-tailed sea god, the son and herald of Poseidon, king of the seas. He calmed the waves with the blow on a conch-shell trumpet. That leads me to believe it must be a fog horn or a ship’s warning horn.

    182. Sharron Thyden

      I believe it is used for the fire my family use to have one I’m thinking its long because a furnace could be deep. There very handy if the fires about to go out. Like blowing on a fire to get it going
      Wonder what happened to that one out at the dairy….. hummmm.

    183. marjorie herbert

      it’s a fog horn. ha years ago i saw it on a treasure appraisal show. they had callers calling in to see if they guessed it. pretty funny that i remember that i was only about 10

      • marjorie herbert

        maybe they used it as an old fashioned fire alarm ha

    184. Kim

      A form of a bagpipe

    185. Bonnie

      Well, it looks like the thing the doctor in A Princess Bride sticks into Wesley’s mouth to revive him, only much bigger. 🙂 I obviously don’t know anything. I asked my husband and he immediately knew it was a bellows and how to use it. Of course.

    186. Jan

      In an effort to think outside the box, I’ll go with popcorn popper!

    187. Patricia Machock

      A steamship horn

    188. Claudia

      It was used to blow the dust off plants. I think.

    189. Sharron L.

      It certainly looks like a Bellow to me! I have an old vintage one, looks different but they are lovely and nice for displaying. It is constructed to furnish a strong blast of air when pumped or pushed together to start a fire! This one is very rare and very neat! Thanks for sharing!

    190. Suzanne

      Definitely an English bellows!

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