Coleman
US lanterns 1931 - 1945
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The Coleman Company made
a demonstration lamp (left)
to support their Instant-Lite
patent; note the presence of the sight glass
to see fuel and/or air
moving up to the generator.
This lamp is in the Coleman
Museum in Wichita.
Jim Nichols modified an
early 220B by adding a heat deflector and sight glass (2nd from left).
In the instant lite position,
air bubbles and fuel pass through the sight glass (2nd from right)
while in the run position,
only fuel passes through the sight glass (right).
In 1932-33, Sunshine Products
Co., Chicago, Illinois,
a wholly owned subsidiary
of Coleman, made this F-146 lantern model.
Through this subsidiary,
Coleman built a very small number of lanterns with a carburetor valve
(note that the valve enters
the fount not the globe rest)
possibly as an experiment
in a period when other companies such as AGM were
using this alternative
method of dual feed - air and gasoline.
The replacement globe was
made by Fred Kuntz.
This lantern is in Mark
Baldwin's collection.

This Coleman Model 242 is dated
February 1933.
The ventilator doesn't take a ball nut but has a threaded insert
so that a shade can be fitted and it can serve as a lamp.
The pump lacks an air tube and positive shut-off
as found on almost all Coleman models.
This lantern was restored by Fred Kuntz.


Model 242A was made in 1935-36.
The pump handle lacks an air tube and positive shut-off
as Model 242 above but does have a hold-down pin
(lower image from John Stendahl)
This lantern has a reproduction
mica globe;
a mica globe was standard on this
model.
A Model 228B Coleman, dated
Sept. '33.
This lantern has an original
globe
in which the logo was sandblasted
into the glass.
This lantern is in Fred
Kuntz's collection.


Coleman in Wichita made
these Model 223 lanterns in the mid 1930's.
They have brass frames and unusual lighting hole doors.
This is a kerosene fueled 300 cp model;
These came from Thailand and are in Michael Merz's collection,


Coleman made the L427 Quick-Lite
lantern in the 1930's for the US Forest Service.
These lanterns are dated
Mar '33 & Feb '35
and are embossed
USFS on the side of the founts.
The lanterns are in Deems Burton's collection.

This lantern is similarly
equipped as the Quick-Lites above
but is only stamped F.S
(for the U.S. Forest Service)
on the rim of the fount that was once painted red.
The lantern
is date stamped Dec '29.
This L427 Quick-Lite was
also made for the US Forest Service
but has USFS stippled into
the fount rather than embossed.
This lantern appears to
be dated Jan '36.
This L427 Quick-Lite was
made in Wichita and is dated Dec. '36,
perhaps one of the last
of this model to be made in the US.
It is stamped QL on the
bottom of the fount.
This lantern, in Fred Kuntz's
collection,
has one of his reproduction
mica globes.
Fred also had the ventilator
re-enameled.


Coleman kerosene lanterns,
Model 234 (one mantle, 175 cp) on the left,
and Model 235 (two mantle,
300 cp) in the middle and right.
The 234 is all original
and dated February, 1936.
This lantern is in Fred
Kuntz's collection.
The 235 in the middle has
the original globe,
is stamped LQ on the fount
base, and is dated December, 1935.
This lantern is in Mark
Baldwin's collection.
The 235 on the right, also
dated Dec. '35, is in Neil McRae's collection.

Four Model 243 lanterns
in Neil McRae's collection (left to right):
Model 243 with a black
ventilator and dated 6, for 1936?, the first year for this model.
Model 243A with a blue
ventilator and dated June '37.
Model 243A with a black
ventilator and dated Aug. '41.
Model 243A with a black
ventilator and a ball nut stamp 6 0 or 0 9; for 1940 or 1946?

Jim Nichols spent many
hours profiling the cut-away 242B lantern (right)
in his shop to create the
image that you see here.
The nickel plating has
been removed.
The air tube from the base
of the pump to the top of the fount
prevents gas from leaking
back out the pump
if the check valve should
fail.
The 242B on the left, owned
by Doug & Nadine Rorem, is dated Oct. '37.

We believe that the Coleman
Lamp and Stove Co. in Los Angeles, California,
manufactured or had these
No. 36 "Handy Pails" made for Junior size lanterns.
This "Handy Pail" came
with a 242B inside when Dwayne Hanson found it.
The instructions call for
storing the lantern upside down
on a rag or newspaper in
the can (to protect the mantle).
This embossed Coleman globe
came on a 242B.
Some are also embossed
Made in U.S.A. on the back;
this one is not.
All of these of which I
am aware are cracked or missing a piece of glass
in nearly the same place
and pattern on the upper right.
There is a small "4" embossed
above Pyrex on this globe (not visible).
Neil McRae notes that Model
246 was Coleman's number
for the 242 lantern made
for export.
This 246 may date to 1940; the date is difficult to read.
It has a tip cleaner wheel as on Model 242K below,
and a solid pump handle
as on the 242A above.
This lantern, which was found in Germany, is in John Eggert's collection.

By the end of the 220/228B
model run in 1942
Coleman painted the founts
green, and stamped them U.S.
They continued to lack
any model identification.
Model 228B (left), in Dean
DeGroff's collection, is date stamped August '42,
has a brass fount, and
most of the usual brass parts are still made with brass.
Model 220B (right) is date
stamped November '42, has a steel fount,
and a number of other parts
are steel.

This 242B is stamped as such on the collar
and is date stamped Nov. '41 on the bottom.
The brass sided fount is protected with green paint
as are the lanterns below made in '42.
This lantern is in Alex Swanson's collection.

These are the earliest 220BX/220C lanterns
that I have seen;
they are date stamped Nov. 1942 (left) and Jan.
1943 (right).
The model is not stamped
but we know Coleman's designation
from boxes in which this
model came; the bottom is stamped U.S.
They have progressively more steel parts
than either the 220/228B above.
These lanterns are in Blake Brallier's collection (left) and in Dean
DeGroff's collection (right).
Another Coleman kerosene
lantern,
this is Model 237B.
It is dated July, 1944.
Complete with the #330
globe,
this model is in Fred Kuntz's
collection.


Initial production of the mil-spec lantern by Coleman in 1944
resulted in lanterns without parts wells;
Coleman designated these their Model 252, per Roger Hill.
This one is stenciled 27 AAA (Anti Aircraft Artillery)
and 12 PLT. (Platoon).


This Model 242C lantern is only identified with a white stencil on the bottom
where it is also date stamped 4 9 - Sept. '44.
The lantern is not stamped U.S.
The brass sided fount is protected with green paint.
This lantern is in Sean McGee's collection.