The Royal Metal Upright by Benjamin Edge & Jeff Schroff

VacuumLand – Vintage & Modern Vacuum Enthusiasts

Help Support VacuumLand:

ornery

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 8, 2013
Messages
208
Location
Northeast Ohio
Well Ben and Jeff, I couldn't wait any longer for you to write your book, so I compiled your posts from the last few years into a PDF about the Royal Metal Upright. I'm going to call this a draft, and keep adding to it. I'll leave the file name the same.

If you, Alex Taber, or anyone else has an issue with this compilation, or the links in it, just shout out, or delete this entire post.

Also, please make any suggestions for additions or changes, and I'll do my best to get it done.

Thanks a million for all the work you've done, and especially to Mr. Taber for creating and maintaining this excellent site.

http://www.ornery.net/Royal_Metal_Upright.pdf
ornery++3-23-2014-15-49-7.jpg
 
Royal's first vacuum cleaner was made in 1910. This is the model 1. Royal built the Health-Mor upright, then the first two Filter Queen model (200 and 350). They also built Modern Hygiene vacuums.

Also, Alex Taber founded the VCCC, and is considered one of the premier historians of vintage vacuums, but Vacuumland is not Alex's site. It actually belongs to the Webmasters, Robert and Fred.

dysonman1++3-24-2014-10-37-42.jpg
 
Off To A Flying Start!

The Model 1 is prominently featured in the compilation thanks to Tom Gasko, but I've never heard of Robert and Fred. I thought the VCCC and Vacuumland were one and the same. I hope they'll forgive me!
 
Vacuumland was started by the VCCC, years ago, using funds from the annual dues. About a year ago, the VCCC's Board of Directors gave up control of Vacuumland to Robert (who started Automatic Washer . org). Vacuumland belongs to Robert and his partner Fred S. who are the webmasters. It now has nothing to do with the VCCC, which is a club for dues paying members to gather at an annual gathering. The VCCC is not the only vacuum collectors club, but one of several. Many folks on Vacuumland do not belong to any "club" at all.

If you need information on the first 20 years of Royal history, the Vacuum Cleaner Museum in St. James, MO has all the information you might need.
 
Wonderful compilation, John. Looks like you took a great deal of time to assemble and organize all the Royal information for you and other Royal vacuum cleaner enthusiasts. I am not a collector, either, but appreciate references like yours if ever I have a purchasing opportunity. I can imagine that it will assist many who have Royal metal upright questions.

Kudos also to Ben, Jeff, Alex, Tom, and others who have generously shared their researched information with the rest of us.

Perhaps others will take the notion to compile information on other brands!


Here is a 1965 Royal ad:

ronni++3-24-2014-17-35-47.jpg
 
"...thanks to Tom Gasko..."

And, now I know Dysonman1 is is Tom Gasko. Gawd, I feel like a weenie!

I would so love to visit your museum, but I can't imagine the next time I'll be anywhere near Missouri. If I were to show up, it would be with camera, and I'd shoot a thousand pics!

Not sure you could really help, or would want to help with the questions I had when I found Vacuumland. I simply had a well worn Model 1030Z, that needed parts and some TLC. I didn't search long before I found what I needed to know, mostly from Ben. I'm just a user, not a collector, but anything I can learn about the metal upright will help in the long run. That will be my vacuum of choice forever. Which model I finally settle on is still to be determined. I am so fond of the 131, I know it won't be replaced, but I may add a partner. That would make me a collector, eh?

Anyway, while searching for parts and information, I stumbled on post after post by Ben, that so much work had gone into, and frequently no replies at all. At this point, if the archives disappear, I'll still have those posts.

That reminds me of a chapter I need to add. "The Best Royal Metal Upright to Have." That's probably a question you could have easily answered, if I had known to ask you. As it is, Ben has fielded that question a few times, and I will add his replies. Might even throw in my own two cents, since I've had my hands on a few at this point.

And, that brings me to a question I had for Ben. What did you mean by, "...any further revisions as to the models sold would be appreciated here."

These things are coming in the door two at a time now!

ornery++3-24-2014-17-43-28.jpg
 
I hope they'll forgive me!



Hi John, welcome to Vacuumland, I'm Robert Seger and no worries what so ever, there really isn't a way you would have known that unless you were around here last April when the transition happened. Thank you Tom for filling him in. Yes the VCCC is a completely separate club from Vacuumland.



I had heard through the grapevine that Louis Rescigno and Chad Cunningham from the VCCC were working on a separate website specifically for the VCCC, but I don't have the details, maybe they can fill us in at some point.



Great Royal .pdf by the way!
 
What A Day!

Started this cold, dreary Monday with news that I might have dissed the owners of this site, got overwhelmed at work, spent 20 minutes in line at the post office for a damage claim, lost an Ebay auction for vintage parts I could have used...

Then the tide turned. Took delivery of two Royal Metal Uprights in really good condition, met Tom Gasko and Robert. Got some great ideas for the book and some cool ads to top it off. They are a hoot!

Been cleaning up one of those vacuums and I'm whipped, so I won't be able to edit the book tonight. I'm thinking of sending the Word document straight to Ben & Jeff to play with. I've only got Adobe Acrobat Pro for another 28 days, and then the trial ends, so I hope to have it final by then.

Great to meet you Robert, and thanks!
 
Tip on PDF files

@ornery -

Well - you don't have to have Adobe Acrobat Pro to create PDF files. If you're using Microsoft Office 2007 or newer, you can do File -> Save As... and pick PDF from the drop down menu and it will save your document in a PDF format. The other option is to download PDFCreator, an open source program that installs a print-to-PDF capability so you can generate PDF files from any program. It is rock solid reliable and it's not a space hog or install a bunch of adware. You can see the link to that here: http://www.pdfforge.org/


- TW
 

Latest posts

Back
Top