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Wholesale Mid-Century H. H. Oil Co. Advertising Wooden Yardstick | Greenland, New Hampshire, c. 1940s–1950s
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$55.20 MSRP
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Description
The Piece This is an original mid-century wooden advertising ruler produced for H. H. Oil Co., Inc., printed with their address at 437 Portsmouth Ave, Greenland, New Hampshire. It’s a long, slender, no-frills object that lived on desks, counters, and workbenches, quietly doing its job while advertising a regional fuel and oil company to the people who actually needed it. Unlike school-issued rulers, this one was never meant for classrooms. It was a promotional utility object, designed to be handled daily by tradesmen, office staff, and customers in an era when oil companies were deeply local businesses. The typography is bold, legible, and unapologetically commercial. The wood has aged beautifully, with softened edges and a surface patina that only comes from decades of real use. It’s specific. It’s regional. And it absolutely does not exist in quantity anymore. Product Details → Origin: United States → Era: Mid-20th century, c. 1940s–1950s → Material: Solid wood → Length: Approx. 36 inches (yardstick format) → Markings: • “H. H. Oil Co., Inc.” • “437 Portsmouth Ave” • “Greenland, N.H.” → Type: Advertising / promotional ruler → Condition: Vintage condition with honest wear consistent with age; legible printing; no visible structural damage Historical Context Advertising rulers like this became especially common in the 1930s through 1950s, when American businesses relied on practical giveaways rather than disposable paper advertising. Hardware stores, oil companies, lumber yards, and service providers distributed wooden rulers because they stayed on desks for decades, quietly reinforcing brand presence every time they were picked up. The oil and fuel industry during this period was still largely regional and relationship-based. Companies like H. H. Oil Co. served local communities with heating oil, lubricants, and fuel at a time when New England homes and businesses depended heavily on oil for warmth and operation. A ruler like this would have been used in offices, garages, and homes tied directly to that economy. Greenland, New Hampshire sits just inland from Portsmouth, a historically industrial and maritime hub. The address printed on the ruler anchors it to a very specific geographic and economic moment: post-war New England, when local oil companies were essential infrastructure and branding was straightforward, durable, and honest. These rulers were never meant to be saved. They were meant to be used until they disappeared.
Details
Made in United States Weight: 90.72 g (3.2 oz)


































