Share your favorites on Show & Tell

1950 Johnson Card Shuffler

In Cards > Playing Cards > Show & Tell.
All items30272 of 2445341960s Arrco Card Shuffler - number 750carnival doll
10
Love it
0
Like it

Laurabelle61Laurabelle61 loves this.
kwqdkwqd loves this.
ho2cultchaho2cultcha loves this.
Hoot60Hoot60 loves this.
blunderbuss2blunderbuss2 loves this.
officialfuelofficialfuel loves this.
fortapachefortapache loves this.
vetraio50vetraio50 loves this.
Vynil33rpmVynil33rpm loves this.
AnythingObscureAnythingObscure loves this.
See 8 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 4 years ago

    dav2no1
    (839 items)

    1950 Johnson Card Shuffler

    Nestor Johnson MFG Co., 1900 N. Springfield Ave., Chicago, IL

    I've had this for a long time it's a manual crank card shuffler made by Nestor Johnson. The Chicago museum has a 1951 model, but mine is earlier since it says Pat Pend.

    It's capable of shuffling one, two, or three decks. You place half a deck on each side, crank the handle and then pick up the shuffler and you repeat one more time.

    NESTOR JOHNSON
    While there were a few different crank-operated shufflers that appeared in the early 1950s—including one from Chicago’s Arrco Playing Card Co.—it was another Chicago company, Nestor Johnson, that really cornered the market.

    **In the next post, we will see my battery operated Arrco shuffler.**

    For the 40 years prior to the card shuffler’s debut in 1950, and at least another quarter century after, the Nestor Johnson MFG Company’s main stock and trade was ice skate manufacturing. Back in the 1920s, they were part of Chicago’s unofficial “Big Three”.

    As competition started to mount from cheaper national sporting good suppliers in the post-war 1940s, the Nestor Johnson MFG Co. needed to start looking for alternative revenue streams.

    Working at the company’s longtime headquarters on Springfield Ave. in Hermosa, an experienced Johnson employee named Rudolph Notz was hard at work on this problem. In 1950, he applied for a patent on a new product he hoped could provide a much needed new flow of revenue. He called it a “playing card shuffler device,” and within weeks, it was part of the Nestor assembly line.

    logo
    Playing Cards
    See all
    2-Pack of Royal 100% Plastic Playing Cards Set - Washable, Waterproof
    2-Pack of Royal 100% Plastic Playin...
    $14
    Vintage Nintendo Kabufuda Tengu Japanese Playing Cards made before 1989
    Vintage Nintendo Kabufuda Tengu Jap...
    $19
    Antique Vintage Style Colonial Deck of Playing Cards 18th 19th Century Style....
    Antique Vintage Style Colonial Deck...
    $17
    Da Brigh Russian Style Playing Cards Deck (Blue)
    Da Brigh Russian Style Playing Card...
    $19
    logo
    2-Pack of Royal 100% Plastic Playing Cards Set - Washable, Waterproof
    2-Pack of Royal 100% Plastic Playin...
    $14
    See all

    Comments

    1. Vynil33rpm Vynil33rpm, 4 years ago
      Weeeerrrrrryyy Nice

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.